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Listening before speaking

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lengua
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 Message 73 of 83
20 October 2006 at 9:06am | IP Logged 
However, a motivated adult with an effective study plan will not require five years to surpass (much less acquire) the grammatical or lexical abilities of a five year old. We can take advantage of things gained in adulthood to help us learn languages more quickly.

Edited by lengua on 20 October 2006 at 9:11am

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Linguamor
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 Message 74 of 83
20 October 2006 at 11:58am | IP Logged 
Without meaningful exposure to the language (comprehensible input), the adult learner will never match the grammatical accuracy of the 5-year-old, nor use the vocabulary in a native-like way.
In a classroom setting, adults do learn more quickly than adults, but classroom language learning often results in only very low levels of language proficiency.Under naturalistic conditions, children (before the critical period) learn faster than adults. I have known many adults who have struggled for years (studying grammar, memorizing words) to learn a language and still could not keep up a simple conversation.For those who were interested, I was able to help them to fluency in a matter of weeks with (you guessed it) comprehensible input.


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CaitO'Ceallaigh
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 Message 75 of 83
20 October 2006 at 12:56pm | IP Logged 
Linguamor wrote:
A five-year-old child has essentially mastered the grammar of his/her language and has a vocabulary of several thousand words with native mastery. Adult language learners vary widely in the level achieved - many never attain native-like mastery of the grammar or vocabulary. Successful language learners have had large amounts of comprehensible input. Comprehensible input includes not only listening, but reading as well.


Can you explain more what comprehensible input is?
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patuco
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 Message 76 of 83
20 October 2006 at 1:36pm | IP Logged 
lengua wrote:
However, a motivated adult with an effective study plan will not require five years to surpass (much less acquire) the grammatical or lexical abilities of a five year old. We can take advantage of things gained in adulthood to help us learn languages more quickly.

That's exactly what I meant.
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Linguamor
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 Message 77 of 83
20 October 2006 at 1:46pm | IP Logged 
CaitO'Ceallaigh wrote:


Can you explain more what comprehensible input is?


Comprehensible input is simply language that is understood. Imagine you are sitting on a train and there is a mother and child sitting across from you. The child won't stay seated, and the mother repeatedly replaces the child on the seat while saying "sit" in the local language. It's a long train ride and the mother and child are hard to ignore. The child is receiving comprehensible input, and so are you. This is a real, if simple example. The human brain is designed to learn language this way, and adults still have this natural language learning ability. We acquire languages when we understand messages in the language. Studying grammar and vocabulary may contribute to learning a language - they make input more comprehensible - but comprehensible input is necessary for real fluency and accuracy.

Listening to language recordings or radio, reading, watching TV and movies, or conversing in a language with native speakers - these are all sources of comprehensible input. Whenever you are understanding bits of language you did not understand before, your brain is receiving the data it needs to acquire the language.     

Edited by Linguamor on 20 October 2006 at 2:10pm

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Linguamor
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 Message 78 of 83
20 October 2006 at 2:38pm | IP Logged 
patuco wrote:
lengua wrote:
However, a motivated adult with an effective study plan will not require five years to surpass (much less acquire) the grammatical or lexical abilities of a five year old. We can take advantage of things gained in adulthood to help us learn languages more quickly.

That's exactly what I meant.


The level reached by the motivated adult after five years will depend on his/her language learning aptitude and on what the "study plan" involves. Most, especially if they have had only limited amounts of comprehensible input, will make mistakes of a type not made by native speakers, even five-year-old native speakers, for example gender agreement mistakes, mistakes using the subjunctive, non-native-like use of vocabulary, etc. There is abundant second language acquisition research attesting to this.   

Edited by Linguamor on 20 October 2006 at 2:46pm

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patuco
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 Message 79 of 83
20 October 2006 at 4:22pm | IP Logged 
Linguamor wrote:
The level reached by the motivated adult after five years will depend on his/her language learning aptitude and on what the "study plan" involves.

Some adults might be forced to learn languages even though they hate it (perhaps they have to emigrate or their job demands it) and they might struggle since they have a self-imposed mental barrier against the language. I think that most adults are under the impression that it's either impossible to learn a new language as an adult (therefore they never try) or, when they bravely take the plunge, they become disillusioned after a few days of using the latest guaranteed method (which promises complete fluency after studying for 5 minutes a day for three months).

It takes a great deal of motivation to learn a language and I would imagine that those who can be bothered to persevere with their language of choice must also be exposed to quite a large amount of comprehensible input. Therefore, I would say that after five years of serious studying and learning, including using native materials (books, TV, radio, etc solely in the language) and possibly an immersion trip or two, any adult should have a larger vocabulary and be able to express him/herself better than a five-year-old native.



Linguamor wrote:
Most, especially if they have had only limited amounts of comprehensible input, will make mistakes of a type not made by native speakers, even five-year-old native speakers, for example gender agreement mistakes, mistakes using the subjunctive, non-native-like use of vocabulary, etc. There is abundant second language acquisition research attesting to this.

Would it be possible to provide a link to some of this research?

Edited by patuco on 20 October 2006 at 4:23pm

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lengua
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 Message 80 of 83
20 October 2006 at 6:01pm | IP Logged 
Linguamor wrote:
Most, especially if they have had only limited amounts of comprehensible input, will make mistakes of a type not made by native speakers, even five-year-old native speakers, for example gender agreement mistakes, mistakes using the subjunctive, non-native-like use of vocabulary, etc. There is abundant second language acquisition research attesting to this.


Speaking of research, most of what I've read would disagree with this. Rather, the research I've read suggests a five year old frequently makes mistakes in gender assignment, as well as in his or her understanding of the subjunctive. These mistakes are improved with time, but only over a period of several years - well into adolescence, in fact. I would not say a child's understanding of either vocabulary or complex grammatical properties would be better than the comprehension of an adult *effectively* studying the same language for the same period of time.

Link 1.

The Acquisition of Mood Clauses in Spanish Relative Clauses wrote:
Although children acquire Spanish subjunctive morphology early in the process of language acquisition, they only master mood selection in a staged process that lasts for several years.


Link 2.

The acquisition of control crosslinguistically: structural and lexical factors in learning to licence PRO. wrote:

Twenty-three Greek-speaking four- to five-year-olds and 10 adults, 29 Spanish-speaking four- to five-year-olds, 18 six- to seven-year-olds and eight adults took part in act-out experiments. The results indicate an awareness of language-particular distinctions governing the interpretation of EC complement subjects. However, child speakers of both languages experience difficulty in giving sentence external reference, leading to error in the case of subjunctive sentences for Spanish-speaking children.


Link 3.

The development of naming and word fluency: evidence from Hebrew-speaking children between ages 8 and 17. wrote:

Naming and word fluency tests are commonly used in neuropsychological evaluations of both children and adults. The current work examines at which age performance on these tests reaches adult level. One hundred fifty children, 30 in each of 5 age groups (8-9, 10-11, 12-13, 14-15, 16-17), and 30 adults ages 18 to 29, participated in the study. Participants completed a Hebrew naming test, a three-letter phonemic fluency task, and a three-category semantic fluency task (animals, fruits and vegetables, and vehicles). Results show that all measures increase steadily from age 8 to age 17. No difference between the 16- to 17-year-old adolescents and the adults was found on the naming test and on the phonemic fluency task, but such a difference was documented for semantic fluency. The relative contribution of the maturation of vocabulary and the development of efficient retrieval processes to performance on naming and fluency tasks is discussed.






Lots more research is available via Pubmed or Google Scholar, though in the older articles, it can be difficult to find more than the abstract for free online.

Edited by lengua on 20 October 2006 at 6:29pm



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