Group 6
Group name:
Isnaini Farida Khilmi (2130730038)
Dyah Nuraini (2130730040)
Nurmawati Kolong (2130730052)
Age and Acquisition
Lenneberg´s critical
period hypothesis (1967) suggests that there is a biologically
determined period of life when language can be acquired more easily. Beyond
this time a language is more difficult to acquire. According to
Lenneberg, bilingual language acquisition can only happen during the critical
period (age 2 to puberty). The critical period hypothesis is associated with
neurophysiological mechanisms suggesting that in late bilinguals the early and
the late acquired languages are represented in spatially separated parts of the
brain (Broca’s area). In early bilinguals on the other hand a similar
activation in Broca’s area takes place for both languages. This loss of the
brain´s plasticity explains why adults may need more time and effort compared
to children in second language learning.
Language
Language has
some different definitions such as:
# Language is a complex, specialized skill, which
develops in the child spontaneously, without conscious effort or formal
instruction.
# Ron
Scollon (2004) emphasize that, first of all, language is not something that
comes in” nicely package units” and that it certainly is a multiple, complex
and kaleidoscopic phenomenon.
#the other definitions are:
1. Language
is systematic
2. Language
is a set at arbitrary symbols
3. Language
is essentially human, although possibly not limited to humans.
We use language to express inner thoughts and
emotions, to make sense of complex and abstract thought, to learn to
communicate with others, to fulfill our wants and needs, as well as to
establish rules and maintain our culture.
Learning and teaching
Learning
has some definitions:
1. Acquisition
or getting.
2. Retention
of information or skill.
3. Retention
implies storage system, memory, cognitive organization.
4. Involves
active, conscious focus on and acting upon events outside or inside the
organism.
5. Relatively
permanent but subject to forgetting.
6. Involves
some form of practice, perhaps reinforced practice.
7. Change in behavior.
Principles of Learning
1. Students’ prior knowledge can help or hinder learning.
2. How students organize knowledge influences how they learn
and apply what they know.
3. Students’ motivation determines, directs, and sustains what
they do to learn.
Teaching is guiding and facilitating learning,
enabling the learner to learn, and setting the conditions for learning.
Principles of Teaching
·
Effective teaching involves acquiring
relevant knowledge about students and using that knowledge to inform our course
design and classroom teaching.
·
Effective teaching involves aligning the
three major components of instruction: learning objectives, assessments, and
instructional activities.
·
Effective teaching
involves articulating explicit expectations regarding learning objectives and
policies.
·
Effective teaching
involves prioritizing the knowledge and skills we choose to focus on.
·
Effective teaching
involves recognizing and overcoming our expert blind spots.
·
Effective teaching
involves adopting appropriate teaching roles to support our learning goals.
·
Effective teaching
involves progressively refining our courses based on reflection and feedback.
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