Cognitive approaches to second
language learning
Yaseen Taha
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u Schools of thought
u cognitive approaches
u Behaviourism
u Learning strategies
u Processing approaches
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What are the Schools of thought?
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Schools of thought
Structural
linguistics and
behavioral
psychology
1900s, 1940s,
1950s
Generative
linguistics and
cognitive
psychology
1970s, 1980s
Constructivism
1980s, 1990s,
2000s
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What does cognitive theory mean?
u A theory of learning processes that focuses on how people
think, understand, and know. It does not specifies
precisely what is learned, what content will be easiest (or
most difficult) to learn, or what learners will select to
learn at different stages of development or levels of
mastery of a complex skill. It came about as a reaction to
behaviorism.
u A cognitive theory of learning sees second language
acquisition as a conscious and reasoned thinking process,
involving the deliberate use of learning strategies.
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Important cognitive theorists
u Allan Paivio, Robert Gagne, Howard Gardener, Benjamin Bloom.
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Behaviourism
u a highly influential academic school of psychology. It assumes
that a learner is essentially passive, responding to environment
stimuli. Believes that a learner starts out with a clean slate, and
behavior is shaped by positive and negative reinforcement.
Reinforcement, positive or negative increases the possibility of an
event happening again. Punishment, both positive and negative,
decreases the possibility of an event happening again.
u It implies that the learner responds to environmental stimuli
without his/her mental state being factor in the learners' behavior.
Individual learns to behave through conditioning.
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Comparison between BEHAVIORIST theory and COGNITIVIST
theory
u Behaviorism is a learning theory
u As a formation of habit,
conditioning
u Practice is necessary, constant
repetition
u Learner is passive
u Behaviorists: teach, plan, present
language item, make Students
repeat
u Errors are forbidden
u Ignored thought and emotions
u Cognitivism is a learning theory, based
on how people think not a theory that
specifies precisely what is learned what
content will be easiest to learn, or what
learners will select to
learn at different stages of development
u Learning results from internal activity
(mental processes)
u Practice is necessary, but rote learning
and meaningless repetition is out.
u Learners process, store, and retrieve
information
u Cognitivists: creates opportunities for
learni
Direct Method (DM) of Language TeachingAyesha Bashir
Direct Method (DM) method is language teaching method. Through this method students are directly taught with target language without using native language.
Cognitive approaches to second
language learning
Yaseen Taha
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
u Schools of thought
u cognitive approaches
u Behaviourism
u Learning strategies
u Processing approaches
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
What are the Schools of thought?
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
Schools of thought
Structural
linguistics and
behavioral
psychology
1900s, 1940s,
1950s
Generative
linguistics and
cognitive
psychology
1970s, 1980s
Constructivism
1980s, 1990s,
2000s
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
What does cognitive theory mean?
u A theory of learning processes that focuses on how people
think, understand, and know. It does not specifies
precisely what is learned, what content will be easiest (or
most difficult) to learn, or what learners will select to
learn at different stages of development or levels of
mastery of a complex skill. It came about as a reaction to
behaviorism.
u A cognitive theory of learning sees second language
acquisition as a conscious and reasoned thinking process,
involving the deliberate use of learning strategies.
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
Important cognitive theorists
u Allan Paivio, Robert Gagne, Howard Gardener, Benjamin Bloom.
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
Behaviourism
u a highly influential academic school of psychology. It assumes
that a learner is essentially passive, responding to environment
stimuli. Believes that a learner starts out with a clean slate, and
behavior is shaped by positive and negative reinforcement.
Reinforcement, positive or negative increases the possibility of an
event happening again. Punishment, both positive and negative,
decreases the possibility of an event happening again.
u It implies that the learner responds to environmental stimuli
without his/her mental state being factor in the learners' behavior.
Individual learns to behave through conditioning.
PDF created with pdfFactory Pro trial version www.pdffactory.com
Comparison between BEHAVIORIST theory and COGNITIVIST
theory
u Behaviorism is a learning theory
u As a formation of habit,
conditioning
u Practice is necessary, constant
repetition
u Learner is passive
u Behaviorists: teach, plan, present
language item, make Students
repeat
u Errors are forbidden
u Ignored thought and emotions
u Cognitivism is a learning theory, based
on how people think not a theory that
specifies precisely what is learned what
content will be easiest to learn, or what
learners will select to
learn at different stages of development
u Learning results from internal activity
(mental processes)
u Practice is necessary, but rote learning
and meaningless repetition is out.
u Learners process, store, and retrieve
information
u Cognitivists: creates opportunities for
learni
Direct Method (DM) of Language TeachingAyesha Bashir
Direct Method (DM) method is language teaching method. Through this method students are directly taught with target language without using native language.
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