Theories of Second Language Acquisition
Theories of Second Language Acquisition
Theories of Second Language Acquisition
The Natural Order hypothesis is based on research findings (Dulay & Burt,
1974; Fathman, 1975; Makino, 1980 cited in Krashen, 1987) which
suggested that the acquisition of grammatical structures follows a 'natural
order' which is predictable. For a given language, some grammatical
structures tend to be acquired early while others late. This order seemed to
be independent of the learners' age, L1 background, conditions of exposure,
and although the agreement between individual acquirers was not always
100% in the studies, there were statistically significant similarities that
reinforced the existence of a Natural Order of language acquisition. Krashen
however points out that the implication of the natural order hypothesis is not
that a language program syllabus should be based on the order found in the
studies. In fact, he rejects grammatical sequencing when the goal is
language acquisition.
According to Krashen, the study of the structure of the language can have
general educational advantages and values that high schools and colleges
may want to include in their language programs. It should be clear,
however, that examining irregularity, formulating rules and teaching
complex facts about the target language is not language teaching, but rather
is "language appreciation" or linguistics.
The only instance in which the teaching of grammar can result in language
acquisition (and proficiency) is when the students are interested in the
subject and the target language is used as a medium of instruction. Very
often, when this occurs, both teachers and students are convinced that the
study of formal grammar is essential for second language acquisition, and
the teacher is skillful enough to present explanations in the target language
so that the students understand. In other words, the teacher talk meets the
requirements for comprehensible input and perhaps with the students'
participation the classroom becomes an environment suitable for acquisition.
Also, the filter is low in regard to the language of explanation, as the
students' conscious efforts are usually on the subject matter, on what is
being talked about, and not the medium.
This is a subtle point. In effect, both teachers and students are deceiving
themselves. They believe that it is the subject matter itself, the study of
grammar, that is responsible for the students' progress, but in reality their
progress is coming from the medium and not the message. Any subject
matter that held their interest would do just as well.
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