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What is Language Awareness?. ?Sensitivity to and conscious awareness of the nature of language and its role in human life" (Donmall, 1985)Knowledge of one language can help development of another language (L1 <-> L2). Why Language Awareness?. Dissatisfaction with Communicative Language T
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1. Language Awareness and Its Multiple Possibilities for the L2 Classroom Article by Daphnée Simard and Wynne Wong
Samantha Label
FLL 655
April 25, 2006
2. What is Language Awareness? “Sensitivity to and conscious awareness of the nature of language and its role in human life” (Donmall, 1985)
Knowledge of one language can help development of another language (L1 <-> L2)
3. Why Language Awareness? Dissatisfaction with Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
Loss of accuracy with CLT only
Social reasons
Immigrant students and language
Language awareness fosters tolerance of other cultures and languages
4. Awareness of Language Program Developed by Hawkins (1984) for U.K. students
Bridge between languages and new language instructions
Elementary and secondary language instruction
Transition to foreign language study
Bridge from ESL
5. Metalinguistic Reflection “Acts of reflection about the language that are under conscious control including the learner’s intentional planning of his/her linguistic processing” (Gombert, 1996)
Reflection example:
“Des fois, les mots sont inversés” (“Sometimes, the words are reversed”)
Done by children and adults
6. Metalinguistic Reflection (Cont.) Without MR, students learning under immersion and naturalistic acquisition models experience lack of accuracy in certain features of L2. This is attributed by Simard and Wong to absence of reflection on language and awareness of either L1 or L2.
7. Social Implications Dabčne (1990) once proposed that the L1 of immigrant students in France be taught as foreign languages in French schools.
Learning these languages (and reflecting on them metalinguistically) would potentially validate their use to the native French students and break down a social barrier between natives and immigrants.
“Expert” factor
8. Metalinguistic Reflection (Cont.) Reflecting on L1 can help understanding of L2
Languages should be learned together and compared, not in isolation
9. Studies EVLang
Joint European study
Language awareness, motivation and cultural appreciation
Results (motivation and attitude vs. testing)
Huot (1995) studied a French L1 child and found a positive relationship between metatalk and L2 acquisition
10. Input Enhancement Instruction in which students are led to notice certain linguistic features
Also known as “consciousness-raising”
Based on the idea of comprehensible input (Krashen)
Many methods, from textual enhancement to explicit grammar instruction
11. Applications Activities designed to raise general awareness of any language, as well as cross-cultural appreciation
Different intonations (increased sensitivity and tolerance)
Nonverbal communication (greetings, cross-cultural awareness)
14. Applications (Cont.) Using guided reflection to help students understand similarities in construction of active/passive sentences
Cross-linguistic exploration of language (days of the week) helps students get to a deeper understanding and appreciation of L1 and L2
Consciousness-raising activity in which students have to recognize the “correct” form and determine the grammatical rule from there
18. Conclusions Language awareness can be a powerful social awareness tool in the classroom
Students need a healthy mix of awareness to form and to meaning
These methods can potentially raise the interest level of FL instruction
Prescriptive vs. descriptive?