Tuesday, May 31, 2005

postsecret.blogspot.com

Online confessors are like flashers. They exhibit themselves anonymously and publicly, with little consideration for you, the audience.... One online confessional, though, breaks the mold. At PostSecret, found at postsecret.blogspot.com, the confessions are consistently engaging, original and well told. How come? The Web site gives people simple instructions. Mail your secret anonymously on one side of a 4-by-6-inch postcard that you make yourself. That one constraint is a great sieve. It strains out lazy, impulsive confessors.

New York Times - May 31/2005

The blog isn't as great as the article suggests but it does highlight just how easily it could be to start a winning blog if only you had a good idea and the gumption to see it through. Anyway worth a look.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

tell me

“Tell me, and I will forget.

Show me, and I may remember.

Involve me, and I will understand.”

-Confucius

Friday, May 27, 2005

motorcycle diaries

sandman wrote (about che guevera)- A murdering bastard is a murdering bastard, no matter how much of a starry-eyed idealist he is.


bob - That may be true but there were and still are a lot of people around whose business enterprises and influence over government policies pretty much force millions of people even deeper into poverty. That's some of the worst violence you can do to a person. It should come as no suprise that the victims of such violence, and the people who sympathize with them, become capable of some violence of their own. Perhaps the real intention of this film is to remind us of these sad facts.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

glory

Somebody wrote - What is glory? This: an absolute commitment to your own principle, whatever it may be--the kind of commitment that expresses itself in only one way, by a willingness to kill other people on its behalf, and to be killed in turn. A commitment, finally, to defeat. For victory is always partial and compromised, but defeat and death are total and grand. Victory is secular; defeat is sacred.

Monday, May 23, 2005

psuedo dilemma

Anyway this whole thread amounts to a hill of beans. TPY will do whatever she does for whatever reasons she does them and the rest of us will have grown a day older having participated vicariously in another person's pseudo dilemma. I dunno why but these internet soul of love sessions give me the creeps. Sorry

Sunday, May 22, 2005

amnesty international

I enjoy the King James Version of the Bible immensely for the beauty of the language. Just from a professional writers perspective one ought to read the KJV on a very regular basis.

But beyond that it has become obvious to me, later in life, that the Bible and Judeo-Christian culture are somehow inexorably linked with a serious commitment to human rights.

First a bit of background. When I was in university and through my 30s I thought Judeo-Christianity was utter bullshit that had no redeeming value. At 47 I still have a very, very dim view of all (all!) organized religions. I share my fathers view that organized religion-be it Roman Catholicism, Aimee Semple McPherson or the Tibetan Buddhists moving and grooving through Taipei streets-are nothing more than ways to separate rubes from their hard earned dollars. (as a side note, my mom, when she was a kid in Orange County CA, actually met Aimee Semple McPherson and got blessed by her! Which is why my mom went on to have the two outstanding boy children, i.e. me and my brother, that she did).

Well, then I move to the Far East, Taiwan specifically, and work for about 5 years with Amnesty International here. And as part of that work with other AI branches in Asia. And the conclusion I came to is that if a county is going to have a serious and deeply rooted commitment to basic human rights then—its got to have as its cultural foundation Judeo-Christianity. Not Islam, not Hinduism, not Buddhism, not Daoism (which actually is my personal religion of choice) but Judeo-Christianity.

As I have pondered this over the years I have come up with a variety of reasons why this is but I see this post is getting long so I will just list them:
First, Judeo-Christianity has a final judgment date.
Second, in Judeo-Christianity each individual is a unique creation of God, made in Gods image. Ergo each individual has unique value, dignity and is worthy of respect.
Third, Judeo-Christianity has a kind of law basis. There are covenants, commandments and they are not human creations.

So, read your Bible and build human rights!

Having said all that, ummm, I personally find the New Testament to be full of often confusing stories and mixed moral messages—maybe I need to read the Cliff Notes.


Take care,
Daoist Master Brian

bob - I don't believe in God but I believe that each individual has unique value. Not sure that they all have dignity or are worthy of respect but I would fight for their freedom to work towards those things. I'm not sure either that a commitment to human rights needs to be based on the uniqueness of the individual. Perhaps it can be based on the opposite. On the knowledge that despite all our apparent differences we are very much the same. We want to be happy and avoid suffering and we can be pretty sure the other guy does too. Take as a starting point a love of life and of nature and from there move towards guarantees of freedom. No need for absolute laws or eternal judgements. Just appreciation, acknowledgement and respect for life and the apparent facts of human nature.

Saturday, May 21, 2005

hill of beans

I wonder too if "the collected works of bob" might not be just the ticket to put a fellar like ran back on track. What with bob's 2097 posts in the last four months alone there must be at least the odd bit of profundity and inspirational wit to be found in there somewhere. Otherwise even such a prodigiuos output such as his doesn't amount to a hill of beans actually. It really is too distressing a notion to even contemplate. Gracious me has it all been for naught?

Song of Solomon

My lover thrust his hand through the latch-opening;
my heart began to pound for him.

I arose to open for my lover,
and my hands dripped with myrrh,
my fingers with flowing myrrh,
on the handles of the lock.
--Song of Solomon 5:4-5 (NIV)

Monday, May 16, 2005

taiwan

Taiwan is like a poem that does not rhyme.
But just when you toss the book angrily into the corner,
You find yourself picking it up again,
And wonder why the story is so damned touching.

BobHonest

Saturday, May 14, 2005

an old maxim

"An old maxim says the courts follow the ballot box. I think that's true. There is no such thing as abstract judicial philosophy. Judicial philosophy and the way judges view the Constitution is a product of the cultural mores of their times."
- New York Times

still a savage

We have looked at this thing from every concievable angle and what it comes down to is this: Do smokers, individualy, have enough respect for other people to take their habit somewhere that it doesn't constitute a major irritation? Or do they want to continue stink up the social venues in a way that is nauseating to non smokers? That's all there is to it. As a smoker you either get on the right side of this or... well, you can form your own conclusions.

Let it be understood that I comprehend the sentiments of those who think that the pub is the last bastion of whogivesafuckism, and, like loretta, to an extent, I sympathize. I spent my first night at the Balmoral at sixteen for god's sake. I practically have a Phd in whogivesafuckism, but these days my whogivesafuckism is running more towards the whogivesafuckismifyouthinkyouhavearighttosmoke school of thought. I may be an English teacher but deep down I'm still a savage.

tough stuff

Seems we are letting it all hang out here so let me take this a step further. It isn't just the health hazard and the stink that turns me off about smoking. It's the principle. Adults from the west have been exposed to loads of information about the dangers of smoking. They know that they endanger their health and the health of those around them with every puff and yet they refuse to quit. It is as bloody difficult addiction to kick I realize but lots of people have kicked more difficult ones. The honest to god truth is that when I look at a smoker I see a person without enough love of life to inspire the discipline required to quit smoking. To me it is an immensely unattractive personality trait.

Tough stuff I realize but there it is. My own addictions and the addictions of others have caused enough damage in this short life already. If I was single I wouldn't dream of dating a smoker.

Sunday, May 08, 2005

ethical journalism

Every mainstream news organization has its own sets of ethics rules, but all of them agree broadly on what constitutes ethical journalism. Information should be verified before it is printed, and people who are involved in a story should be given a chance to air their viewpoints, especially if they are under attack. Reporters should avoid conflicts of interest, even significant appearances of conflicts, and disclose any significant ones. Often, a conflict means being disqualified to cover a story or a subject. When errors are discovered or pointed out by internal or external sources, they must be corrected. And there should be a clear wall between editorial content and advertising.

New York Times

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

more on the natural method

The most important implication of acquisition-learning distinction hypothesis is that form-focused and meaning-based activities should be separated. Therefore, we divided our English program into two unequal parts: input and grammar hours. 75 % of the program is formed by input hours and grammar is handled only in the remaining 25 %. A similar division was made in the test system. 80 % of a common test includes meaning based questions whereas grammar questions formed 20 %. Such a parallelism between what is done in class and what is tested in exams is necessary to avoid negative backwash. That is, if common tests were heavily grammar-oriented, then students would not pay enough attention to meaning-based activities in class.

What kinds of meaning based activities are there in input hours? The majority of input hours is filled with listening activities. Why listening? Because while listening students get input. Why not reading? Because reading can be done outside with ease but not listening. You can make thirty or so students listen to the same tape in class but outside the class you need thirty or so tapes to attain the same efficiency.

Therefore listening activities form the core of the whole English program throughout the year.

Reading, on the other hand, is done extensively outside the class. How about intensive reading? The reason why we prefer extensive reading is the ample amount of input you can get in this way. For instance suppose that intensive reading of a one-page difficult text takes an hour whereas you can read ten pages of simplified text within the same amount of time. One page on the one hand, ten pages on the other. From a cost-efficiency point of view, therefore, intensive reading is held at a minimum in class. Instead students are encouraged to read simplified novels and the number of books read by each student is over 60 (in March). This amounts to more than 3000 pages of written input.

Aren't the students assigned any grammar outside the class? Yes, but not extensively. Grammar plays a minor role outside the class as it does inside. How is the grammar taught in class? Through deduction or even through grammar translation. Why are such old-fashioned techniques used? Because deduction is easier and faster than induction and it is no less effective (especially for adults). Some methodologists suggest that inductively discovered rules are retained better, but one should not forget that it takes quite a long time. What is more, there is no guarantee that the inductively learned rules become acquired as has been emphasized before. Both induction and deduction are instances of learning not of acquisition. If neither of them result in acquisition, then why should we spend so much time with indirect teaching of grammar? In our application, therefore we preferred direct, deductive teaching of grammar basically because it is the shortest way of teaching grammar allowing us to give more time to acquisition activities.

What is the relative weight of production-based activities as compared to comprehension-oriented ones? Aren't speaking and writing as important as listening and reading? Sure, they are. In fact one of the most important aims in NA is to develop students' communicative skills.

But the way to develop them is different from other communicative methods. The NA theory suggests that dwelling on receptive skills positively affects the productive ones as well. Therefore in NA speaking and writing activities occupy a small portion of class time.

Students are believed to develop all of the four skills provided that they are exposed to ample amount of input.

During the first semester, students are not forced to speak or write. This practice is in line with the concept of "Silent Period" mentioned in Krashen's theory. During this silent period students are not passive but actively processing the input and developing their acquired competence. Forcing students to produce before they have enough subconscious grammar knowledge (AC), enhances students' anxiety. Especially in Communicative Approach, the students are required to speak from the very beginning. In NA, however, this is avoided in order not to strengthen the affective filter. If the filter is strong, LAD cannot be triggered. Therefore the only thing that NA students have to do (especially during the first semester) is to display their comprehension one way or another. To achieve this, they can use single or double-word answers, non-verbal means, body language, or even mother tongue.

Answering T/F or wh-questions, drawing charts while listening are other means of displaying comprehension. If students spend most of their class-time by just listening, doesn't it mean that NA teachers are doing the speaking all the time? Isn't this too much burden on the shoulders of our teachers? In Krashenian NA, yes! Krashen's NA teachers has to speak a lot because he is a native (or at least native-like) speaker and he is the main source of input in class. But in our EFL setting, teachers are non- ative . Let alone the non-natives, it is even hard for the native teachers to be the only source of input in class. The solution that we have found to this problem is to use authentic listening texts in the form of audio or video cassettes from the ELT market in addition to the audio and video cassettes of our old coursebook.

If the main source of input is authentic material then what is the role of teacher? The basic duty of our teachers is to check students' comprehension? This is far easier than being the main source of input or being a communicative teacher.

Interestingly, however, this easy method of language teaching is not necessarily less effective than others. One can even suggest that it is one of the most effective methods. To test the efficacy of our application in Kuleli we gave a standard test (KET) comprising listening, reading, writing components plus a separate grammar test (in March). We also gave the same tests to the students in another military high school using the same textbook but with a grammar-oriented method. The test results indicated that Kuleli students are 25 % better off in reading, 40 % in listening. Their better performance might be considered as a natural, expected outcome of the heavy emphasis on receptive skills.

What is more interesting, however, are the writing and grammar results. Kuleli students performed 18 % better in grammar and 30 % in writing though these two language areas have not been emphasized in our program. Even if there were no differences in success between Kuleli and other school students, NA would be successful due to their superiority in overall-proficiency. In short, research results have confirmed the hypothesis that getting great quantities of input develops not only the receptive skills but also the productive ones plus grammar.

NA, in its somewhat modified version, seems to be an appropriate method applicable in an EFL setting like Turkiye. It is a reality that the number of native or true- bilingual teachers is low in our country. But even under such restricted conditions, the application of NA at Kuleli prep has shown that students attain high levels of proficiency when exposed to ample amount of input. To sum up, NA seems to be a method of fostering both productive and receptive skills plus grammar by just relying on input, a method of killing many birds with one stone.

the natural approach - theory to practice

In this paper, we will try to explain how the Natural Approach (NA) has been applied at the prep class of Kuleli Military High School. To our knowledge, Kuleli is the first school in Turkiye applying this rather unpopular method. Since the method is not commonly known and sometimes misinterpreted, a brief theoretical introduction would be beneficial. We'd like to start with a curious analogy between swimming and language acquisition: we as human beings are probably the only creatures who are capable of drowning (!) This is not necessarily because of our heavy flesh: even elephants which are heavier than man simply lay their bodies freely in water and almost never experience drowning. It seems as if the more we flutter, the deeper we sink. It is as if man's conscious swimming attempt deprives him off the natural swimming or floating capacity.

Interestingly, new born babies, who are free from fluttering in water, make the best use of their natural swimming ability and do better than their elders. Another domain where infants outsmart us is language acquisition. While babies pick up their mother tongue with ease, most adults can not learn a new language without much trouble. Even with their advanced cognitive capacity and problem solving skills they simply fall behind children's ultimate level of success. Again it seems as if adults' conscious learning attempts deprive them off the natural language acquisition capacity.

Is it not true that while teaching swimming, the first step is to make learners realize their natural ability to float on the surface of the water? Similarly in NA the aim is to make students rediscover their innate capacity to acquire a language. In fact NA is not the only method which tries to tap this natural capacity. What makes NA different from others, however, is its theory of second language acquisition.

The learning theory underlying NA is called the Monitor Model. It was put forward by an American applied linguist at the University of Southern California. There are five basic hypotheses in the Monitor Model. The first and probably the most important one is the "acquisition-learning distinction hypothesis according to which L2 learners have two distinct ways to develop competence in a second language: learning and acquisition.

Learning is the process of dealing with grammar in conscious way. It is the common practise experienced in most foreign language classrooms even today. Students consciously examine the grammar structures and try to internalize them through extensive practice. In this
sense learning a language is similar to any other kind of subject matter or skill learning like learning math, learning how to type or drive. In all these, you first learn the rules consciously and try to make them automatic through extensive practice. The product of learning process is also a kind of conscious knowledge which Krashen calls learned competence (LC).

Acquisition, on the other hand, is a subconscious process. It is similar, if not identical, to the way we pick up our mother tongue. Unlike a learner, an acquirer cannot feel the processes, the changes happening in his brind (brain and/or mind). When he acquires a new rule, he does not know what has happened because acquisition takes place below his level of awareness. The product of acquisition, AC, is also subconscious. That is why native speakers of a language do not know that they use their L1 grammar knowledge while speaking. In fact, without grammar communication would be greatly damaged. The same is true for second language speakers. While speaking fluently in another language, we have to use our subconsciously provided knowledge.

The existence of conscious and subconscious knowledge in the minds of second language learners is accepted by almost everyone. What is controversial, however, is the claim that consciously learned rules cannot become subconsciously acquired through practice. This view belongs to Krashen and reflected in his oft-criticised claim that "learning does not become acquisition". According to Krashen, LC and AC represent two separate knowledge systems between which there is no seepage, no passage, no interface. This view is known as NON-INTERFACE (NIP) position.

The majority of teachers and methodologists on the other hand, believe that we first learn a grammar rule and through practice it becomes automatic thus subconsciously acquired. This second view, known as INTERFACE (IP)position, appeals to our intuitions whereas NIP is quite counter-intuitive.

In scientific philosophizing intuitions are of undeniable importance but as long as they are not contrary to research findings. And it is at his point that IP and empiric data are in conflict. Research has been telling us, at least for the last two decades, that the development of AC and LC are rather independent. It has been repeatedly found that second language "acquirers" pick up the grammar rules of their target language in an unchangeable natural order even when the teaching/learning order in class is different. (Bailey, et al., 1974; Dulay & Burt, 1974; Fabris, 1978; Christison, 1979) The natural order that researchers have found does not necessarily match our teaching order. Third person singular "s", for example, is an item that we teach at the very beginning of our teaching program but our students seem to resist using this simple rule. In grammar exams where they can use their LC there is no major problem but while speaking fluently they simply ignore it as if they did not know the rule.

This apparent gap between what students consciously know and what they can use during fluent speech has led many researchers to investigate whether the natural order of acquisition can be altered or, in other words, whether they can interfere the process of acquisition. In two separate experiments carried out in 1989, Pienemann and Ellis examined the acquisition three of German grammar rules in a classroom setting. They presented these rules in a reversed natural order. That is, if A is the first rule of German acquisition then they presented it last and emphasized it the least: similarly they taught the last acquired C rule the first and emphasized it the most. At the end of the teaching period they analyzed their students' free conversation and found that again the students follow the natural order, just like naturalistic acquirers.

A comparison of this sequence with that reported for naturalistic learners of German revealed no difference, despite the fact that the order in which the rules were introduced and the degree of emphasis given to rules in the instruction differed from the naturalistic order... The results of this study support the claim that the classroom and naturalistic L2 acquisition ... follow similar routes. (Ellis, 1989, p.305) formal learners develop their language stepwise despite the scheduling of the teaching [and], more importantly, in the same order as has been found for natural acquisition. (Pienemann, 1989, pp. 71-72).

These and many other similar research results confirm Krashen's NON-IP. If learning became acquisition then it would be possible to change the natural order. Since conscious learning and practice cannot change the order of acquisition, Krashen asserts that acquisition and learning are two distinct processes and that learning does not become acquisition. If we cannot acquire through learning then how does acquisition take place? Krashen's input hypothesis gives the answer. According to this hypothesis, we acquire any human language in an "amazingly simple way": by understanding messages. Not through grammar practice nor through speaking and writing practice but by way of getting comprehensible input.

A cornerstone of Krashen's theory is that human beings are equipped with a language-specific acquisition device (LAD), which is triggered by comprehensible input. When we understand a message, LAD automatically operates and picks up the new grammar in that input subconsciously. That is, while we are focusing consciously on the meaning of a message, a subconscious mechanism, LAD, focuses on the form or the grammar of the same message.

Provided that a message is understood, LAD can acquire the new grammar items in it in accordance with the natural order. How does this gradual, piecemeal acquisition take place then?. Let's suppose that a learner-acquirer is at the level of "X" in terms of his current competence in his second language. In order for him to move from x to x+1, that is, the next stage along the natural order, he is to get a message that includes those structures representing x+1 . One cannot acquire an x+2 rule unless he is at the level x+1 even when the message is understood. Technically speaking, one who is at the level of x is not psycholinguistically ready to acquire x+2 structures. That is why, understanding sentences with 3rd person singular "s" does not result in the acquisition of that specific rule.

A common misconception among foreign language teachers is that when students are not told the grammar rules directly, that is, when we make them discover the rules on their own in an inductive way, they will be able to acquire them. However, research has shown us that a structure cannot be acquired either through deduction or induction if the learner is not psycholinguistically ready, namely, if he is not at the relevant stage at the natural order. Both deduction and induction are types of learning, not of acquisition. Both require a conscious focus on grammar whereas acquisition necessitates a focus on meaning.

But isn't there any good of teaching grammar? If you ask this question to Krashen, he would probably say "little, if any". For him the only function of learned competence is to make corrections while speaking or writing. Krashen might be justified in his underestimation of grammar since his ideal NA teacher is that of a highly proficient (preferably native) one providing an input-rich environment for the students. But in a scarcity-of-input EFL environment, where neither the teacher nor the environment can provide sufficient amount of authentic input, grammar plays a far more important role. Alongside its correction role in production, LC helps you understand better. With the help of some conscious grammar knowledge, you can decode those texts that are not decodable only with AC. Especially in reading, the amount of books that you can process is doubled or trippled with the aid of some conscious grammar knowledge. The more you read, the faster you acquire. So grammar helps acquisition by bettering comprehension and by increasing the number of input avenues.

The aim of teaching grammar, however, is not to convert LC into AC but to enable the students to understand better and to get more input. Learning still does not become acquisition but it aids acquisition by easing the way for better comprehension.

The acceptance of the claim that learning does not become acquisition requires a tolerance for grammar mistakes. That is, an NA teacher must be patient when his students make very simple mistakes like the omission of third person singular "s". But if a teacher does not correct grammar mistake, won't it be hard to eradicate them later on? In other words "How is the problem of fossilization handled in NA?" Krashen would probably answer this question by saying that error correction does not necessarily lead to the correction of errors. Error correction might be a temporary solution. A long-term cure for fossilization is to provide comprehensible input. Provided that the students get ample amount of messages, grammar mistakes will be eradicated gradually.

The only type of mistake that needs to be corrected in NA is the one which hinders communication, the one which causes a meaning problem. That is, if the grammar mistake is so awful that the message is not understood then the teacher might ask the student to clarify his message or to restate his sentence.

Correcting form-based grammar mistakes is not only useless but also harmful. Especially at the beginning level, student production is full of mistakes. Dealing only with meaning errors is enough intervention. If a teacher corrects both meaning and form errors then students will feel offended and hesitate to speak in class. As a result, the classroom atmosphere will get tense.

The affective filter hypothesis in Krashen's SLA theory predicts that in such a negative atmosphere, acquisition process is greatly hampered. According to the theory, this filter gets strengthened when a learner has high anxiety, low motivation and low self-esteem. Incoming input cannot trigger LAD if the filter is strong. In short a teacher who is correcting form-based mistakes is not only wasting his time and effort but also doing disservice to his students.

application of natural approach

1. Application of the Five Hypotheses to Foreign/Second Language Classes

In this part, we will try to sift through the practical value of the approach for foreign or second language classes by taking its theoretical bases into consideration.

i. The Acquisition-Learning Distinction

The first and the most useful hypothesis, the acquisition-learning hypothesis tells us that we should balance class time between acquisition activities and learning exercises. It is important to realize that students or any human being cannot both learn and acquire at the same time because one can focus on only one thing at a time, either on form or on meaning. Therefore, there must be a separation between acquisition and learning activities in FL classes and the relative weight of acquisition classes should be over that of learning classes.

The NA instructor does not expect students at the end of a particular course to have acquired a 'specific grammar point'. Instead s/he does expect them to display their comprehension. It is necessary and inevitable, as has been mentioned earlier, to employ two separated classes: Input and grammar classes (i.e., acquisition and learning classes). In input classes, students are given as much comprehensible input as possible. In grammar classes, however, grammar rules are presented deductively or inductively depending on the age of the students (also on whether they are field-independent or field-dependent). The role of grammar classes is to produce 'optimal monitor users' and to aid comprehension indirectly. Therefore, the core of the NA is acquisition activities which have a purpose other than conscious grammar exercises such as audiolingual drills and cognitive learning exercises.

ii. The Monitor Hypothesis

What is implied by the Monitor Hypothesis for FL classes is, therefore, to achieve optimal monitors. Students may monitor during written tasks (e.g., homework assignments)and preplanned speech, or to some extent during speech. Learned knowledge enables students to read and listen more so they acquire more. Especially in early stages, grammar instruction speeds up acquisition. This is one of the reasons why adults are faster than children in terms of the rate of achievement. However, the NA teacher wishes his students to use the monitor where appropriate.

iii. The Input Hypothesis

As for the application of the Input Hypothesis, the instructor should provide input that is roughly-tuned. The teacher should always send meaningful messages and 'must' create opportunities for students to access i+1 structures to understand and express meaning. For instance, the teacher can lay more emphasis on listening and reading comprehension activities. Extensive reading is often preferred because of ample amount of input provided. Outside reading is also helpful (e.g., graded readers, magazines and the like).

iv. The Natural Order Hypothesis

The Natural Approach teacher should be tolerant against errors. He uses a semantic syllabus for acquisition activities and grammatical syllabus for grammar lessons (i.e., for learning sessions). As is known "the grammatical syllabus assumes that we know the correct natural order of presentation and acquisition, we don't: what we have is information about a few structures in a few languages." (Krashen, 1983: 72). Therefore, the teacher will not organize the acquisition activities of the class about grammatical syllabi and only 'meaning' errors are to be corrected in a positive manner.

v. The Affective Filter Hypothesis

The application of this hypothesis would be that acquisition should be achieved in a low-anxiety environment. The teacher creates a comfortable atmosphere in the classroom by lowering the affective filter. There is no demand for early production speech and no radical concern for correctness in early stages of acquisition. This, of course, reduces the anxiety of students considerably. Our pedagogical goal in an FL class should, then, not only include providing comprehensible input but also creating an atmosphere that fosters a low affective filter.

2. The Syllabus

The syllabus underlying the Natural Approach is topical and situational. It is a semantic, or notional syllabus, simply "a series of topics that students will find interesting and the teacher can discuss in a comprehensible way" (Krashen, 1985:55). The focus of each classroom activity is organized by topic, not grammatical structures. What is more interesting is that Krashen and Terrell have not specified or suggested the functions which are believed to derive naturally from the topics and situations. Therefore, basic communication goals (both written and oral) are achieved mainly through topics and situations; and each topic and situation includes various language functions that the students will acquire.

As discussed earlier, a grammatical syllabus may be used in learning classes where learners are given conscious knowledge about the target language. Needless to say, the relative weight of acquisition activities is to be over that of learning activities. Similarly, practice of specific grammatical structures is not focused on in the above mentioned semantic syllabus.

3. Learning/Teaching Activities

Learners remain silent during the first stage. This does not mean they are inactive. What they do in this stage is to understand the teacher talk that focuses on objects in the classroom or on the content of pictures. Students are only expected to respond to teacher commands without having to say anything. The purpose of the beginning stage is not to make students perfect but to help them proceed to the next stage.

When students feel ready to produce speech, the teacher asks questions and elicit one word answers. This is the second stage where the teacher asks yes/no questions, either- or questions, and wh-questions that require single word utterances. Students are not expected to use a word actively until they have heard it many times. Pictures, charts, advertisements are utilized to proceed to the third stage where acquisition activities are emphasized (e.g., group work and whole class discussion).

The NA instructor uses techniques that are borrowed from other methods and adapted to meet the requirements of the NA theory. Among these techniques are TPR activities of Asher, Direct Method activities in which gesture and context are used to elicit questions and answers, and group work activities that are often used in Communicative Language Teaching. But, what makes the NA different is that every specific technique has a theoretical rationale. That is, the Natural Approach theory is so strong that within its framework classroom activities can be accounted for. This feature of the NA makes it superior to other methods like Communicative Language Teaching which lacks a sound theory of language learning.

4. Teacher Roles

We may speak of three crucial roles for the NA teacher. Firstly, the teacher is the primary source of input that is understandable to the learner. It is the teacher that attempts to maintain a constant flow of comprehensible input. If s/he maintains students' attention on key lexical items or uses context to help them, the students will 'naturally' be successful. Secondly, the teacher creates a friendly classroom atmosphere where there is a low affective affective filter. Thirdly, the teacher chooses the most effective materials and employs a rich mix of classroom activities.

5. Learner Roles

The language acquirer is regarded as a processor of comprehensible input. S/he is challenged by input that is a little beyond her/his present level of competence. S/he is expected to be able to assign meaning to this input through dynamic use of context and extralinguistic information. Acquirers' roles, in fact, vary according to their stage of linguistic development. Some of their roles are to make their own decisions on when to speak, what to speak about, and what linguistic expressions to use while speaking.






6. CONCLUSION

We are on the eve of a new paradigm shift in foreign language teaching methodology. The Communicative Approach or 'PPP' is no longer a dogmatically accepted best method. Its impact is about to fade away. Methodologists are in search of a successor of the CA. The Natural Approach with its strong learning theory and easily applicable techniques is the strongest nominee for the most common method of the 21st century.

Using our reasoning faculty, we can speed up the process of reaching the conclusion that the NA or comprehension-based methods are more efficient than grammar-based ones. Otherwise, we have to follow the footsteps of old-fashioned ELT literature which is preconditioned against the NA. Such a literature will most probably seek the successor of the Communicative Approach among production-based methods. If we are to follow this literature, then we are to accept losing another decade before arriving at comprehension-based methods.

the natural approach to second language acquisition

II. THEORETICAL BASIS OF THE NATURAL APPROACH

II.1. Theory of Language

Krashen regards 'communication' as the main function of language. The focus is on teaching communicative abilities. The superiority of 'meaning' is emphasized. Krashen and Terrell believe that a language is essentially its lexicon. They stress the importance of vocabulary and view language as a vehicle for 'communicating meanings' and 'messages'. According to Krashen, 'acquisition' can take place only when people comprehend messages in the TL. Briefly, the view of language that the Natural Approach presents consists of 'lexical items', 'structures' and 'messages'. The lexicon for both perception and production is considered critical in the organization and interpretation of messages. In Krashen's view, acquisition is the natural assimilation of language rules by using language for communication. This means that linguistic competence is achieved via 'input' containing structures at the 'interlanguage + 1' level (i +1); that is, via 'comprehensible input'.

II.2. Theory of Language Learning

(1) The Acquisition-Learning Hypothesis

Krashen, in his theory of second language acquisition (SLA)suggested that adults have two different ways of developing competence in second languages: Acquisition and learning. "There are two independent ways of developing ability in second languages. 'Acquisition' is a subconscious process identical in all important ways to the process children utilize in acquiring their first language, ... [and] 'learning' ..., [which is] a conscious process that results in 'knowing about' [the rules of] language" (Krashen 1985:1).

Krashen believes that the result of learning, learned competence (LC) functions as a monitor or editor. That is, while AC is responsible for our fluent production of sentences, LC makes correction on these sentences either before or after their production. This kind of conscious grammar correction, 'monitoring', occurs most typically in a grammar exam where the learner has enough time to focus on form and to make use of his conscious knowledge of grammar rules (LC) as an aid to 'acquired competence'. The way to develop learned competence is fairly easy: analyzing the grammar rules consciously and practising them through exercises. But what Acquisition / Learning Distinction Hypothesis predicts is that learning the grammar rules of a foreign/second language does not result in subconscious acquisition. In other words, what you consciously learn does not necessarily become subconsciously acquired through conscious practice, grammar exercises and the like. Krashen formulates this idea in his well-known statement that "learning does not became acquisition". It is at this point where Krashen receives major criticism.

(2) The Natural Order Hypothesis

According to the hypothesis, the acquisition of grammatical structures proceeds in a predicted progression. Certain grammatical structures or morphemes are acquired before others in first language acquisition and there is a similar natural order in SLA. The average order of acquisition of grammatical morphemes for English as an 'acquired' language is given below:

-Ing--------Aux---------Irregular------Regular Past
Plural----->Article---->Past---------->3rd Sing.
Copula--------------------------------Possessive

The implication of natural order is not that second or foreign language teaching materials should be arranged in accordance with this sequence but that acquisition is subconscious and free from conscious intervention (Ellidokuzoglu, 1992).

(3) The Input Hypothesis

This hypothesis relates to acquisition, not to learning. Krashen claims that people acquire language best by understanding input that is a little beyond their present level of competence. Consequently, Krashen believes that 'comprehensible input' (that is, i + 1) should be provided. The 'input' should be relevant and 'not grammatically sequenced'. The 'input' should also be in sufficient quantity as Richards pointed out:


".. child acquirers of a first language are provided with samples of 'caretaker' speech, rough - tuned to their present level of understanding, ..[and] adult acquirers of a second language [should be] provided with simple codes that facilitate second language comprehension."
(Richards, J. 1986:133)


(4) The Monitor Hypothesis

As is mentioned, adult second language learners have two means for internalizing the target language. The first is 'acquisition' which is a subconscious and intuitive process of constructing the system of a language. The second means is a conscious learning process in which learners attend to form, figure out rules and are generally aware of their own process. The 'monitor' is an aspect of this second process. It edits and make alterations or corrections as they are consciously perceived. Krashen believes that 'fluency' in second language performance is due to 'what we have acquired', not 'what we have learned': Adults should do as much acquiring as possible for the purpose of achieving communicative fluency. Therefore, the monitor should have only a minor role in the process of gaining communicative competence. Similarly, Krashen suggests three conditions for its use: (1) there must be enough time; (2) the focus must be on form and not on meaning; (3) the learner must know the rule.

(5) The Affective Filter Hypothesis

The learner's emotional state, according to Krashen, is just like an adjustable filter which freely passes or hinders input necessary to acquisition. In other words, input must be achieved in low-anxiety contexts since acquirers with a low affective filter receive more input and interact with confidence. The filter is 'affective' because there are some factors which regulate its strength. These factors are self-confidence, motivation and anxiety state.

Monday, May 02, 2005

writing

Krashen - Writing can make you smarter. When we write something down on the page, we make a representation of our thoughts, of our "cognitive structures." Once on the page, the brain finds it irresistible to come up with a better version of our cognitive structures. Improving our cognitive structures is real learning (using "learning" in the general sense, not as contrasted with "acquisition"). Writing is not the only way of doing this, of course, but it is a very effective way..... meaning is not what you start out with in writing, but what you end up with. Boice noted that inspiration is the result of writing, not the cause. In addition, there is empirical evidence supporting this assertion, experiments showing that writing can aid in thinking and problem-solving (Krashen, 2003) as well as positive correlations between eminence and amount written among professional writers and thinkers.