If I were to give an elevator speech about language learning (especially to administrators!), I would pare it down to these five concepts (and by no means am I trying to oversimply the language acquisition process nor to reduce it to a series of general platitudes) - this is what I have learned about the language acquisition process over these many years from reading/listening to Stephen Krashen, Bill Van Patten, and so many others whom I deeply respect:
- Language learning is unlike any other subject area, because it is not linear in nature.
- Because of this, learners do not acquire language on a prescribed timeline or at the same pace.
- The language acquisition process is subconscious in nature.
- When encountering L2, the brain on its own is constantly creating, making connections to, and revising its mental representation of that language.
- That language which the brain understands, it keeps and then creates, adds to, and refines those existing mental connections.
- That language which the brain does not understand, it throws out.
- As a result, learners need to interact with/have constant exposure to understandable, meaningful, purposeful messages in L2 so that the brain can create/revise its mental representation of that language.
For me, this elevator speech can then serve as a springboard to discuss other topics such as proficiency vs. performance, the need for compelling messages, the role of the affective filter in learning, the monitor hypothesis, etc.
Awesome
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