Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
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8 Individual differences in L2 users and L2 learners Mostly this book concentrates on the factors that L2 learners have in common. Teachers usually have to deal with students in groups rather than as individuals; it is what all the class do that is important. However, at the end of the lesson, the group turns into 25 individuals who go off to use the second language for their own needs and in their own ways. Particular features of the learner’s personality or mind encourage or inhibit L2 learning. The concern of the present chapter is with how L2 learners vary as individuals, mostly dealing with language in a Lang 5 sense of knowledge in the mind. This is clearly one difference between first and second language learning. Apart from a handful of children with specific language impairment (SLI), everybody manages to learn to speak their first language, more or less by definition – human language is whatever human beings learn to speak. However, we are all aware of vast differences in how well people can speak a second language. On the one hand you have the Czech-born financier Robert Maxwell, who was able to pass for English, on the other you have Henry Kissinger, forever sounding German. Every teacher knows that some students will learn a second language effortlessly, others will struggle for ever. Some of the explanation for this undoubtedly lies in the diff- erent situations; children learn their L1 naturally in the intimate situations of their family; school learners learn an L2 formally in the public situation of the classroom. However, there still seems to be an element that can only be attributed to the individual; some people can, others cannot. Whatever the teaching method used, some students will prosper, some will not, often despite their best intent- ions. This chapter will look at some of the ways in which individuals differ that have been linked to how well they learn a second language in the classroom. Some have already been seen in Chapter 6: individuals choose for themselves how to process or learn language. It should be noted that much of this research is applied psychology rather than applied linguistics, making use of concepts and measures from psychology rather than from disciplines to do with language. This sometimes means it treats language teaching as if it were the teaching of any other subject on the curriculum, rather than concentrating on its unique nature. |
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