1 / 15

Interlanguage Ellis 2003, Chapter 3 (pp.31-35)

Interlanguage Ellis 2003, Chapter 3 (pp.31-35). By: Fajar Cita Wibowo Sukmawan Bimo Charisma Septika / 2201410033 Delia Prestiana Putri / 2201410040. Definition of Interlanguage. The system of L2 knowledge of learner language reflects a mental system of L2 knowledge.

sirius
Download Presentation

Interlanguage Ellis 2003, Chapter 3 (pp.31-35)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. InterlanguageEllis 2003, Chapter 3 (pp.31-35) By: Fajar Cita Wibowo Sukmawan Bimo Charisma Septika / 2201410033 Delia Prestiana Putri / 2201410040

  2. Definition of Interlanguage The system of L2 knowledge of learner language reflects a mental system of L2 knowledge.

  3. Behaviourist Learning Theory The dominant psychological theory of the 1950s and 1960s was behaviourist learning theory. In this theory, it involves habit formation.

  4. Behaviourist Learning Theory A habit is a stimulus-response connection. Learners imitated models of correct language (i.e. stimuli) and received positive reinforcement if they were correct and negative reinforcement if they were incorrect. For example, learners might hear the sentence “Give me a pencil”, use it themselves, and thereby be rewarded by achieving their communicative goal ( i.e. by being given a pencil when they wanted one).

  5. A Mentalist Theory of Language Learning • In 1960s and 1970s a mentalist theory of L1 acquisition emerged. According to this theory: • Only human beings are capable of learning language. • The human mind is equipped with a faculty for learning language, referred to as a Language Acquisition Device. • This faculty is the primary determinant of language acquisition. • Input is needed, but only to ‘trigger’ the operation of LAD.

  6. What is Interlanguage ? • It was coined by the American linguist, Larry Selinker. • L2 learners construct a linguistic system that draws, in part, on the learner’s L1, but is also different from it and target language.

  7. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 1. The learner constructs a system of abstract linguistic rules which underlies comprehension and production of the L2.This system is viewed as a ‘mental grammar’ and referred to as an ‘interlanguage’

  8. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 2. The learner’s grammar is permeable.The grammar is open to influence from the outside (i.e. through the input) and the inside.

  9. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 3. The learner’s grammar is transitional.Interlanguage continuum, learners construct a series of mental grammars or interlanguages as they gradually increase the complexity of their L2 knowledge.

  10. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 4. Some researchers have claimed that the systems learners construct contain variable rules.

  11. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 5. Learners employ various learning strategies to develop their interlanguages. The different kinds of errors learners produce reflect different learning strategies.

  12. The concept of interlanguage involves the following premises about L2 acquisition: 6. The learner’s grammar is likely to fossilize. The prevalence of backsliding (i.e. The production of errors representing an early stage of development) is typical of fossilized learners.

  13. A computational Model of L2 Acquisition Intake L2 knowledge output input • The concept of interlanguage can be implied as the data in the human mind computer. the processes: creating intake & L2 knowledge occur within the ‘black box’ of the learner’s mind where the learner’s interlanguage is constructed  L2 knowledge is used by learner  producing written & spoken output.

  14. The learners exposed to input which is processed into 2 parts, IntakeParts of it are attended to and taken into short-term memory. L2 knowledgeSome of the intake is stored in long-term memory.

  15. Thank You

More Related