Ling/Span/Fren/Ger/Educ 466: SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION. Spring 2011 (Tuesdays 4-6:30; Psychology 251)

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Ling/Span/Fren/Ger/Educ 466: SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION Spring 2011 (Tuesdays 4-6:30; Psychology 251) Instructor Professor Joe Barcroft Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Office: Ridgley 405 Tel: 935-7951; E-mail: barcroft@wustl.edu Office hours: Tues and Thurs 10:30-11:30 Course Description There are many ways in which a second language can be acquired: from infancy as the child of bilingual parents, or later through formal instruction, immersion in a new culture, or in a particular work or social situation. This class is an inquiry into the processes by which acquisition occurs. Topics include the nature of language learning within the scope of other types of human learning, the relationship between first and second language acquisition; the role of linguistic, cognitive, and sociocultural factors; insights gained from analyzing learners' errors; key concepts such as interlanguage and communicative competence; bilingualism; the optimal age for second language acquisition; and a critical appraisal of different theories of second language acquisition. Both theoretical and instructional implications of second language acquisition research are considered. Required Texts Brown, H. D. (2007). Principles of Language Learning and Teaching (5th Edition). New York: Longman. VanPatten, B., & Williams, J. (Eds.). (2007). Theories in second language acquisition. Mahweh, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Grading Components Midterm (In-Class) Exam 25% Final (Take-Home) Activity 25% Final Paper 25% Article Presentation 10% Weekly Assignments 5% Participation 9% Completion of Online Evaluation of Course 1%

Grading Criteria 97-100 A+ 87-89 B+ 77-79 C+ 67-69 D+ 60 or below F 93-96 A 83-86 B 73-76 C 63-66 D 90-93 A- 80-83 B- 70-73 C- 60-63 D- Midterm Exam and Final (Take-Home) Activity There will be an in-class midterm exam toward the middle of the semester and a final take-home activity at the end of the semester. More details about preparing for both of these will be provided in class. Final Paper Each student may choose between two options for the final paper in this course: Option 1: Annotated Bibliography: The first option is compile an annotated bibliography of 7-8 articles on a topic related to second language acquisition. Option 2: Research Proposal: The second option is to prepare a research proposal on a topic related to second language acquisition. This research proposal will include a review of 4-5 key articles on the topic in question. The term paper should follow the style of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (5 th Edition). The length of the final paper should be 12-14 pages for undergraduates and 15-17 pages for graduate students. More specific instructions for the paper will be provided during the semester. Article Presentation Script During the semester each student will prepare to present a summary and a critical analysis of a selected study within the field of SLA. More specific instructions on how to prepare the article presentation, including an accompanying handout for other students, will be provided in class. Weekly Assignments Some weekly assignments will be given during the semester. Each student will receive a grade (5% of the final grade) that reflects how well the student completed each assignment. Different point totals will be assigned to different types of weekly assignments. Participation Each student will receive a participation grade for the course based upon the degree to which the student is prepared for class, volunteers, interacts, and actively takes part in the course. Absences from class will lower the final participation grade.

466 COURSE SCHEDULE (SPRING 2011) January 18 1. Course introduction 2. What is second language acquisition (SLA)? 3. What factors affect success in learning a second language? 4. Students questions about SLA 5. Some key issues in SLA 6. A brief introduction to some major theories and approaches: internal versus external theories generative linguistics and Universal Grammar (UG) (Chomsky) connectionism/emergentism/creed the Input Hypothesis (Krashen) the Interaction Hypothesis (Long) input processing principles (VanPatten) learnability and teachability (Pienemann) sociocultural/vygostkian approaches January 25 1. Key concepts in the study of language and SLA: key questions about SLA What is language? linguistic subsystems learning and teaching schools of thought (behaviorism, generativism, connectionism/emergentism, constructivism) competence versus performance nature versus nurture modularity versus general cognitive mechanisms systematicity and variability incomplete success and fossilization cross-linguistic influence and language transfer the information processing perspective (input > developing system > output) individual differences (cognitive, affective) 2. Historical overview of SLA research and language instruction: before 1950s 1950s to present current trends 3. What makes for a good theory of SLA? 4. Behaviorism and audiolingualism versus Krashen s Monitor Theory 5. The significance of Corder (1967) 6. Understanding learner language: contrastive analysis hypothesis Prator s hierarchy of difficulty cross-linguistic influence interlanguage error analysis interlingual versus intralingual transfer stages of development fossilization form-focused instruction error treatment 7. On Reading SLA Research Articles Read: Brown, Chs. 1 and 9; Theories, Preface, Chs. 1 and 2; Corder (1967)

February 1 1. First language (L1) acquisition: behaviorism generative linguistics connectionism serial versus parallel processing functional approaches competence versus performance comprehension and production nature versus nurture linguistic universals principles and parameters (generativism) systematicity and variability practice and frequency the role of input discourse competence insights from L1 acquisition applied to language teaching 2. The age issue in second language (L2) acquisition: the critical period hypothesis hemispheric lateralization the nature of age effects across different linguistic subsystems cognitive, affective, and linguistic considerations Read: Brown, Chs. 2-3; Johnson and Newport (1974); Wattendorf & Festman (2008) February 8 1. SLA within the scope of other types of human learning: learning and training Pavlov Skinner Ausubel systematic forgetting Rogers Gagne s 8 types of learning transfer interference overgeneralization inductive versus deductive reasoning language aptitude intelligence 2. Universal Grammar and SLA: Chomsky Universal Grammar (UG) basics of UG-based (generative) theory structure dependency principles and parameters minimalism functional categories UG and L1 acquisition availability of UG for L1 versus L2 acquisition 3. Connectionism/emergentism/CREED and SLA: parallel distributed processing neural networks nodes connectionism and L1 acquisition connectionist/emergentist/creed models of processes in SLA 4. Information processing and SLA 5. Perceptual saliency and SLA Read: Brown Ch. 4; Theories, Chs. 3 and 5

February 15 1. The role of input in SLA 2. Review of Krashen s Monitor Theory 3. Input, interaction, and output in SLA 4. Long s Interaction Hypothesis 5. Input processing and SLA 6. Input, intake, and developing system 7. Structured input and L2 instruction 8. Processability Theory 9. Lexical input processing Read: Brown, pp. 294-299 (on Krashen); Theories, Chs. 6-8 and 10 February 22 1. Learning styles and SLA: field dependence versus field independence left- versus right-brain dominance ambiguity tolerance versus intolerance reflectivity versus impulsivity visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners 2. Learning strategies and SLA: metacognitive: advanced organizers, directed attention, selective attention, selfmanagement, functional planning, self-monitoring, delayed production, self-evaluation cognitive: repetition, resourcing, translation, grouping, note taking, deduction, recombination, imagery auditory representation, the Keyword Method, contextualization, elaboration, transfer, inferencing socioaffective: cooperation, question for clarification 3. Communication strategies of L2 learners: avoidance: message abandonment, topic avoidance compensatory: circumlocution, approximation, use of all-purpose words, word coinage, prefabricated patterns, nonlinguistic signals, literal translation, foreignizing, code-switching, appeal for help, stalling or timegaining strategies-based instruction Read: Brown, Ch. 5 March 1 MIDTERM EXAM

March 8 1. The role of personality factors in SLA: affective factors: self-esteem, inhibition, risk-taking, anxiety, empathy, extroversion motivation: instrumental versus integrative, intrinsic versus extrinsic neurobiology of affect personality types and Myers-Briggs measuring affective factors 2. Sociocultural factors in SLA: stereotypes and generalizations attitudes second culture acquisition social distance Schumann s parameters of social distance culture in classrooms language policy world Englishes English as a second language (ESL) and foreign language (EFL) linguistic imperialism and language rights English only debate language, thought, and culture Sapir-Whorf (linguistic determinism) Vygotsky and SLA activity theory 3. Sociolinguistic approaches to SLA: ethnography of L2 communication variation in L2 use Schumann s pidginization and acculturation proposals L2 socialization March 15 Read: Brown, Chs. 6 and 7; Theories, Ch. 11 No Class (Spring Break) March 22 1. Communicative competence and L2 development: subcategories of communicative competence (grammatical, discourse, sociolinguistic, strategic, organizational, illocutionary) language functions (instrumental, regulatory, representational, interactional, personal, heuristic, imaginative) functional syllabuses discourse analysis conversation analysis the importance of pragmatics language and gender styles and registers nonverbal forms of communication 2. A history of L2 teaching approaches, methods, and techniques in light of SLA research: Grammar-Translation Gouin and Berlitz audiolingualism (ALM) community language learning suggestopedia the silent way total physical response (TPR) the Natural Approach strategies-based instruction methodology, approach, method, curriculum/syllabus, and technique L2 teaching by principles error treatment communicative language teaching (CLT) Brown s ecology of language acquisition Read: Brown, Ch. 8; Savignon (1972)

March 29 Summary and critical appraisal of SLA theories: theories of SLA versus theories of components of SLA domains and generalizations hypotheses and claims criteria for a viable theory evaluating current SLA theories Brown s suggestions for becoming a theory builder April 5 Read: Brown, Ch. 10; Theories, Ch. 12 1-paragraph description of final paper topic with at least 3 article citations 1. Norbert Schmitt lecture 2. Informal Discussion with Norbert Schmitt 3. Incidental and intentional learning in SLA 4. Appraisal of the role of formal instruction in SLA naturalistic and classroom SLA types of focus on form defining SLA success route versus rate immediate versus ultimate attainment effects of explicit and implicit grammar instruction interface versus no interface positions Read: VanPatten and Cadierno (1993) Article Presentation Script ** Note: Professor Norbert Schmitt s workshop on April 5 from 9-10am ** April 12 1. L2 acquisition and instruction across different linguistic subsystems and modalities: the roles of phonological, lexical, and pragmatic development in SLA comprehension and production in the spoken and written modes similarities and differences between the acquisition of signed languages and spoken languages 2. The developing bilingual lexicon: theory and research on L2 vocabulary learning development of conceptual mediation in L2 3. Multi-competence and effects of L2 on L1: types of bilinguals (coordinate, compound) language interference Read: Cook (2003); Kroll and Tokowicz (2001)

April 19 Article Presentations April 26 1. Neurolinguistic research on language acquisition and bilingualism 2. Informal information-sharing session related to completed term papers 3. Current and future directions in SLA research and L2 pedagogy *TAKE-HOME FINAL ACTIVITY DISTRIBUTED TODAY. Read: Green (2008) Final paper *Note: The take-home final activity will be distributed in class on April 26 th and will be due on Wednesday May 11 at 8 pm.

Citations for Articles (Required Reading) Jan 25 Corder, S. P. (1967). The significance of learners errors. Reprinted in J. C. Richards (Ed.) (1974, 1984), Error analysis: perspectives on second language acquisition (pp. 19-27). London: Longman. (Originally in International Review of Applied Linguistics, 5, 161-169.) Feb 1 Johnson, J. S., & Newport, E. L. (1989). Critical period effects in second language learning: The influence of maturational state on the acquisition of English as a second language. Cognitive Psychology, 21, 60-99. Wattendorf, E., & Festman, J. (2008). Images of the multilingual brain: The effect of age of second language acquisition. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 28, 3-24. Mar 22 Savignon, S. J. (1972). Teaching for communicative competence: A classroom study. In S. J. Savignon, Communicative competence: Theory and classroom practice (pp. 67-80). Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. Apr 5 VanPatten, B., & Cadierno, T. (1993). Explicit instruction and input processing. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 15, 225-243. Apr 12 Cook, V. (2003). Introduction: The changing L1 in the L2 user s mind. In V. Cook (Ed.), Effects of the second language on the first (pp. 1-18). Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Kroll, J. F., & Tokowicz, N. (2001). The development of conceptual representation for words in second language. In J. L. Nicol (Ed.), One mind, two languages: Bilingual language processing (pp. 49-71). Malden, MA: Blackwell. Apr 26 Green, D. (2008). Bilingual aphasia: Adapted language networks and their control. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 28, 25-48.