المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6563 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
Occurrence as predicative complements in copular structures
2025-04-09
Some diagnostics for the logical types of adjectives
2025-04-09
مصادر الإشعاع المؤين
2025-04-09
تيار النزف BLEEDING CURRENT
2025-04-09
Expressing an extreme property (d)
2025-04-09
.تيار متردد ALTERNATING CURRENT
2025-04-09

الأساس الدولي لحق الترشح
2023-11-22
قاعدة « لا تعاد الصلاة إلّا من خمس‌ »
20-9-2016
Complexation Equilibria
18-7-2017
الصورة الفنية أو الجمالية
21-7-2020
التصنيف حسب مرحلة النشأة للمدن – مرحلة المدينة الكبيرة
18/10/2022
Manganese for Health and biology
29-11-2018

Focus on the learner  
  
466   08:50 صباحاً   date: 1-3-2022
Author : George Yule
Book or Source : The study of language
Page and Part : 190-14


Read More
Date: 2024-01-13 617
Date: 2024-01-16 561
Date: 6-1-2022 776

Focus on the learner

The most fundamental change in the area of L2 learning in recent years has been a shift from concern with the teacher, the textbook and the method to an interest in the learner and the acquisition process. For example, one radical feature of most communicative approaches is the toleration of “errors” produced by students. Traditionally, “errors” were regarded negatively and had to be avoided or eradicated. The more recent acceptance of such errors in learners’ use of the L2 is based on a fundamental shift in perspective from the more traditional view of how L2 learning takes place.

Rather than consider a Spanish (L1) speaker’s production of in the room there are three womens as simply a failure to learn correct English (which can be remedied through extra practice of the correct form), we can look at this utterance as an indication of the natural L2 acquisition process in action. An “error,” then, is not something that hinders a student’s progress, but is probably a clue to the active learning progress being made by the student as he or she tries out ways of communicating in the new language. Just as children acquiring their L1 produce certain types of ungrammatical forms at times, so we might expect the L2 learner to produce similar forms at certain stages. The example of womens might be seen as a type of overgeneralization (of -s as the plural marker), used by the learner in accordance with the most common way of making plural forms in English.