2. WHAT IS LANGUAGE?
Language is a human system
of communication that uses
arbitrary signals, such as voice
sounds, gestures, and/or
written symbols.
3. NOAM CHOMSKY BELIEVES THAT
CHILDREN ARE BORN WITH AN
INHERITED ABILITY TO LEARN ANY
HUMAN LANGUAGE.
4. CHOMSKY BELIEVES THAT EVERY
CHILD HAS A ‘LANGUAGE
ACQUISITION DEVICE’ OR LAD
WHICH ENCODES THE MAJOR
PRINCIPLES OF A LANGUAGE AND
ITS GRAMMATICAL STRUCTURES
INTO THE CHILD’S BRAIN. CHILDREN
HAVE THEN ONLY TO LEARN NEW
VOCABULARY AND APPLY THE
SYNTACTIC STRUCTURES.
5.
6. CHOMSKY POINTS OUT THAT A CHILD COULD
NOT POSSIBLY LEARN A LANGUAGE THROUGH
IMITATION ALONE BECAUSE THE LANGUAGE
SPOKEN AROUND THEM IS HIGHLY
IRREGULAR – ADULT’S SPEECH IS OFTEN
BROKEN UP AND EVEN SOMETIMES
UNGRAMMATICAL. CHOMSKY’S THEORY
APPLIES TO ALL LANGUAGES AS THEY ALL
CONTAIN NOUNS, VERBS, CONSONANTS AND
VOWELS AND CHILDREN APPEAR TO BE
‘HARD-WIRED’ TO ACQUIRE THE GRAMMAR.
7.
8. EVERY LANGUAGE IS EXTREMELY
COMPLEX, OFTEN WITH SUBTLE
DISTINCTIONS WHICH EVEN NATIVE
SPEAKERS ARE UNAWARE OF.
HOWEVER, ALL CHILDREN,
REGARDLESS OF THEIR INTELLECTUAL
ABILITY, BECOME FLUENT IN THEIR
NATIVE LANGUAGE WITHIN FIVE OR SIX
YEARS.
CHOMSKY, N. (1977). ASPECTS OF THE THEORY OF
SINTAX. EN N. CHOMSKY, ASPECTS OF THE THEORY OF
SINTAX (PÁG. 48). LONDON: MIT PRESS.
12. ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON LANGUAGE
ACQUISITION
Language is acquired through principles of conditioning, including
association, imitation, and reinforcement.
According to this view, children learn words by associating sounds with
objects, actions, and events.
13. NEURAL NETWORKS
Some cognitive neuroscientists have created neural networks, or computer
models, that can acquire some aspects of language. These neural networks are
not preprogrammed with any rules. Instead, they are exposed to many
examples of a language.
14. BIOLOGICAL INFLUENCES ON
LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
Chomsky argues that human brains have a language
acquisition device (LAD), an innate mechanism or
process that allows children to develop language
skills.
15. BIOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENT
Emphasize the importance of both nature and nurture
in language acquisition. Humans do have an innate
capacity for acquiring the rules of language.
17. Noam Chomsky, a pioneering linguist, put forth an
idea called the language acquisition device or LAD,
for short.
The LAD is a hypothetical tool hardwired into the
brain that helps children rapidly learn and
understand language.
Chomsky used it to explain just how amazingly
children are able to acquire language abilities as
well as accounting for the innate understanding of
grammar and syntax all children possess.
19. It has often been suggested that L2 learning is a
process in which the learner creates interim
guesses about the language which he tries out to
see whether they are right or wrong and
reformulates them if necessary (Cook 1969).
Second language refers to any language learned in
addition to a person's first language; although the
concept is named second-language acquisition, it
can also incorporate the learning of third, fourth, or
subsequent languages.
Second-language acquisition is also not to be
contrasted with the acquisition of a foreign
language; rather, the learning of second languages
and the learning of foreign languages involve the
same fundamental processes in different
situations.
29. SparkNotes Editors. (2005). SparkNote on Language and Cognition.
Retrieved October 9, 2015, from
http://www.sparknotes.com/psychology/psych101/languageandco
gnition/
Andrea McKay .What Is Language Acquisition? .
http://study.com/academy/lesson/what-is-language-acquisition-
theories-stages-quiz.html
Stephen D Krashen . Second Language Acquisition
and Second Language Learning .University of Southern California
.2012
ESF European Science Foundation .Adult language acquisition:
cross-linguistic perspectives. Cambridge University.(2004 )
Extract from V.Cook (2000) 'Linguistics and Second Language
Acquisition: One Person with Two Languages', in Aronoff & Rees-
Miller, Blackwell Handbook of Linguistics