Pedagogical grammar as the framework of tefl research. part 10. the impact of formal teaching on the foreign language acquisition

  • L. Chernovaty The School of Foreign Languages, Mykola Lukash Translation Studies Department, V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3411-9408
Keywords: acquisition, consciousness, foreign language, formal teaching, learning

Abstract

The relevance of the paper is accounted for by the need of establishing a common framework to integrate the research in teaching foreign languages, specifically in the development of grammar competence, into a single area with uniform approaches, terminology and criteria. Its aim is to look for the ways of promoting the efficiency of grammar subskills development by taking into consideration its key features, specifically, the role of formal teaching in this process. Basing on the analysis of experimental data related to the effect of the monitor on the sequence of the foreign-language grammar structures acquisition, on the one hand, and the rate and quality of the foreign-language acquisition, on the other, it is concluded that their results are conflicting or, at least, incongruent. The author explains it by the fact that most of the experiments were carried out in the countries where it was possible to communicate in the target language outside the classroom. Hence, it is unfeasible to distinguish the improvement of the subjects’ performance that resulted from the formal teaching (i.e. “learning”, in Krashen’s terminology) and the one brought about by communicating in the target language environment outside the classroom (i.e. “acquisition”). The author assumes that in the experiments that showed low efficiency of formal teaching as opposed to “acquisition” in the target language environment outside the classroom, the subjects might have practised outside the classroom much more than they did in the classroom. And the picture might have been the opposite one in the experiments that proved the advantage of the formal teaching. The author believes that the main shortcoming of the said research is the absence of information concerning the subjects’ activities outside the classroom. It is important, as some subjects might have intensively communicated with the native speakers outside the classroom improving their command of English, while others, due to the circumstances or personal characteristics (anxiety, etc.) might have been isolated from that kind of communication altogether. This constituted a major random variable that might have affected the experimental results. Furthermore, some subjects might have additionally learned grammar rules in their extracurricular time and thus complemented their “acquisition” mechanisms with those of “learning”. The author offers a list of other potential random variables (motivation, anxiety, attitude, aptitude, analytical capabilities, know ledge of the language structure) and outlines the prospects of the further research.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Chernovaty, L. (1999). Osnovy teorii pedagogicheskoi grammatiki inostrannogo yazyka [The Basics of the Foreign Language Pedagogical Grammar Theory]. Doctor of Sciences thesis. Kharkiv: V.N.Karazin Kharkiv National University [in Russian].

Briere, E. (1978). Variables affecting native Mexican children’s learning Spanish as a second language. Language Learning, vol. 28(1), pp. 159–174 [in English].

Carroll, J. (1967).Foreign language proficiency levels trained by language majors near graduation from college. Foreign Language Annals, vol. 1(2), pp. 131–151 [in English].

Chihara, T. and Oller, J. (1978). Attitudes and attained proficiency in EFL: a sociolinguistic study of adult Japanese speakers. Language Learning, vol. 28(1), pp. 55–68 [in English].

Dulay, H., Burt, M. and Krashen, S. (1982). Language Two. New York: Oxford Univ. Press [in English].

Ellis, R. (1989). Understanding Second Language Acquisition. London: Oxford Univ. Press [in English].

Fathman, A. (1978). ESL and EFL learning: similar or dissimilar? In: C. Blatchford and J. Schachter (Eds.). On TESOL’78: EFL Policies, Programs, Practices. Washington, D.C.: TESOL, pp. 48–56.

Fathman, A. (1975). Language background, age and the order of acquisition of English structures. In: M. Burt, H. Dulay (Eds.). New Direction in Second Language Learning, Teaching and Bilingual Education. Washington, D.C.: TESOL, pp. 33–43 [in English].

Fathman, A. (1976). Variables affecting the successful learning of English as a second language. TESOL Quarterly, vol. 10(4), pp. 433–441 [in English].

Felix, S. (1981). The effect of formal instruction on second language acquisition. Language Learning, vol. 31(1), pp. 87–112 [in English].

Fujino, H. (2019). L2 learners’ perceptions of grammar: the case of JFL learners in the UK. The Language Learning Journal [in English]. DOI: 10.1080/09571736.2019.1578399. Published Online: 01 Mar 2019.

Gholami, L. and Gholami, J. (2020). Uptake in incidental focus-on-form episodes concerning formulaic language in advanced adult EFL classes. Language Teaching Research, vol. 24 (2), pp. 189–219 [in English]. DOI: https:/doi.org/10.1177/1362168818783442.

Hale T. and Budar E. (1970). Are TESOL classes the only answer? Modern Language Journal, vol. 54(7), pp. 487–492 [in English].

Hernández, T.A. (2011). Re-examining the role of explicit instruction and input flood on the acquisition of Spanish discourse markers. Language Teaching Research, vol. 15(2), pp. 159–182 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1362168810388694.

Krashen, S. (1981). Second Language Acquisition and Second Language Learning. Cambridge: Prentice Hall [in English].

Krashen, S., Jones, C., Zelinaky, S., Usprich, C. (1978). How important is instruction? ELT Journal, N. 32, pp. 257–261 [in English].

Krashen, S. and Seliger, H. (1976). The role of formal and informal linguistic environments in adult second language learning. International Journal of Psycholinguistics, N 3, pp. 15–21 [in English].

Krashen, S., Seliger, H.and Hartnett, D. (1974). Two studies in second language learning. Kritikon Literarum, vol. 2(3), pp. 220–228 [in English].

Leow, R.P. (2018). ISLA: How implicit or how explicit should it be? Theoretical, empirical, and pedagogical/curricular issues. Language Teaching Research, vol. 23, N 4. P. 476–493 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1362168818776674.

Liamkina, O. and Ryshina-Pankova, M. (2012). Grammar Dilemma: Teaching Grammar as a Resource for Making Meaning. The Modern Language Journal, vol. 96 (2), pp. 270–289 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-781.2012.01333_1.x.

Lightbown, P. (1983). Exploring relationships between developmental and instructional sequences in L2 acquisition. In: Seliger M., Long M. (eds.). Classroom Oriented Research in Second Language Acquisition. Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House, pp. 82–91 [in English].

Lightbown, P., Spada, N. and Wallace, R. (1980). Some effects of instruction on child and adolescent ESL learners. In: Scarcella, R. and S. Krashen (Eds.). Research in Second Language Acquisition. Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House, pp. 68–81 [in English].

Liviero, S. (2017). Grammar teaching in secondary school foreign language learning in England: teachers’ reported beliefs and observed practices. The Language Learning Journal, vol. 45 (1), pp. 26–50 [in English]. DOI: 10.1080/09571736.2016.1263677.

Makino, T. (1979). English morpheme acquisition order of Japanese secondary school students. Abstract of PhD Dissertation. TESOL Quarterly, N 13, p. 428 [in English].

Marsden, H. and Slabakova, R. (2017). Grammatical meaning and the second language classroom: Introduction. Language Teaching Research, vol. 23(2), pp. 147–157 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/ 10.1177/1362168817752718.

Mason, C. (1971). The relevance of intensive training in English as a foreign language for university students. Language Learning, vol. 21(2), pp. 197–204 [in English].

Mei-Hsing, T. (2018). The effects of explicit instruction on L2 learners’ acquisition of verb–noun collocations. Language Teaching Research, vol. 24(2), pp. 138–146 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1362168818795188.

Perkins, K. and Larsen-Freeman, D. (1975). The effect of formal language instruction on the order of morpheme acquisition. Language Learning, vol. 25(2), pp. 237–243 [in English].

Pica, T. (1983). Adult acquisition of English as a second language under different conditions of exposure. Language Learning, vol. 33(4), pp. 465–497 [in English].

Schumann, J. (1978). The Pidginization Process: A Model for Second Language Acquisition. Rowley, Mass.: Newbury Press [in English].

Umeda, M., Snape, N., Yusa, N. and Wiltshier, J. (2017). The long-term effect of explicit instruction on learners’ knowledge on English articles. Language Teaching Research, vol. 23(2), pp. 179–199 [in English]. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1362168817739648

Upshur, J. (1968). Four experiments on the relation between foreign language teaching and learning. Language Learning, vol. 18, NN 1–2, pp. 111–124.

Published
2021-06-08
How to Cite
Chernovaty, L. (2021). Pedagogical grammar as the framework of tefl research. part 10. the impact of formal teaching on the foreign language acquisition. Teaching Languages at Higher Educational Establishments at the Present Stage. Intersubject Relations, (38), 251-265. https://doi.org/10.26565/2073-4379-2021-38-16