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Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) Twww.hodderplus.com/linguistics Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

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Page 1: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7)

Understanding SLALourdes Ortega (2009)

Twww.hodderplus.com/linguistics Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Page 2: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.2 Cognition, conation, & affect in psychology & SLA

cognition: thinking affect: feeling conation: trying (wanting)

Research strategy Seek correlation, between ID & outcome shared variance: more meaningful? Beware of “significant correlations”

Page 3: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.2 Learning & not learning French: Kaplan vs. Watson

Alice Kaplan very successful: devoted to French from childhood

Richard Watson surprisingly unsuccessful at spoken French

How to explain the vast differences in outcomes in such learners?

Page 4: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.3 Language aptitude, all mighty?

No! Despite positive research findings,

many unanswered questions remain True nature Relationship to other ID factors

conative affective contextual

Page 5: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.4 Aptitude as prediction of formal L2 learning rate Measured often by MLAT 5 parts, measuring 4(3) components High predictive validity Questionable construct validity

Mismatch between test parts & theorized components Measures rote rather than dynamic memory Rate of formal learning less important than…

Ultimate Attainment Various learning conditions (ATI)

Page 6: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.5 Is L2 aptitude different from intelligence & L1 ability 3 domains overlap but differ:

L1 ability L2 aptitude L2 achievement L1 ability >L2 achievement

Academic skills, grammatical sensitivity underlie intelligence, L1, L2

Page 7: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.6 Lack of L2 aptitude, or general language-related difficulties?

L1 difficulties L2 difficulties Linguistic Coding Differences Hypothesis

(LCDH) (Sparks, Ganschow, et al.) Phonological-orthographic relationships

Phonological awareness: sounds alone phonemic awareness (segmentation) phonological decoding (integration)

Page 8: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Dufva’s Finnish research

Phonological memory

phonological awareness (age 6)

word recognition,

listening comprehension (age 7-8)

reading comprehension (age 8-9) (with word recognition, phonological memory)

L2 (English) proficiency (age 9)

Page 9: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Back to poor Watson

Spelling, reversal problems evoke LCDH Finnish schoolchildren L2 findings on phonetic coding ability

disfluent speaking (Wesche) mimicking sounds, remembering words

Page 10: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.7 Memory capacity as a privileged component of L2 aptitude

Exceptional learners Multiple languages (e.g. Obler’s CJ) Older learners (Call/Scott’s missionaries)

Static memory span (STM) EFL vocabulary of Finnish children(Service) Lookup behavior of univ. GFLers (Chun &

Payne) Active working memory span (WM)

Grammar, Reading (Harrington & Sawyer, cf. Juffs)

Page 11: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.8 Contributions of memory to aptitude, complexified

STM vocabulary learning @ early stages

(Masoura & Gathercole) grammar @ later stages (O’Brien+) formal but not semantic rules (Williams) long-term but not short-term gain

(Mackey+)

Page 12: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.9 Aptitude & age Aptitude doesn’t matter before puberty

Fundamental Difference Hypothesis:

Implicit vs. explicit learning (Bley-Vroman) Hungarian immigrant research (DeKeyser)

Parts of aptitude matter @ different ages First memory, later analysis (Harley & Hart)

Age & learning context conspire (Ross et al.)

Page 13: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.10 Does aptitude matter under explicit & implicit learning conditions

Explicit but not implicit (Krashen, etc.) Both explicit & implicit (Robinson, etc.) More implicit than explicit (Sawyer?) Mixed empirical evidence

Experimental (Williams, de Graaf, Nation & McLaughlin,

Robinson) Classroom (Erlam, Sheen)

Page 14: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

7.11 Most recent developments: Multidimensional aptitude

“The Peters”’ Proposals Peter Robinson

Basic abilities combine Interact with context & affect

Peter Skehan Stages of input processing Input, central processing, output

Page 15: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Robinson: Aptitude Complexes

Example:Learning from feedback (recasts) requires… certain aptitude complexes (combinations)

noticing the gap ability (NTG) memory for contingent speech (MCS)

composed of certain basic abilities (aptitudes) pattern recognition, processing speed NTG phonological working memory MCS

Abilities Complexes Tasks Life

Page 16: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Skehan: Stages of Input Processing

9 stages 4 macro stages1. Noticing

Working memory, phonological coding, etc.

2. Patterning Grammatical sensitivity, Induction

3. Controllingo Automatization, retrieval processes

4. Lexicalizingo Memory, chunking, plus above (Stage 3)

Page 17: Foreign Language Aptitude (Ch. 7) Understanding SLA Lourdes Ortega (2009) T Published by Hodder Education © 2009 Mark Sawyer

Playing it to one’s strengths: The future of L2 aptitude? (7.12) ATI: Aptitude-Treatment Interactions Famous example from Canada (Wesche)

Ss (mis-)matched to treatment by MLAT profile Matched students achieved more

The Peters’ proposals promise more… specific diagnosis of strong/mixed/weak abilities possibilities for research, pedagogy