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Peer reviewedNey, James W. – Foreign Language Annals, 1979
Discusses the structuralist and the cognitivist theories of language learning, and emphasizes the importance of practice in second language learning. (AM)
Descriptors: Language Instruction, Learning Processes, Learning Theories, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedHosenfeld, Carol – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1979
Examines the learning strategies of one student of French grammar, and draws implications for curriculum writers and language teachers. (AM)
Descriptors: French, Grammar, Language Instruction, Learning Activities
Willayi, Richard B. – TESL Talk, 1976
The consensus of opinion seems to be that the processes of mother tongue acquisition are essentially analogous to those of second language (SL) acquisition. These processes, however, seem to work best in childhood years. A theory of adult SL learning should try to incorporate interlanguage. (CFM)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Child Language, Children, Interference (Language)
Peer reviewedSchmitz, Albert – Zielsprache Englisch, 1976
Argues for pattern drill as an indispensable link in the learning process: presentation, explanation, practice, performance. Opponents of pattern practice are suspected of confusing goal (communication) with means (drill phase). (Text is in German.) (IFS/WGA)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Language Instruction, Language Patterns, Language Skills
Peer reviewedColpaert, Jozef – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 1996
Emphasizes that the introduction of new technologies in the learning process of second languages should entail more didactic efficiency, educational effectiveness and pedagogical efficacy. Describes the Didascalia framework of criteria for added value. This framework requires an accurate, objective and adaptable specification of the added value of…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Course Objectives, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedHavranek, Gertraud – European Journal of Teacher Education, 1989
Analysis of learner language (LL), the foreign-language learner's utterances, can provide insight into the second-language acquisition process. Various models of first- and second-language acquisition are reviewed, characteristics of LL are discussed, and the role of instruction in second-language acquisition is considered. (IAH)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedJylha-Laide, Jaana – Journal of Educational Television, 1994
Presents a case study of a six-year-old Finnish girl who learned a foreign language by watching English language cartoons on video, without formal teaching or contact with native speakers. Topics addressed include television versus video; sentence structure; rate of speech; repetition; and learning by viewing versus naturalistic language learning.…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Case Studies, Childrens Television, English
Peer reviewedPalincsar, Annemarie Sullivan – Elementary School Journal, 1996
Explores a caveat for teaching language-minority students: As an educational community, teachers, teacher educators, and educational researchers need to be careful that they do not simply add to familiar patterns of instruction but rather actively seek ways to recast the cultures of schools and the social systems of classrooms to meet the needs of…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Classroom Environment, Educational Change, Educational Planning
Peer reviewedOxford, Rebecca; Shearin, Jill – Modern Language Journal, 1994
Several ways to extend the notion of second-language (L2) learning motivation are discussed. The motivational materials and techniques considered are well known in the fields of general, industrial, educational, and cognitive developmental psychology but have not been applied to the L2 field. (Contains 98 references.) (LB)
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Educational Theories, Interdisciplinary Approach, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedCarson, Joan G.; Nelson, Gayle L. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 1994
Writing groups, used in many English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) composition classrooms, pose problems for some students from collectivistic cultures such as Japan and China. Suggested reasons are the individual benefit goal, the need for feedback rather than group harmony, and strained group dynamics. (Contains 41 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Feedback, Foreign Countries, Group Behavior, Group Dynamics
Peer reviewedDuchesne, Hermann – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1995
Analysis of language production skills of French immersion students in grades 1-6 over 3 years revealed rapid growth of oral competence in the first three years of acquisition, followed by a much slower annual rate of progress. Lexical and syntactic structures most difficult to acquire emerge in five distinct patterns. (50 references) (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, French, Immersion Programs, Interlanguage
Peer reviewedBohn, Ocke-Schwen; Flege, James Emil – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1990
Examines the perception of four English vowels by adult native speakers of German. The role of foreign-language experience in the perception of second-language vowels was examined through labeling responses to members of synthetic continua in which vowel duration and spectrum were varied factorily. (42 references) (GLR)
Descriptors: Adults, Contrastive Linguistics, English (Second Language), German
Peer reviewedde Courcy, Michele – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1997
Reports a study of the learning strategies and processes of four adult learners of Chinese, using data collected over a two-year period. Students showed a number of different approaches to learning, not all of which could be classified "good language learner" strategies. Findings suggest areas for exploration in immersion education, especially…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Chinese, Ideography, Immersion Programs
Peer reviewedJin, Hong Gang – Language Learning, 1994
Investigated whether topic-prominence transfer is a universal developmental stage or a transferable typology by analyzing the behavior of 46 native speakers of English learning Chinese, a subject-prominence (SP) language, as a second language. Results found that the learners displayed a process of systematically transferring English SP features to…
Descriptors: Chinese, College Students, Distinctive Features (Language), English
Wakshul, Barbra – Winds of Change, 2001
Language is easiest to learn before age 5. The Cherokee Nation supported production of a toy that teaches young children basic Cherokee words. When figures that come with the toy are placed into it, a computer chip activates a voice speaking the name of the figure in Cherokee. Learning takes place on visual, auditory, and tactile levels. (TD)
Descriptors: Cherokee, Cherokee (Tribe), Computer Uses in Education, Language Acquisition


