CLL Session 8: Age effects in SLA LAEL, Lancaster University Florencia Franceschina.

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CLL Session 8: Age effects in SLA LAEL, Lancaster University Florencia Franceschina

Transcript of CLL Session 8: Age effects in SLA LAEL, Lancaster University Florencia Franceschina.

Page 1: CLL Session 8: Age effects in SLA LAEL, Lancaster University Florencia Franceschina.

CLL Session 8:Age effects in SLA

LAEL, Lancaster University

Florencia Franceschina

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1. Some observable facts

A. Older is better in the short term

B. Younger is better in the long term

C. Even very extensive exposure does not guarantee native-like attainment

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Older is better

Older learners have been observed to have an advantage in terms of rate of acquisition in the initial stages of SLA, both

– In naturalistic settings(e.g., Snow and Hoefnagel-Hoehle, 1978)

– In instructed settings(e.g., six studies in Garcia-Mayo and Garcia-Lecumberri, 2003)

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Snow and Hoefnagel-Hoehle (1978)

L1 English / L2 DutchImmersionTasks: Pronunciation, auditory discrimination, morphology, sentence

repetition, sentence translation, sentence judgement, story comprehension, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test

Findings: After 3 months’ residence: adults and adolescents outperformed

children on tests After 10 months’ residence: the children caught up

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Garcia-Lecumberri and Gallardo (2003)

L1 Spanish/Basque / L2 English

Instructional setting

Start age: 4, 8, 11

Mean time-span of exposure: 6 years for all

Tasks: vowel/consonant discrimination, spoken production (measures of intelligibility, degree of foreign accent, overall performance)

Most results indicate an advantage for the late starters

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Younger is better

Immigrant studies have shown that there is a negative correlation between age of arrival (AoA) and level of L2 attainment

Examples:- Oyama (1976, 1978)- Patkowski (1980)- Johnson and Newport (1989)- Hyltenstam (1992)

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Long exposure does not guarantee success

Example:

Coppieters (1987) 21 L2 French nearnatives LoR in France: 5.5-37 years task: intuitions about grammar none of them was within the NS range

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Other differences between adult and child SLA

Younger and older learners make different types of mistakes in certain areas

Example: Lasagaster and Doiz (2003)

written production, L2 English11/15/17 year-olds - younger learners make more spelling mistakes- younger learners resort to codeswitching more often- older learners make more tense mistakes, but they use more complex language than the younger ones

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2. Accounts of age effects

Critical period

vs.

General age factors

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Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH)

Lenneberg’s original formulation (1967)

Evidence: – Recovery from brain damage (Lenneberg, 1967)– Feral children (e.g., Genie - Curtiss, 1977)– Late FLA in deaf signers (Mayberry, 1993)

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Exercise: Who are these people? Which one is the odd

one out? Why?

Victor of Aveyron Kaspar Hauser Kamala and Amala Ivan Mishukov

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General age factors

Example:

Bialystok (1997), Bialystok and Hakuta (1994)argue against a cut-off point, and for a continuous decline of language learning abilities

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References

Bialystok, E. 1997: The structure of age: in search of barriers to SLA. Second Language Research 13, 2: 116-137.

Bialystok, E. and K. Hakuta. 1994: In other words: the science and psychology of second language acquisition. New York: Basic Books.

Coppieters, R. 1987: Competence differences between native and near-native speakers. Language 63, 544-573.

Curtiss, S. 1977: Genie: a psycholinguistic study of a modern-day "wild child". New York: Academic Press.

Garcia Lecumberri, M. L. and F. Gallardo. 2003: English FL sounds in school learners of different ages, in M. D. P. Garcia Mayo and M. L. Garcia Lecumberri, eds. Age and the acquisition of English as a foreign language. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 115-135.

Garcia Mayo, M. D. P. and M. L. Garcia Lecumberri. (eds.) 2003: Age and the acquisition of English as a foreign language. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.

Hyltenstam, K. 1992: Non-native features of near-native speakers. On the ultimate attainment of childhood L2 learners, in R. J. Harris, ed. Cognitive processing in bilinguals. Amsterdam: Elsevier. Pp. 351-368.

Johnson, J. and E. Newport. 1989: Critical period effects in second language learning: the influence of maturational state on the acquisition of English as a second language. Cognitive Psychology 21, 60-99.

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References

Lasagabaster, D. and A. Doiz. 2003: Maturational constraints on foreign language written production, in M. D. P. Garcia Mayo and M. L. Garcia Lecumberri, eds. Age and the acquisition of English as a foreign language. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 136-160.

Lenneberg, E. H. 1967: Biological foundations of language. New York: John Wiley.

Mayberry, R. I. 1993: First language acquisition after childhood differs from second language acquisition: the case of ASL. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research 36, 1258-1270.

Oyama, S. 1976: A sensitive period for the acquisition of a non-native phonological system. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 5, 3: 261-283.

Oyama, S. 1978: The sensitive period and comprehension of speech. Working Papers on Bilingualism 16, 1-17.

Patkowski, M. 1980: The sensitive period for the acquisition of syntax in a second language. Language Learning 30, 449-472.

Snow, C. E. and M. Hoefnagel-Hoehle. 1978: The critical period for language acquisition: evidence from second language learning. Child Development 49, 1114-1128.

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Reading

Singleton, D. 1995: Introduction: a critical look at the Critical Period Hypothesis in SLA research. In D. Singleton and Z. Lengyel (eds.): The age factor in second language acquisition. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 1-29.