Monday, 2 December 2024

EDU 04.2 UNIT2: NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE

B. Ed SEMESTER 1

EDU 04.2: THEORETICAL BASE OF ENGLISH EDUCATION

UNIT2: NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Sl.

No:

CONTENTS

1

Language and Culture, Language and Society,

Language and Media (Print and Digital)

2

Basic Concepts in Linguistics Morphology,

Phonology, Syntax, Semantics.

3

Psycho Linguistic Theories

4

Behaviorism-Imitation, Repetition, Reinforcement

5

Congnitivism Schema

6

Constructivism ZPD, Scaffolding, Mental Processes.

7

Krashen’s Hypothesis

8

Chomsky- LAD Universal Grammar.

9

Multiple Intelligence

10

Previous year Questions

 

 


 

A.   Language and Culture

Culture and language rely a lot on each other. The power of language to reflect culture and influence thinking was first proposed by an American linguist and anthropologist, Edward Sapir (1884–1939), and his student, Benjamin Whorf (1897–1941). The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis stated that the way we think and view the world is determined by our language. Instances of cultural language differences are evidenced in that some languages have specific words for concepts whereas other languages use several words to represent a specific concept. Culture is a vital part of the communication process. Consequently, it may be impossible for students to use the language appropriately without culture awareness. It is an undeniable fact that to understand a language completely, it is essential to master not only the language knowledge including grammar, lexis and phonology but also certain features of culture.

B.   Language and Society

Language is central to social interaction in every society, regardless of location and time period. Language and social interaction have a reciprocal relationship. Language shapes social interactions and social interactions shape language. Language is a tool for interacting with other human. Sociolinguistics is the study of the connection between language and society and the way people use language in different social situations.

The basic premise of sociolinguistics is that language is variable and ever changing. As a result, language is not uniform or constant. Rather, it is varied and inconsistent for both the individual user and within and among groups of speakers who use the same language.

         Language has a social function. It helps us to establish and maintain relationships. Meaning, while language is principally used for communication purposes, it is also used to establish and maintain social relationships.

         Also, the users of the same language speak differently from each other.

         The kind of language each of them chooses to use is in part determined by his social background.

         Thus, language, in turn, reveals information about its speaker.

         So, when we talk about the relationship between language and society, it is an exploration of a bidirectional relationship between the language and its users.

C.   Language and Media

Media language has always attracted the attention of linguists, particularly applied linguists and sociolinguists. There are four practical and principled reasons for this interest.

First, the media provide an easily accessible source of language data for research and teaching purposes.

Second, the media are important linguistic institutions. Their output makes up a large proportion of the language that people hear and read every day.  Media usage reflects and shapes both language use and attitudes in a speech community. For second language learners, the media may function as the primary—or even the sole—source of native-speaker models.

Third, the ways in which the media use language are interesting linguistically in their own right; these include how different dialects and languages are used in advertising, how tabloid newspapers use language in a projection of their assumed readers' speech, or how radio personalities use language—and only language–to construct their own images and their relationships to an unseen, unknown audience.

Fourth, the media are important social institutions. They are crucial presenters of culture, politics, and social life, shaping as well as reflecting how these are formed and expressed. Media ‘discourse’ is important both for what it reveals about a society and for what it contributes to the character of society.

  Basic concepts in Linguistics

Linguistics is the scientific study of language.It is the study of human languages.This discipline Linguistics is broadly divided into six main categories or branches such as Phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics.

PHONETICS

          The phonetics is a branch that deals with the study of individual sounds

          How this individual sounds or speech sounds are produced or received

          Study of human speech sounds in general with no references to any language

          Examples : p, b, t ,k.. Etc.

PHONOLOGY

         Branch that deals with how these individual speech sounds together to make a meaningful spoken unit

         Study of sound pattern of language

         It deals with how these individual speech sounds are organised or arranged in a particular language ie it analysis the sound pattern of language

         For example : Top, Stop, Pot : here the particular sound t is arranged differently in each word with different sound pattern

So these speech sounds are called phonemes. In English we have 26 letters and we have 44 phonemes.

44 phonemes

20 vowels                                                 24 consonants

 

12 pure vowels ,8 diphthongs or monothongs

So that the smallest unit of sound is called phoneme or the basic sound unit is called phoneme.

MORPHOLOGY

              Morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit in a language

              Morphology is the study of words, foundation and structure

              The basic unit which constitutes a word form is called morpheme

            Morphology is the systematic study of morphemes or how morphemes join to form words is called morphology.

            Like phoneme is the basic unit of sound in language, morpheme is the basic meaningful unit in language

              For example ;Cats = cat + s

              National = Nation + al

              Bookishness = Book+ish + ness = 3 morphemes

              The = one morpheme

              Bad = one morpheme

              Badly = 2 morpheme etc

SYNTAX

               Syntax is branch that deals with the study of words arrangement or structure.

               The syntax contains the system of rules for the structure of a sentence in a language

               For example, = subject + verb + object the structure of sentence

             ie. When a sentence has subject, verb, object and used correctly in order then that sentence is syntactically correct or grammatically correct.

For example, =

1.       She Plays Cricket

2.       He Received an award

3.       3.My Father Bought a new Car.

SEMANTICS

               Semantics is a branch that deals with the meaning of words and phrases

               It is a branch deals with how meanings are generated or produced

               Study of text without its context

               Decontextualized

             It does not bother about the speaker of the sentence or writer of the text, we create the literal meaning of the sentence

                For example, = My uncle has just passed = literal meaning

PRAGMATICS

               Pragmatics is the branch that deals with the study of text with its context

               contextualized study of text

               Intended meaning is there in the text and we have to find it

               It bothers about the context the speaker or the writer used

               Pragmatics studies language that is not directly spoken

             Instead, the speaker or writer hints or suggests a meaning and the listener or the audience assumes the correct intention or the context behind that sentence and give replies to that sentence in that context.       

         For example, = my uncle has just passed away                                      

         How as the day? Asked by the stranger.

SUPRASEGMENTAL

Suprasegmental, also called prosodic feature, in phonetics, a speech feature such as stress, tone, intonation, pitch, word juncture that accompanies or is added over consonants and vowels; these features are not limited to single sounds but often extend over syllables, words, or phrases.

 

 

What is intonation?

 

Intonation, in phonetics, the melodic pattern of an utterance. It conveys differences of expressive meaning (e.g., surprise, anger, or delight), and it can also serve a grammatical function. Intonation is primarily a matter of variation in the pitch of the voice. In such languages as English, it is often accompanied by stress and rhythm to produce meaning. (Tone is also a form of pitch modulation, but the term describes the use of pitch to differentiate words and grammatical categories.).

In many languages, including English, intonation distinguishes one type of phrase or sentence from another. The different intonations a person can use to say, “The cup of water is over there” demonstrate this grammatical function: when a person begins with a medium pitch and ends with a lower one (falling intonation), this sentence is a simple assertion, but when a person uses a rising intonation (high final pitch), it is a question.

 

Pitch

Pitch, in speech, the relative highness or lowness of a tone as perceived by the ear, which

depends on the number of vibrations per second produced by the vocal cords. Pitch is the main acoustic correlate of tone and intonation. The pitch of a sound is how high or low it is.

We produce high pitched sounds when our vocal folds have a high-frequency vibration, and when our vocal folds vibrate more slowly, the resulting sound is lower in pitch. Some languages use pitch information to signal changes in word meaning. If a language uses pitch this way, the pitch information is called tone. These example words are from Yoruba, a spoken language in Nigeria.

Stress

Stress, in phonetics, intensity given to a syllable of speech by special effort in utterance, resulting in relative loudness. This emphasis in pronunciation may be merely phonetic (i.e.,noticeable to the listener, but not meaningful), as it is in French, where it occurs regularly at the end of a word or phrase; or it may serve to distinguish meanings, as in English, in which, for example, stress differentiates the noun from the verb in the word “permit.”

Vocalization

Any sound produced through the action of an animal’s respiratory system and used in communication. Vocal sound, which is virtually limited to frogs, crocodilians and geckos, birds, and mammals, is sometimes the dominant form of communication

Syllable

Syllable, a segment of speech that consists of a vowel, with or without one or more accompanying consonant sounds immediately preceding or following—for example, a, I, out, too, cap, snap, check. A syllabic consonant, such as the final n sound in button and widen, also constitutes a syllable. Closed (checked) syllables are those that end in a consonant; open (free) syllables end in a vowel. The role that syllables play in the production of speech is a matter of considerable debate. So too is any more precise definition of the syllable in phonetics and phonology.

Linguists commonly use language variety (or simply variety) as a cover term for any of the overlapping subcategories of a language, including dialect, register, jargon, and idiolect. Register

Register is a linguistic variety regarded as appropriate to use in a particular speech situation. Register is usually associated with a particular speech situation.

The term register refers to the various ways people use language based on who they're talking to and their situation. We often talk about register in terms of formality. For example, our word choices, tone of voice, and body language will likely differ in a formal situation (e.g., a job interview) compared to informal situations (e.g., hanging out with friends). There are five main types of different linguistic registers. They are: frozen, formal, consultative, casual, and intimate.

Dialect

Dialect refers to the variety of language that can signal the speaker's regional or social

background Dialect is a variety of language which differs grammatically, phonologically, lexically from other varieties, and which

is associated with a particular social class or status group. Examples - Australian dialect, Indian dialect.

  PSYCHOLINGUISTIC THEORIES

Psycholinguistics is an integration of two disciplines; psychology and linguistics. Psychology is the study of mind and behavior; linguistics is the study of language. So, in general, psycholinguistics can be defined as the study of mind and language. It is concerned with the relationship between the human mind and the language as it examines the processes that occur in

brain while producing and perceiving language.

Psycholinguistics covers three main points; language production, language perception and language acquisition.

·       Language production refers to the processes involved in creating and expressing meaning through language.

·       Language perception refers to processes involved in interpreting and understanding both written and spoken language.

·       Language acquisition refers to processes of acquiring a native or a second language.

1.  Behaviourist Theory

 

(Theories of E L Thorndike, Ivan Pavlov, J B Watson, B F Skinner etc). The concept of learning has undergone a series of revolutionary changes in the twentieth century. Early learning theorists attempted to explain all learning in terms of some form of ‘conditioning’. Part of the problem with early behaviourist theories was that they concentrated almost exclusively upon the nature of incoming stimuli and different kinds of responses. However, this proved to be of limited value in accounting for the enormous range of human actions.

Behaviorist theory, which is basically a psychological theory in its essence, founded by J.B. Watson, is actually a theory of native language learning, advanced in part as a reaction to traditional grammar. The supporters of this theory are Leonard Bloomfield, O.N. Mowrer, B.F. Skinner, and A.W. Staats. Behaviorism was advanced in America as a new approach to psychology in the early decades of the 20thcentury by making a particular emphasis on the importance of verbal behavior, and received a considerable trust from the educational world of 1950s. The major principle of the behaviorist theory rests on the analyses of human behavior in observable stimulus-response interaction and the association between them.

E L Thorndike was the first behaviourist to explore the area that learning is the establishment of associations on particular process of behaviour and consequences of that behaviour. Basically, "the behaviourist theory of stimulus response learning, particularly as developed in the operant conditioning model of Skinner, considers all learning to be the establishment of habits as a result of reinforcement and reward”. This is very reminiscent of Pavlov's experiment which indicates that stimulus and response work together. According to this category, the babies obtain native language habits via varied babblings which resemble the appropriate words repeated by a person or object he is rewarded, this very reward reinforces further articulations of the same sort into grouping of syllables and words in a similar situation. In this way, he goes on emitting sounds, groups of sounds, and as he grows up he combines the sentences via generalizations and analogy (as in *goed for went, *doed, for did, so on), which in some complicated cases, condition him to commit errors by articulating in permissible structures in speech. By the age of five or six, or babblings and mutterings grow into socialized speech but little by little they are internalized as implicit speech, and thus many of their utterances become distinguishable from the adults. This, then, obviously, means that behaviourist theory is a theory of stimulus-response psychology.

"Through a trial-and-error process, in which acceptable utterances are reinforced by comprehension and approval, and un acceptable utterances are inhibited by the lack of reward, he gradually learns to make finer and finer discriminations until his utterances approximate more and more closely the speech of the community in which he is growing up. To put it in other words, children develop a natural affinity to learn the language of their social surroundings whose importance both over language learning and teaching must never be underestimated. In this respect behaviorist theory stresses the fact that "human and animal learning is a process of habit formation.

A highly complex learning task, according to this theory may be learned by being broken' down into small habits. These are formed correct or incorrect responses, are rewarded or punished, respectively'. For behaviourism, learning is the acquisition of new behaviour through conditioning or associative learning i.e., making a new association between events in the environment. There are two types of possible conditioning:

Classical conditioning & Operant conditioning.

Behaviouristic theories focus only on the objectively observable aspects of learning.

a)  Learning is manifested by a change in behaviour.

b)  The environment shapes behaviour.

c)  The principles of contiguity and reinforcement are central to explaining the learning process.

Basic Tenets of Behaviorist Theory

The following principles illustrate the operating princip1es of behaviorism

1.  Behaviorist Theory dwells on spoken language. That is primary medium of language is oral: speech is language, because there are many several language s without written form, because we learn to speak before we learn to read and write. That is why spoken language must have a priority in language teaching.

2.  Behaviorist Theory is the habit formation theory of language teaching and learning, reminding us the learning of structural grammar. Language learning a mechanical process leading the learners to habit formation whose underlying scheme is the conditioned reflex.

3.  All learning is the establishment of habits as the result of reinforcement and reward. Positive reinforcement is reward and negative reinforcement is punishment.

4.  Sees and considers learning as a change in behaviour.

5.  Learner is given a stimulus and makes an appropriate response.

6.  Learner is seen as passive.

7.  Learning is transmitted from an authority to the students.

8.  Learning is broken into small Pieces. It is clear that language learning and its development, for the behaviorists, is a matter of conditioning by means of imitation, practice, reinforcement, and habituation, which constitute the paces of language acquisition.

9.  It must be born in mind that all behaviorist theories of learning are associationistic, including Thorndike's, Guthrie's, Hull's, Skinner's, and the theory of the school of functionalism. Apparently,has its shortcomings, but it cannot be denied that learning process is for the most part a behaviorist processing, a verbal behavior.

10.     In language teaching area, behaviorism establishes the basic background of exercises, either oral or written in viewing language as stimulus and response. In addition, it gives a great deal of insight into the recognition of the use of controlled observation to discover the law s of behavior.

11.     It has exerted a great impact by influencing many teaching methods on the area of language teaching, for example, Audio-lingual Method, Total Physical Response, and Silent Way embody the behaviorist view of language; also, British Structuralism has created the theory of language called Situational Language Teaching, as seen in the achievements of British applied linguistics, such as Palmer, Hornby, and Frisby, and the British linguists like]. R. Firth and M.A.K. Halliday.

12.     In a word behaviorist theory aims at discovering behavioral justifications for designing language teaching in certain ways, being a hub a of many language teaching and learning theories.

13.     It must not be forgotten that it has given a push for the creation of empiricist language learning which became very fashionable in U.S.A. and in Europe.

2.  Cognitive Theory

(Gestalt views of learning -Wertheimer, Kohler, Kafka & Kurt Lewin’s Field Theory of Learning) The cognitivist revolution replaced behaviorism in 1960s as the dominant paradigm. New cognitive frameworks of learning began to emerge during the 1970s, 80s, and 90s.In contrast to behaviourism, cognitive psychologists are interested in the mental processes that are involved in learning. In recent years cognitive psychology has had a considerable influence on language teaching methodology. In a cognitive approach, the learner is seen as an active participant in the learning process, using various mental strategies. The individual learner is more key to Gestaltists than the environment that behaviourists emphasize.

Important principles:

  Cognitive approach looks beyond behaviour to explain brain-based learning.

  Learning is defined as change in a learner’s schemata or mental constructions.

  It considers learning as the inner mental activities such as thinking, memory, knowing, and problem-solving.

  Cognitivists consider how human memory works to promote learning.

  The learner is viewed as an active information processor.

  Memory system is an active organized processor of information.

  Prior knowledge plays an important role in learning. Piaget's theory of cognitive development is a comprehensive theory about the nature and development of human intelligence.

  Adaptation is the mechanism underlying Cognitive development- the process of building mental representations or schemes of the world through direct interaction with it. This adaptation to the environment

 

3.    Constructivist Theory - (Learning Theories of Piaget, Bruner, Vygotsky, Gagne & Ausubel) Constructivist movement is an extension of the cognitive movement. The contribution of thinkers like Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner and LeVygotsky helped to create a new awareness in this field. Constructivism is a psychological theory of knowledge which argues that learners construct or generate knowledge and meaning from their experiences. However, Constructivism is often associated with pedagogic approaches that promote active learning, or learning by doing.

               Formalization of the theory of constructivism is generally attributed to Jean Piaget, who articulated mechanisms by which knowledge is internalized by learners. He suggested that through processes of accommodation and assimilation, individuals construct new knowledge from their experiences. When individuals assimilate, they incorporate the new experience into an already existing framework without changing that framework.

                   According to the theory, accommodation is the process of reframing one's mental representation of the external world to fit new experiences. It is important to note that constructivism is not a particular pedagogy. In fact, constructivism is a theory describing how learning happens, regardless of whether learners are using their experiences to understand a lecture or following the instructions for building a model airplane. In both cases, the theory of constructivism suggests that learners construct knowledge out of their experiences. However, Constructivism is often associated with pedagogic approaches that promote active learning, or learning by doing. Piaget’s theory of Constructivist learning has had wide ranging impact on learning theories and teaching methods in education and is an underlying theme of many education reform movements.

                   Zone of proximal development -One essential tenet in Vygotsky's theory is the notion of the existence of what he called t"zone of proximal development". Zone of proximal development is the difference between the child's capacity to solve problems on own, and his capacity to solve them with assistance. In other words, the actual developmental level refers to all the functions and activities that a child can perform on his own, independently without the help of anyone else. On the other hand, the zone of proximal development includes all the functions and activities that a child or a learner can perform only with the assistance of someone else.The person in this scaffolding process, providing non-intrusive intervention, could be an adult (parent, teacher, caretaker, language instructor) or another peer who has already mastered that particular function.

                   Scaffolding and developing - Effective caregivers engage in regulating dialogue with children almost naturally. A key phenomenon of such interactions is that caregivers maintain the dialogue just above the level, where the children can perform activities independently. As children learn, adults change the nature of their dialogue so that they continue to support the child, but also give the child increasing responsibility for the task. Jerome Bruner and his colleagues called this

scaffolding. It takes place within a child’s zone of proximal development, a level or range in which a child can perform a task with help.

The ZPD, Scaffolding and the dialogue are especially useful concepts for framework for school learning. Dialogue, scaffolding and working in one’s own ZPD can be accomplished in collaborative classrooms, and are being accomplished in many classrooms today all over the world.

Discovery Learning -The teacher has to create a linguistic atmosphere that encourages the learner to discover ideas as well as facts. The teacher should not make the learner imitate prepared models. He/she should facilitate the child’s process of constructing his/her own models. Discovery learning promotes motivation and problem solving. The teacher only presents the problem before the child.

 

VYGOTSKY'S SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIVISM & LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

According to Vygotsky, all fundamental cognitive activities take shape in a matrix of social history and form the products of sociohistorical development. That is, cognitive skills and patterns of thinking are not primarily determined by innate factors, but are the products of the activities practiced in the social institutions of the culture in which the individual grows up. Consequently, the history of the society in which a child is reared and the child's personal history are crucial determinants of the way in which that individual will think. In this process of cognitive development, language is a crucial tool for determining how the child will learn how to think because advanced modes of thought are transmitted to the child by means of words.

The origins of thought and language according to Vygotsky Like in animals, thought and speech have different roots in humankind, thought being nonverbal and language being non-intellectual in an early stage. But their development lines are not parallel - they cross again and again. At a certain moment around the age of two, the curves of development of thought and speech, until then separate, meet and join to initiate a new form of behaviour. That is when thought becomes verbal and speech becomes rational. A child first seems to use language for superficial social interaction, but at some point, this language goes underground to become the structure of the child's thinking.

Inner Speech -Children learn when they engage in activities and dialogues with others, usually adults or more capable peers. Children gradually internalize this dialogue so that it becomes inner speech, the means by which they direct their own behaviour and thinking. Eventually, this dialogue becomes internalised as inner speech. There seems to be a general sequence in the development of speech for oneself. When alone, very young children tend to talk about what they have done after they complete an activity. Later they talk as they work. Finally, they talk to themselves before they engage in an activity.

Speech now has assumed a planning function. Later they internalise this speech. Inner speech conversations carried on within ourselves begins as a social dialogue with other people and is a major mode of learning, planning and self-regulation.

ZPD: Therefore, when it comes to language learning, the authenticity of the environment and the affinity between its participants are essential elements to make the learner feel part of this environment. These elements are rarely predominant in conventional classrooms.

Vygotsky's influence on Krashen's second language acquisition theory .Although Vygotsky and Krashen come from entirely different backgrounds, the application of their theories to second language teaching produces similarities. Influence or coincidence, Krashen's input hypothesis resembles Vygotsky's concept of ZPD. According to the input hypothesis, language acquisition takes place during human interaction in an environment of the foreign language when the learner receives language 'input' that is one step beyond his/her current stage of linguistic competence.

For example, if a learner is at a stage 'i', then maximum acquisition takes place when he/she is exposed to 'Comprehensible Input' that belongs to level 'i + 1'.Krashen's acquisition-learning hypothesis also seems to have been influenced by Vygotsky. Although Vygotsky speaks of internalization of language while Krashen uses the term language acquisition, both are based on a common assumption: interaction with other people.

The concept of acquisition as defined by Krashen and its importance in achieving proficiency in foreign languages, can be a perfect application of Vygotsky's view of cognitive development as taking place in the matrix of the person's social history and being a result of it. Even the distinct concepts in Krashen's acquisition theory and Vygotsky's sociocultural theory are not conflicting but complementary in providing resources for language teaching methodology. By explaining human language development and cognitive development, Vygotsky's theory serves as a strong foundation for the modern trends in applied linguistics. It lends support to less structured and more natural, communicative and experiential approaches and points to the importance of early real-world human interaction in foreign language learning.

5. Krashen’s Hypotheses (Monitor Theory of Language Acquisition)

The theory underlies Krashen and Terrell's comprehension-based language learning methodology known as the natural approach (1983). Monitor theory has been one of the most influential SLA theories developed by the linguist Stephen Krashen to explain second language acquisition (SLA). It is based on five main hypotheses, referred as monitor theory. These comprise;

1.       The Acquisition-Learning hypothesis: Krashen claimed that formal instruction, or learning and studying about a language, is a different process from the natural acquisition that takes place as a subconscious act similar to the way children begin to understand their native language. We use learning to produce correct form or grammar, while acquisition is used to understand and produce meaning. As an example, if someone wants to learn Russian, she could learn Russian by taking classes on Russian grammar and vocabulary, but she could acquire the language by reading and listening to Russian texts or living in Russia and interacting with the people and culture in that country (how about interacting with Russian people through the net Acquisition versus learning

Acquisition-learning distinction is the most fundamental of these and the most widely known among linguists. According to Krashen these are two independent systems of L2 performance; acquisition is a product of subconscious processing similar to children’s L1 acquisition and requires life-like L2 interaction, which focuses on communication rather than correctness, while learning occurs through formal instruction and comprises conscious processing, which results in knowledge about the L2, e.g. grammatical rules.

Krashen believes ‘learned competence’ acts as a monitor or editor: that is, whereas ‘acquired competence’ is responsible for the fluent production of sentences, ‘learned competence’ consciously corrects them. He claims that learned knowledge enables learners to read and listen more, so acquisition is effective.

2.       The Natural Order hypothesis: There is a natural, predictable order in which people acquire language. It is the same for each person and independent of the instruction program (this is related to Chomsky’s mentalistic view of language). 'we acquire the rules of language in a predictable order'

3.       The Monitor hypothesis: The learned system should have the purpose to self monitor production. It is somehow related to the goal that the learner may be able to identify and correct mistakes or ask for help and reflect on the process of acquisition. 'conscious learning ... can only be used as a Monitor or an editor' (Krashen & Terrell 1983).

               Monitor theory, as defined by Krashen, states that adult learners have two systems to enable them to develop their language ability: subconscious acquisition and conscious learning, with acquisition being more important. Conscious learning is only available as a "monitor", i.e. learners can consciously 'edit' their 'output' (utterances or written work) to make themselves more fluent or comprehensible, based on what they have formally learned about the second language. This, however, has no effect on subconscious, true acquisition, and in its absence, output will be less 'accurate' or native speaker-like. Each of the hypotheses relate to conditions that are necessary for acquisition to take place within a system that involves subconscious emergence of language alongside conscious monitoring: for example, the natural order hypothesis points towards a fairly fixed sequence of acquisition that adult language users go through when monitoring does not interfere much, and which is closer to first language acquisition by children.

               The monitor hypothesis asserts that a learner's learned system acts as a monitor to what they are producing. In other words, while only the acquired system is able to produce

spontaneous speech, the learned system is used to check what is being spoken.Before the learner produces an utterance, he or she internally scans it for errors, and uses the learned system to make corrections.

Self-correction occurs when the learner uses the Monitor to correct a sentence after it is uttered. According to the hypothesis, such self-monitoring and self-correction are the only functions of conscious language learning. The Monitor model then predicts faster initial progress by adults than children, as adults use this ‘monitor’ when producing L2 utterances before having acquired the ability for natural performance, and adult learners will input more into conversations earlier than children.

4.       The Input hypothesis: People acquire a language by understanding messages or by receiving comprehensible input. This input should be slightly ahead of a learner’s current state of . The input hypothesis states that only comprehensible input will result in acquisition of the target language. Krashen says that learners must be exposed to input that is just beyond their current level in order to make progress. This concept is called i+1. If the level of input is at i+1 the learner will make progress. If it is too high, for instance i+7, the learner will be unable to acquire it.

5.       The Affective Filter hypothesis: The affective filter hypothesis asserts that a learner's emotional states act as adjustable filters that freely permit or hinder input necessary to acquisition. 'a mental block, caused by affective factors ... that prevents learning. According to the affective filter hypothesis, certain emotions, such as anxiety, self-doubt, and mere boredom interfere with the process of acquiring a second language. They function as a filter between the speaker and the listener that reduces the amount of language input the listener is able to understand. These negative emotions prevent efficient processing of the language input.

               The hypothesis further states that the blockage can be reduced by sparking interest, providing low anxiety environments and bolstering the learner's self-esteem. When the learner is experiencing high anxiety, low self-esteem or low motivation, the filter turns on and causes the learner to block out input. Learners need both comprehensible input and a weak filter, that is, a learning environment free of stress and anxiety, where the learner is not forced to produce and can progress at his own pace.

    Krashen suggests that  adolescence and puberty may not be good periods for SLA, as this ‘affective filter’ arises out of self-conscious reluctance to reveal oneself and feelings of vulnerability. Learners with optimal aptitudes have a low affective filter, this means; they try to get more input and more receptive to the input they get. The affective filter controls the rate and the ultimate level of success of acquisition.

Pedagogical implications of Krashen’s Hypotheses.

 

1)  The principal goal of language teaching is to supply comprehensible input in order to facilitate acquirers. “The defining characteristic of a good teacher is someone who can make input comprehensible to a non-native speaker regardless of his or her competence in the target language.

2)  Teaching should be seen as preparation for acquisition in the wider world.

3)  The teacher must ensure that learners do notfeel anxious or are put on the defensive.

4)  Grammar teaching should be restricted to simple forms and its goal is to enable the to monitor.

5)  Speaking is a result of acquisition, not its cause. It emerges as a result of building competence via comprehensible input.

6)  Learners progress along the natural order by understanding input that contains structures that are a little bit beyond their current level of competence.

7)  If input is understood, the necessary grammar is automatically provided, the teacher does not need to teach the next structure. Noam Chomsky’s Contributions to

Linguistics & LAD

Chomskyan linguistics, beginning with his Structures, a distillation of his Logical Structure of LinguisticTheory(1955,75), challenges structural linguistics and introduces transformational grammar. This approach takes utterances (sequences of words) to have a syntax

characterized by a formal grammar; in particular, a context-free grammar extended with transformational rules.Perhaps his most influential and timetested contribution to the field, is the claim that modelling knowledge of language using a formal grammar accounts for the "productivity" or "creativity" of language. In other words, a formal grammar of a language can explains the ability of a hearer-speaker to produce and interpret an infinite number of utterances, including novel ones, with a limited set of grammatical rules and a finite set of terms. He has always acknowledged his debt to Pāṇini for his modern notion of an explicit generative grammar although it is also related to rationalist ideas of a priori knowledge. It is a popular misconception that Chomsky proved that language is entirely innate and discovered a "universal grammar" (UG). In fact, Chomsky simply observed that while a human baby and a kitten are both capable of inductive reasoning, if they are exposed to exactly the same linguistic data, the human child will always acquire the ability to understand and produce language, while the kitten will never acquire either ability.

Chomsky labeled whatever the relevant capacity the human has which the cat lacks the "language acquisition device" (LAD) and suggested that one of the tasks for linguistics should be to figure out what the LAD is and what constraints it puts on the range of possible human languages. The universal features that would result from these constraints are often termed "universal grammar" or UG.

Generative grammar - The Chomskyan approach towards syntax, often termed generative grammar, studies grammar as a body of knowledge possessed by language users. Since the 1960s, Chomsky has maintained that much of this knowledge is innate, implying that children need only learn certain parochial features of their native languages. The innate body of linguistic knowledge is often termed universal grammar. From Chomsky's perspective, the strongest evidence for the existence of Universal Grammar is simply the fact that children successfully acquire their native languages in so little time. Furthermore, he argues that there is an enormous gap between the linguistic stimuli to which children are exposed and the rich linguistic knowledge they attain (the "poverty of the stimulus" argument). The knowledge of Universal Grammar would serve to bridge that gap.

Cognitivism and Contribution of Noam Chomsky

Noam Chomsky believes that children are born with an inherited ability to learn any human language. He claims that certain linguistic structures which children use so accurately must be already imprinted on the child’s mind. Chomsky believes that every child has a ‘language acquisition device’ or LAD which encodes the major principles of a language and its grammatical structures into the child’s brain. Children have then only to learn new vocabulary and apply the syntactic structures from the LAD to form sentences. Chomsky points out that a child could not possibly learn a language through imitation alone because the language spoken around them is highly irregular adult’s speech is often broken up and even sometimes ungrammatical. Chomsky’s theory applies to all languages as they all contain nouns, verbs, consonants and vowels and children appear to be ‘hard-wired’ to acquire the grammar. Every language is extremely complex, often with subtle distinctions which even native speakers are unaware of. However, all children, regardless of their intellectual ability, become fluent in their native language within five or six years.

Evidence to support Chomsky’s theory

·       Children learning to speak never make grammatical errors such as getting their subjects, verbs and objects in the wrong order.

·       If an adult deliberately said a grammatically incorrect sentence, the child would notice.

·       Children often say things that are ungrammatical such as ‘mama ball’, which they cannot have learnt passively.

·       Mistakes such as ‘I drawed’ instead of ‘I drew’ show they are not learning through imitation alone.• Chomsky used the sentence ‘colourless green ideas sleep furiously’, which is grammatical although it doesn’t make sense, to prove his theory: he said it shows that sentences can be grammatical without having any meaning, that we can tell the difference between a grammatical and an ungrammatical sentence without ever having heard the sentence before, and that we can produce and understand brand new sentences that no one has ever said before. Evidence against Chomsky’s theory.

·       Critics of Chomsky’s theory say that although it is clear that children don’t learn language through imitation alone, this does not prove that they must have an LAD – language learning could merely be through general learning and understanding abilities and interactions with other people.

Theory of Multiple Intelligences

Howard Gardner proposed the theory of multiple intelligences. According to him, intelligence is not a single entity; rather distinct types of intelligences exist. Each of these intelligences is independent of each other. In Frames of Mind, Howard Gardner (1983) argues that learners could be said to have strengths in particular types of intelligences rather than a level of intelligence based on their IQ. Gardner's intelligences were originally arranged in seven groups of skills and abilities:Gardner also put forth that different types of intelligences interact and work together to find a solution to a problem. Gardner studied extremely talented persons, who had shown exceptional abilities in their respective areas, and described nine types of intelligence. These are as follows:

1)                             Linguistic (skills involved in the production and use of language): It is the capacity to use language fluently and flexibly to express one's thinking and understand others. Persons high on this intelligence are 'word-smart', i.e. they are sensitive to different shades of word meanings, are articulate, and can create linguistic images in their mind. Poets and writers are very strong in this component of intelligence.

2)                             Logical-Mathematical (skills in scientific thinking and problem solving): Persons high on this type of intelligence can think logically and critically. They engage in abstract reasoning, and can manipulate symbols to solve mathematical problems. Scientists and Nobel Prize winners are likely to be strong in this component.

3)                             Spatial (skills in forming visual images and patterns): It refers to the abilities involved in forming, using, and transforming mental images. The person high on this intelligence can easily represent the spatial world in the mind. Pilots, sailors, sculptors, painters, architects, interior decorators, and surgeons are likely to have highly developed spatial intelligence.

4)                             Musical (sensitivity to musical rhythms and patterns): It is the capacity to produce, create and manipulate musical patterns. Persons high on this intelligence are very sensitive to sounds and vibrations, and in creating new patterns of sounds.

5)                             Bodily-Kinesthetic (using whole or portions of the body flexibly and creatively): This consists of the use of the whole body or portions of it for display or construction of products and problem solving. Athletes, dancers, actors, sportspersons, gymnasts, and surgeons are likely to have such kind of intelligence.

6)                             Interpersonal (sensitivity to subtle aspects of others' behaviours): This is the skill of understanding the motives, feelings and behaviour of other people so as to bond into a comfortable relationship with others. Psychologists, counsellors, politicians, social workers, and religious leaders are likely to possess high interpersonal intelligence.

7)                             Intrapersonal (awareness of one's own feelings, motives, and desires): This refers to the knowledge of one's internal strengths and limitations and using that knowledge to effectively relate to others. Persons high on this ability have finer sensibilities regarding their identity, human

existence, and meaning of life. Philosophers and spiritual leaders present examples of this type of intelligence.

8)                             Naturalistic (sensitivity to the features of the natural world): This involves complete awareness of our relationship with the natural world. It is useful in recognising the beauty of different species of flora and fauna, and making subtle discriminations in the natural world. Hunters, farmers, tourists, botanists, zoologists, and bird watchers possess more ofnaturalistic intelligence.

9)                             Existential Intelligence (sensitivity and capacity to tackle deep questions about human existence) Philosophers and theorists possess more of Existential Intelligence.

 

METHODOLOGY (EDU 04.2) PREVIOUS YEAR QUESTIONS-UNIT 2

1 Marks

1.     Morphology is the study of :Grammatical items, words, phonemes, transcription?(June 2022)

2.     Behaviorist classes are: teacher centred,learner centred,task centred, Process oriented? (June 2022)

3.     What is linguistics? (June 2022)

4.     Which one of the following is not an intonation pattern in English? (Rising, falling, Rising-falling,Rising-falling-rising)

5.     The zone of proximal development is seen as a? (June 2015)

6.     The proponent of Nuero Linguistic programming is?(June 2015)

7.     The English language comprises? (June 2015)

8.     Cognitive Psychology has practical applications in?(June 2015)

9.     Define morphology ? (Aug 2021)

10.  Identify the pair which is not correctly matched ? Reinforcement – practice, Habit – repetition,

11.  Acquisition - exposure , Constructivism - reproduction ? (2021

 

Aug)

2 Marks

 

 

 

1.

What is stress? (2017)

 

2.

What is allophone? (2017)

 

3.

What are consonants? given examples.(2017)

 

4.

What is register? (2017)

 

5.

Differentiate between language and acquisition?(2015 Dec)

 

6.

what is phoneme?(June 2018)

 

7.

What is dialect? (June 2018)

 

8.

Give two implications of psycholinguistic theory in ELT ? ( 2021 Aug)

4 Marks

 

 

 

1.

Explain Intonation with examples? (2017)

 

2.

Explain word stress with eg? (June 2018)

 

3.

Differentiate between formal and functional grammar?(June 2018)

 

4.

Explain briefly LAD of Noam Chomsky ?(2017)

 

10 Marks


5.      How can we blend Krashen and Chomsky as regards to their View of language teaching? (Dec 2015)

6.      How will you apply MI theory In your English language class?(Dec 2015)

7.      Bring out the importance of English language in present era?(Dec 2015)

8.      Explain constructivist Approach chomsky’s theories on language acquisition?(June 2022)

 

1.      Explain Krashen's hypothesis in second language acquisition ? (2021 Aug)

2.      Compare the basic assumptions of language acquisition or learning process as presented by the theories of behaviourism and constructivism? (2021 Aug


 1.     Discuss Noam Chomsky’s contributions to – English language teaching-learning?(June 22.     Examine the perceptible difference between the behaviorist and the constructivist approach of language teaching?(Dec 2015)3.     List language teaching techniques and observe how they can be updated? (Dec 2015)4.     Explain the theory of multiple Intelligence in relation to English teaching?(June2018)

END


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