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CHAPTER 2 THE NATURE OF LEARNER LANGUAGE

CHAPTER 2 THE NATURE OF LEARNER LANGUAGE. Ellis, Rod. 2003. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford: Oxford University Press PP 15-30 Mazidatur rizqiyah(2201410122) Introduction to Second Language Acquisition.

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CHAPTER 2 THE NATURE OF LEARNER LANGUAGE

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  1. CHAPTER 2 THE NATURE OF LEARNER LANGUAGE • Ellis, Rod. 2003. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford: Oxford University Press PP 15-30 • Mazidatur rizqiyah(2201410122) • Introduction to Second Language Acquisition 32

  2. The main way of investigating L2 acquiaition is by collecting and describing sample of learner • The description may focus on the kinds of errors learners make and how these errors change over time, or it my identify developmental patterns 32

  3. ERRORS AND ERROR ANALYSIS There are are three good reasons for focusing on errors: • They are conpicuous • It’s useful for teacher to know what errors learners make • Making errors may actually help learners to learn when they self correct the errors they make. 32

  4. How to analyze errors • Identfying errors • Describeing errors • Explaining errors • Error evaluation 32

  5. Identifying Errors • Telling the story orally and writing it out • Comparing the the two sentences • Reconstruct the correct sentences • Distinguish errors and mistake 32

  6. Describing errors • Classifying errors into grammatical catagories • Trying to identify general ways in which the learners’ utterence differ from the reconstructed target language-utterence. 32

  7. How to distinguish errors and mistake • to check the consistency of learner’s performance. • to ask learners to try to correct their own deviant utterences 32

  8. Explaining errors • Some errors are common only to leaners who share the same mother tongue or whose mother tongue manifest the same linguistic property. • Example Speaker of Bantu Languages in Southern Africa frequently use the preposition ‘at’ to refer to direction as well as location. “we went at Johannesburg last weekend.” (Bantu languages employ a single preposition ‘at’) 32

  9. Error evaluation • Global Errors Violate overall structure of a sentence and for this reason may make it difficult to process.e. g The policeman was in this corner whistle... • Local Errors affect only a single constituent in the sentence. 32

  10. DEVELOPMENTAL PATTERNS • L2 Learners make are universal and also explore the univerality of L2 acquisition by examining the developmental pattern learners follow 32

  11. How to explore the universal of L2 acquisition • The early stages of L2 acquisition: finding out how a language is learned as natural by investigating • The order of acquisition:to investigate the order of acquisition, researchers a numberal of grammatical structures study • Sequence of acquisition: moving the through a series of stages en route to acquiring the native speaker rule. • Some implication: Learners language changemos over time is the most important finding of SLA. 32

  12. The early stages of L2 acquisition • How a language is learned: • A silent period They learn a lot about language just through listening to or reading it. • Acquisition Order Leaners begin to learn the grammar of the L2. • The sequence of acquisition Leaners learn particular grammatical structure, such as past tense. 32

  13. The order of acquisition • How to investigate the order of Acquisition; • Choose a number of grammatical structures to study. • Collect samples of learner language. • Identify how accurately each feature is used by different leaners. 32

  14. Sequence of acquisition • Transitional construction • U-shaped course of development • Restructuring 32

  15. Some Implication • Some linguistic features (particularly grammatical) are inherently easier to learn than others. • Example of implication for both SLA theory\ and for language teaching. learners master plural –s before third person –s 32

  16. VARIABILITY IN LANGUAGE LEARNING Leaners vary in their use of the L2 according to; • Linguistic Context In one context they use one form while in other contexts they use alternate forms. • Situasional Context Learners use the correct target-language forms in formal context and non-target forms in informal context. • psycholinguistic context 32

  17. THANK YOU 32

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