Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Social factors
- Communicative Competence
- It involves knowing
- - Linguistic Structure
(Vocabulary, phonology,
grammar, others)
- - When to speak (or
not)
- - What to say/to
whom
- - How to say
it
- - Social and cultural
knowledge
- Monolingual
Communicative
Competence
- Multilingual
Communicative
Competence
- Have differences
- - Different social function of first and second language learning
- Differences between learning language and learning culture
- Is
- What a speaker needs to know to
communicate appropriately within a
particular language comunity
- Microsocial Factors
- L2 Variation
- Depends
largely on
- Communicative
contextual dimensions
- Such as
- Linguistic contexts: Elements of language form and
function associated with the variable element.
- Psychological contexts: Factors associated with the amount of attention
which is being given to language form during production, the level of
automaticity vs control in processing.
- Microsocial contexts: Features of setting/situation and interaction which
relate to communicative events in which language is being produced,
interpreted, and negotiated.
- Input
- and
- Nature of input modification
- In speech
- Foreigner talk
- Utterances by
native speakers
- Omit some obligatory elements
- Make shorter sentences
- Have less varied vocabulary
- Interaction
- and
- Interactional modifications
- Negative feedback
- Direct correction
- Indirect correction
- as
- The Genesis of Language
- Interpersonal interaction
- Zone of Proximal Development
(ZPD)
- through
- Scaffolding
- includes
- Vertical constructions
- Intrapersonal interaction
- Within an
individual's own mind
- Private
speech
- is
- Self-talk of
children
- Almost always verbalized
in L1 and/or L2
- Inner
speech
- is
- Self-talk of more
mature
individuals
- used to
- Control thoughts and behavior
- Macrosocial Factors
- Social Categories
- Education level
- Sex
- Age
- Ethnicity
- in a
- Multiethnic society
- members of a dominant group learn
the language of a subordinate group
without threat to their L1 competence
or to their ethnic identity
- this is
- ADDITIVE
BILINGUALISM
- members of a subordinate group learn the
dominant language as L2 and are more likely to
experience some loss of ethnic identity and
attrition of L1 skills
- this
is
- SUBTRACTIVE
BILINGUALISM
- Others
- Institutional forces
and constraints
- Language related social control, determination
of access to knowledge, instances of linguistic
privilege or discrimination.
- Boundaries and
Identities
- Crossing a linguistic boundary to
participate in another language
community, and to identify or be
identified with it, requires learning
that language.
- Full participation also commonly
requires learning the culture of that
community and adapting to those
values and behavioral patterns.
- This
is
called
- Acculturation
- Global and natural status of L1 and L2
- Opportunities as well as motivation for learning a
particular L2 often depends on its relative power or status
(if it confers visible economic or social benefits)
- Circumstances of Learning
- learner differences in
cognitive styles and
learning strategies are
- Field-dependent
- related
to
- children raised in urban
cincumstances
- Field-independent
- related
to
- children raised in rural residence
- fundamental difference in situational
circumstances is whether L2 learning is
- Informal/Naturalistic
- takes
place in
- settings where people contact
and interact with speakers of
another language.
- Formal/Instructed
- takes
place in
- Schools, which are institutions that are
established with the needs, beliefs,
values, and customs of their cultural settings