sheila tamizrad conditions for learning
TRANSCRIPT
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Conditions for Learning Dr. Ali BakhshiBy: Sh. TamizradFall 2014
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Content
• Acculturation• Input and interaction
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Acculturation
• Target discourse communities
• Schumann (1986): Success or failure was
linked to differences in the levels of social and
psychological contact that the groups of
second-language learners had with the target
language group.
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Acculturation
• Schumann (1986): The degree to which a
learner acculturates to the target language
group will control the degree to which he
acquires the second language.
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Factors Affecting the Level of Acculturation
1. Power Relations Between the Two Groups
2. Desire to Assimilate
3. Extent of Shared Facilities
4. Psychological (Language and Culture Shock)
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Research
• Kirkgoz (1999)
• Aim of study: If studying in a program geared
toward acculturation led to better learning of
English
• An English medium university in Turkey
• 1-year pre-university English-language program
(Department of Economics and Business)
• Two groups: Control group + treatment group
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The treatment
A number of acculturation-oriented interventions:
1. The treatment group was formed into a replica
target discourse community.
2. They were required to periodically attend the
lectures held in the Department of Economics and
Business.
3. EAP instruction for the RDC group included
content from Economics and Business studies.
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Result
• The treatment group members
outperformed the control group members.
• Students who had more social and
psychological contact with the target
discourse community, the Department of Economics
and Business, were more successful than those
who had more limited contact.
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Applications
• Benson (1994) There are some “structures, values,
norms, and procedures of that culture, which may or
may not parallel his or her background knowledge from
the first language environment”.
• Swales (1990): Genres are understood to signal a
discourse community’s norms and ways of thinking
and constructing knowledge.
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Applications
Wharton (1999): Three models of acculturation in relation
to genre-based approaches in ESP
1. Induction: A weak version of acculturation theory
The aim is for the students to learn not only the genre conventions (linguistic
information), but also the ways of thinking and the belief systems of the community
2. Adjunct: Kirkgoz’ study (1999): A strong version
3. Apprenticeship or Mentoring: the study reported by Parks
(2001): The strongest version
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Input and Intraction
• (Stern, 1992): The concepts of linguistic input and
interaction as requisites for language learning
• Krashen’s Input Hypothesis (1982)
• Long (1996): Developed Krashen’s Input Hypothesis,
Interaction Hypothesis
Corrective feedback (Negative feedback)
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Input and Intraction
• Schmidt,1994; Sharwood Smith, 1993: More noticing
leads to more learning.
• The level of attention learners pay to the input in the
language environment plays a role in intake, that is, a
language form or use is incorporated into the learner’s
developing second language in relation to the level of
conscious attention the learner pays to it.
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Research
• Pica, Young, and Doughty (1987):
Learners who were allowed to ask questions
about a written text had better comprehension
of it than those who did not but read a simplified
version of the text.
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Research
• Robinson, Strong, Whittle, and Nobe (2001): An
experiment to assess the effect of a task-based approach on the
development of EAP oral discussion skills.
• Structured focus on form, where teachers provide many
activities for directing learner attention to aspects of their
task performance that differ from native speaker norms,
plus extensive whole task practice is equivalent to carefully
targeted and sequenced micro-skills teaching.
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Applications
• Input and interaction hypotheses have also led to
proposals for task-based language teaching.
• Tasks: Pieces of work in everyday life with a specific
objective, such as painting a fence, filling
in a form, making an airline reservation. They are
nonlinguistic units.
• Jasso-Aguilar (1999): Task-based Vs. Text-based
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Applications
Long and Crookes (1992): The design of task-based syllabuses for ESP
needs to include:
• Identification of target tasks (target situation tasks).
• Breaking the tasks down into target task types (subtasks/tasks
within the task)
• Development of pedagogical tasks.
• Assessment of students by task-based criteria—as established by
experts in their field, not language.
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