1 / 17

The nature of learner language

The nature of learner language. Ellis 2003 Chapter 2 pp. 15-30 By. Zumika Elvina 2201410057. Errors and error analysis. Good reasons for focusing in errors. They are conspicuous feature of learner language. It is useful for teacher .

janet
Télécharger la présentation

The nature of learner language

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The nature of learner language Ellis 2003 Chapter 2 pp. 15-30 By. ZumikaElvina 2201410057

  2. Errors and error analysis • Good reasons for focusing in errors. • They are conspicuous feature of learner language. • It is useful for teacher . • It helps learner to learn when they self-correct the errors they make.

  3. Identifying errors • To identify errors we have to compare the sentences learners produce with what seem to be the normal or ‘correct’ sentences in the target language with correspond with them. • Example: A man and a little boy was watching him. the correct sentence should be: A man and a little boy were watching him.

  4. Identifying … • Reconstruct the correct sentence. • Example: The big of them contained a snake. one way of reconstructing the correct sentence is: The bigger of them contained a snake. another possibility The big one contained a snake.

  5. Errors or Mistakes • Errors reflect gaps in a learner’s knowledge; they occur because the learner does not know what is correct. • Mistakes reflect occasional lapses in performance; they occur because, in a particular instance, the learner is unable to perform what he or she knows.

  6. Describing errors • To classify errors into grammatical categories. • Try to identify general ways in which the learners’ utterances differ from the reconstructed target-language utterances. • Classifying errors: • to diagnose learners’ learning problems at any one stage of their development; • to plot how changes in error patterns occur overtime.

  7. Explaining Errors • Errors are, to a large extent, systematic, and to a certain extent, predictable. • Many of errors are universal. • Some errors are common only to learners who share the same mother tongue or whose mother tongue manifest the same linguistic property.

  8. Explaining … • Different sources of errors: • Omission error • Overgeneralization error • Transfer error

  9. Error evaluation • Global errors  violate the overall structure of a sentence and for this reason may make it difficult to process. • Local errors  affect only a single constituent in the sentence.

  10. Developmental patterns • The early stages of L2 acquisition  by investigating what learners do when exposed to the L2 in communicative settings. undergo a silent period, they may be learning a lot about the language just through listening to or reading it. learn the grammar of the L2 Acquisition order Sequence of acquisition

  11. Developmental … • The order of acquisition to investigate  choose a number of grammatical structures to study. an accuracy order  they rank the features according to how accurately each feature is used by the learners.

  12. Developmental … • Sequence of acquisition

  13. Variability in learner language • Learner language is variable. At any given stage of development, learners sometimes employ one form and sometimes another. • Learner language is systematic since it is possible that variability is systematic. • In linguistics context, they use one form while in the other context they use alternate forms.

  14. Variability … • In situational context, learners are no different from native speakers. • In psycholinguistic context, whether learners have the opportunity to plan their production. • Form-function mind mapping • Free variation

  15. Summary • Researchers focused on: • Learners’ errors; • Developing procedures for identifying; • Describing; • Explaining; • Evaluating them. • Subsequently, researchers focused on exploring the regularities of L2 acquisition by searching for ‘orders’ and ‘sequences’ of acquisition.

  16. Sum… • Research on variability has sought to so how that, although allowance should perhaps be made for some free variation, variability in learner language is systematic. • Variability plays an integrative part in the overall pattern of development, with learners moving through a series of stages that reflect different kinds of variability.

  17. Thank You

More Related