SlideShare a Scribd company logo
4
Most read
6
Most read
23
Most read
1. What’s The First Language?




A first language (also native language, mother tongue,
arterial language, or L1) is the language (s) a person has
learned from birth or within the critical periode, or that a
person speaks the best and so is often the basis for
sociolinguistic identity.
In some countries, the terms native language or mother
tongue refer to the language of one’s ethnic group rather
than one’s first language. Sometimes, there can be more
than one native or mother tongue, (for example: when
the child’s parents speak different languages). Those
children are usually called multilingual.
A

multilingual person, in a broad definition,
is one who can communicate in more than
one language, be it actively (through
speaking, writing, or signing) or passively
(through listening, reading, or perceiving).
 Multilingual

speakers have acquired and
maintained at least one language during
childhood, it’s so called first language (L1).
The first language (sometimes also
referred to as the mother tongue) is
acquired without formal education, by
mechanisms heavily disputed.
 In

linguistics, first language acquisition is
closely related to the concept of a “native
speaker”. According to a view widely held
by linguistics, a native speaker of a given
language has in some respectsa level of
skill which a second (or subsequent)
language learner can hardly reliably
accomplish.
A. What’s SLA?
Second Language Acquisition (SLA) refers
both to the study of individuals and groups
who are learning a language subsequent
to learning their first one as young
children, and to the process of learning
that language.
 In

short, SLA is the process of learning
other languages in addition to the native
speaker. For instance, a child who speaks
Hindi as the mother tongue, starts learning
English when he starts going to school.
English is learned by the process of
second language acquisition. In fact, a
young child can learn a second language
faster than an adult can learn the same
language.
 Though

most scholars use the term
“language learning” and “language
acquisition” interchangeably, actually
these terms differ. Language learning
refers to the formal learning of language in
the classroom. On the other hand,
language acquisition means acquiring the
language with little or no formal training or
learning.
 L2

 The additional language is called a
“second language” (L2), even though it
may actually be the third, fourth, or tenth
to be acquired.
 TL  It is also commonly called a target
language (TL), which refers to any
language that is the aim or goal of
learning.
More detail of the TL
 Target Languge (TL) is the language learners
are studying, and also the individual items of
language that they want to learn, or the teacher
wants them to learn.
 Example: The teacher first presents the target
language, learners practise it, and then there’s a
production staage where the target language is
used in a free activity.
 In

the classroom
-> Lessons aims may be based around
target language, e.g, “Learners will be
able to understand the difference between
“ I didn’t need to, and “I needn’t have”
 FL

is acquired during early chilhood;
normally beginning before the age of
about three years and those, they are
learned as part of growing up among
people who speak them.
 Acquisition of more than one language
during early chilhood is called
simultaneous multilingualism.
2. What’s a Second Language?
Sometimes it is necessary for us to make
further distinctions according to the
function the L2 will serve in our lives.
These differences may determine the
specific areas of vocabulary knowledge
we need.
 The

following are distinctions commonly
made in the literature:
 A second language is typically an official
or societally dominant language needed
for education, employment, and other
basic purposes. It is often acquired by
minority group members or immigrants
who speak another language natively.
foreign language is one not widely used in
the learners’ immediate social context which
might be used for future travel or other crosscultural communication situations.

 A

Library language is one which functions
primarily as a tool for further learning through
reading, e.g books and journals.

 A
An Auxiliary language is one which learners
need to know for some official functions in their
immediate political setting, or will need to
purposes of wider communication.



Other restricted or highly specialized functions
for “second languages are designated language
for specific purposes, e.g French for Hotel
Management. One such prominent area is
English for Academic Purposes (EAP).
3. Frameworks of SLA
 Study

of SLA can be categorized as primarily
based on linguistic, psychological, and social
frameworks. We should keep in mind that there
are extensive interrelationships among them.
 a. Linguistic
There have been foci (plural of focus) for the
study of SLA from linguistic perspective since
1960: Internal and external.
Internal Focus
The first linguistic framework with an internal
focus is Transformational Generative Grammar
(Chomsky 1957, 1965). The apperance of this
work revolutionized linguistic theory and had
profound effect on the study of both first and
second languages.
This framework was followed by the Principles
and Parameters Model and the Minimalist
Program, also formulated by Chomsky.
External Focus
The most important linguistic frameworks
contributing to an external focus on SLA
are categorized within Functionalism.
Approaches based on functional
frameworks have dominated European
study of SLA and are widely followed
elsewhere in the world.
b. Psychological
There’re three foci in the study of SLA from a psychological
perspective: languages and the brain, learning processes, and
learner differences (individual differences).
1.Languages and the brain
The location and representation of the language in the brain has
been interest to biologist and psychologist since the nineteenth
century. Lenneberg (1967) generated great interest when he
argued that there is a critical period for language acquisition
which has neurological basis, and much age-related research on
SLA is essentially grounded in this framework.
2. Learning processes
The focus on learning processes has been
haevily influenced by computer-based
Information Processing (IP) models of learning.
Process ability is a more recently developed
framework which extends IP concepts of
learning and applies them to teaching second
languages.
Connectionism is another cognitive framework
for the focus on learning processes.
3. Learner differences (individual differences)
The focus on learner differences in SLA has
been most concerned with the question of why
some learners are more successful than others.
It arises in part from the humanistic framework
within psychology, which has a long history in
that discipline, but has significantly influenced
second language teaching and SLA.
c. Social
There are two foci for the study of SLA from
this perspective microsocial and macrososial.
1.Micro Sosial Focus
The concern within the microsocial focus relate
to language acquisition and use in immediate
social contexts of production, interpretation,
and interaction. The frameworks provided by
Variation Theory and Accomodation Theory.
2. Macrosocial focus
The concerns of the macrosocial focus relate
language acquisition and use to broader
ecological context, including cultural, political,
and educational settings.
The Ethnography of Communication framework
extends the notion of what is being acquired in
SLA.
The frameworks provided by Acculturation
Theory and Socisl Psychology offer broader
understandings of how such factors as identity,
status, and values affect the outcomes of SLA.

More Related Content

PPTX
Second Language Learning
PPT
Ug & sla
PPT
Second language acquisition in the classroom
PPTX
SLA-Inter-language presentation
PPTX
Second Language Acquisition 631
PDF
The role of L1 on second language acquisition
PPT
Lambert’S Socio Psychological Model Shahida
PPTX
The recent history of second language learning research sla -presentation...
Second Language Learning
Ug & sla
Second language acquisition in the classroom
SLA-Inter-language presentation
Second Language Acquisition 631
The role of L1 on second language acquisition
Lambert’S Socio Psychological Model Shahida
The recent history of second language learning research sla -presentation...

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Introduction to sosiolinguistics
PPTX
Politeness (Pragmatics)
PPTX
Discourse structure chapter 4 by Ahmet YUSUF
PPTX
Chapter 5.sociolinguisitcs
PPTX
Functionalism Framework in Language Acquisition
PPTX
Introduction to psycholinguistics
PPTX
04. Mentalism.pptx
DOCX
Transitivity
PPTX
Two Views of Discourse Structure: As a Product and As a Process
PPTX
Language maintenance and Shift.
PPT
Pragmatics implicature 2
DOCX
Language Planning
PPTX
Social Contexts of SLA, Sok Soth, RUPP, IFL
PPTX
Psycholinguistics
PPTX
Discourse analysis
PPTX
Pidgin & creoles
PPTX
Linguistic inequality ppt
PPSX
Presupposition
PPT
Second language acquisition
 
PPTX
Content-Based Instruction (CBI)
Introduction to sosiolinguistics
Politeness (Pragmatics)
Discourse structure chapter 4 by Ahmet YUSUF
Chapter 5.sociolinguisitcs
Functionalism Framework in Language Acquisition
Introduction to psycholinguistics
04. Mentalism.pptx
Transitivity
Two Views of Discourse Structure: As a Product and As a Process
Language maintenance and Shift.
Pragmatics implicature 2
Language Planning
Social Contexts of SLA, Sok Soth, RUPP, IFL
Psycholinguistics
Discourse analysis
Pidgin & creoles
Linguistic inequality ppt
Presupposition
Second language acquisition
 
Content-Based Instruction (CBI)
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Second Language Acquisition: An Introduction
PPT
second language acquisition
PPTX
Second language acquisition
PPTX
Second language acquisition
PPTX
Theories of second language acquisition
PPTX
Stressing the importance of the native language
PPT
Krashen's theory on Second Language Acquisition
PPTX
Factors affecting second language acquisition
PPTX
second language acquisition
PPTX
Second language acquisition
PPTX
The logical problem of language learning
PPTX
Research proposal for translation
PPT
Second Language Acquisition by David Nunan
PPT
Age and Second Language Acquisition
PPT
Differences in first and second language learning
PPTX
L1 and L2 acquisition
PPTX
Microsocial and macrosocial factors
PPTX
Cognitive Approaches to Second Language Acquisition
PPT
Second language acquisition and ultimate attainment
PPTX
Second Language Acquisition
Second Language Acquisition: An Introduction
second language acquisition
Second language acquisition
Second language acquisition
Theories of second language acquisition
Stressing the importance of the native language
Krashen's theory on Second Language Acquisition
Factors affecting second language acquisition
second language acquisition
Second language acquisition
The logical problem of language learning
Research proposal for translation
Second Language Acquisition by David Nunan
Age and Second Language Acquisition
Differences in first and second language learning
L1 and L2 acquisition
Microsocial and macrosocial factors
Cognitive Approaches to Second Language Acquisition
Second language acquisition and ultimate attainment
Second Language Acquisition
Ad

Similar to Second Language Acquisition (SLA) (20)

PPTX
LIN304-2nd part-time worker instead 1.pptx
PPTX
Introducing Second language acquisition.pptx
PDF
CH 1_Introducing Second Language Acquisition.pdf
PPTX
CH 1_Introducing Second Language Acquisition.pptx
PPTX
English 344 session 1
PPT
Theories of language learning.ppt
PPTX
The Field of Second Language Acquisition
PPT
Psichology And Languaje Learning
PPTX
presentation foundation of second language acquisition.pptx
PPT
2nd Lang Acq. Sunum
PPTX
second language acquisition
PPTX
Second Language Acquisition
PPTX
Introducing Second language acquisition.pptx
PDF
Introducing Second Language Acquisition (Professor Muriel Saville-Troike)
PPTX
English 344 session 1
PDF
Second Language Acquisition.pdf SLA research and linguistics
PPT
Psychology And Language Learning
PPTX
English 344 week 2
ODP
paper - 12 A English Language Teaching (ELT). Topic :- Second Language Acqui...
PPT
Language Theories.ppt free download for Leptop
LIN304-2nd part-time worker instead 1.pptx
Introducing Second language acquisition.pptx
CH 1_Introducing Second Language Acquisition.pdf
CH 1_Introducing Second Language Acquisition.pptx
English 344 session 1
Theories of language learning.ppt
The Field of Second Language Acquisition
Psichology And Languaje Learning
presentation foundation of second language acquisition.pptx
2nd Lang Acq. Sunum
second language acquisition
Second Language Acquisition
Introducing Second language acquisition.pptx
Introducing Second Language Acquisition (Professor Muriel Saville-Troike)
English 344 session 1
Second Language Acquisition.pdf SLA research and linguistics
Psychology And Language Learning
English 344 week 2
paper - 12 A English Language Teaching (ELT). Topic :- Second Language Acqui...
Language Theories.ppt free download for Leptop

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PDF
Mark Klimek Lecture Notes_240423 revision books _173037.pdf
PDF
Origin of periodic table-Mendeleev’s Periodic-Modern Periodic table
PDF
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
PPTX
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
PDF
Basic Mud Logging Guide for educational purpose
PPTX
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
PPTX
The Healthy Child – Unit II | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc Nursing 5th Semester
PDF
3rd Neelam Sanjeevareddy Memorial Lecture.pdf
PDF
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
PDF
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
PPTX
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
PDF
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
PDF
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PPTX
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
Mark Klimek Lecture Notes_240423 revision books _173037.pdf
Origin of periodic table-Mendeleev’s Periodic-Modern Periodic table
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
Basic Mud Logging Guide for educational purpose
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
The Healthy Child – Unit II | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc Nursing 5th Semester
3rd Neelam Sanjeevareddy Memorial Lecture.pdf
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
master seminar digital applications in india
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...

Second Language Acquisition (SLA)

  • 1. 1. What’s The First Language?   A first language (also native language, mother tongue, arterial language, or L1) is the language (s) a person has learned from birth or within the critical periode, or that a person speaks the best and so is often the basis for sociolinguistic identity. In some countries, the terms native language or mother tongue refer to the language of one’s ethnic group rather than one’s first language. Sometimes, there can be more than one native or mother tongue, (for example: when the child’s parents speak different languages). Those children are usually called multilingual.
  • 2. A multilingual person, in a broad definition, is one who can communicate in more than one language, be it actively (through speaking, writing, or signing) or passively (through listening, reading, or perceiving).
  • 3.  Multilingual speakers have acquired and maintained at least one language during childhood, it’s so called first language (L1). The first language (sometimes also referred to as the mother tongue) is acquired without formal education, by mechanisms heavily disputed.
  • 4.  In linguistics, first language acquisition is closely related to the concept of a “native speaker”. According to a view widely held by linguistics, a native speaker of a given language has in some respectsa level of skill which a second (or subsequent) language learner can hardly reliably accomplish.
  • 5. A. What’s SLA? Second Language Acquisition (SLA) refers both to the study of individuals and groups who are learning a language subsequent to learning their first one as young children, and to the process of learning that language.
  • 6.  In short, SLA is the process of learning other languages in addition to the native speaker. For instance, a child who speaks Hindi as the mother tongue, starts learning English when he starts going to school. English is learned by the process of second language acquisition. In fact, a young child can learn a second language faster than an adult can learn the same language.
  • 7.  Though most scholars use the term “language learning” and “language acquisition” interchangeably, actually these terms differ. Language learning refers to the formal learning of language in the classroom. On the other hand, language acquisition means acquiring the language with little or no formal training or learning.
  • 8.  L2  The additional language is called a “second language” (L2), even though it may actually be the third, fourth, or tenth to be acquired.  TL  It is also commonly called a target language (TL), which refers to any language that is the aim or goal of learning.
  • 9. More detail of the TL  Target Languge (TL) is the language learners are studying, and also the individual items of language that they want to learn, or the teacher wants them to learn.  Example: The teacher first presents the target language, learners practise it, and then there’s a production staage where the target language is used in a free activity.
  • 10.  In the classroom -> Lessons aims may be based around target language, e.g, “Learners will be able to understand the difference between “ I didn’t need to, and “I needn’t have”
  • 11.  FL is acquired during early chilhood; normally beginning before the age of about three years and those, they are learned as part of growing up among people who speak them.  Acquisition of more than one language during early chilhood is called simultaneous multilingualism.
  • 12. 2. What’s a Second Language? Sometimes it is necessary for us to make further distinctions according to the function the L2 will serve in our lives. These differences may determine the specific areas of vocabulary knowledge we need.
  • 13.  The following are distinctions commonly made in the literature:  A second language is typically an official or societally dominant language needed for education, employment, and other basic purposes. It is often acquired by minority group members or immigrants who speak another language natively.
  • 14. foreign language is one not widely used in the learners’ immediate social context which might be used for future travel or other crosscultural communication situations.  A Library language is one which functions primarily as a tool for further learning through reading, e.g books and journals.  A
  • 15. An Auxiliary language is one which learners need to know for some official functions in their immediate political setting, or will need to purposes of wider communication.  Other restricted or highly specialized functions for “second languages are designated language for specific purposes, e.g French for Hotel Management. One such prominent area is English for Academic Purposes (EAP).
  • 16. 3. Frameworks of SLA  Study of SLA can be categorized as primarily based on linguistic, psychological, and social frameworks. We should keep in mind that there are extensive interrelationships among them.  a. Linguistic There have been foci (plural of focus) for the study of SLA from linguistic perspective since 1960: Internal and external.
  • 17. Internal Focus The first linguistic framework with an internal focus is Transformational Generative Grammar (Chomsky 1957, 1965). The apperance of this work revolutionized linguistic theory and had profound effect on the study of both first and second languages. This framework was followed by the Principles and Parameters Model and the Minimalist Program, also formulated by Chomsky.
  • 18. External Focus The most important linguistic frameworks contributing to an external focus on SLA are categorized within Functionalism. Approaches based on functional frameworks have dominated European study of SLA and are widely followed elsewhere in the world.
  • 19. b. Psychological There’re three foci in the study of SLA from a psychological perspective: languages and the brain, learning processes, and learner differences (individual differences). 1.Languages and the brain The location and representation of the language in the brain has been interest to biologist and psychologist since the nineteenth century. Lenneberg (1967) generated great interest when he argued that there is a critical period for language acquisition which has neurological basis, and much age-related research on SLA is essentially grounded in this framework.
  • 20. 2. Learning processes The focus on learning processes has been haevily influenced by computer-based Information Processing (IP) models of learning. Process ability is a more recently developed framework which extends IP concepts of learning and applies them to teaching second languages. Connectionism is another cognitive framework for the focus on learning processes.
  • 21. 3. Learner differences (individual differences) The focus on learner differences in SLA has been most concerned with the question of why some learners are more successful than others. It arises in part from the humanistic framework within psychology, which has a long history in that discipline, but has significantly influenced second language teaching and SLA.
  • 22. c. Social There are two foci for the study of SLA from this perspective microsocial and macrososial. 1.Micro Sosial Focus The concern within the microsocial focus relate to language acquisition and use in immediate social contexts of production, interpretation, and interaction. The frameworks provided by Variation Theory and Accomodation Theory.
  • 23. 2. Macrosocial focus The concerns of the macrosocial focus relate language acquisition and use to broader ecological context, including cultural, political, and educational settings. The Ethnography of Communication framework extends the notion of what is being acquired in SLA. The frameworks provided by Acculturation Theory and Socisl Psychology offer broader understandings of how such factors as identity, status, and values affect the outcomes of SLA.