Second Language Acquisition
Week #17:
Learning Strategies
and
Ambiguity Tolerance
1
0. Outline
1. Individual learner differences and
language learning
2. Defining learning strategies
3. Types of learning strategies
4. Learning strategies – a résumé
5. Ambiguity tolerance
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3
MODALITY
PREFERENCES
• visual
• auditory
• kinaesthetic
FL
APTITUDE
components
• phonemic
coding
• language
analytic
• memory
aptitudinal
preference
• memory vs.
analytic
L
EARNING
STYLE
• analytic vs.
holistic
• visual vs.
verbal
• active vs.
passive
L
EARNING
S
TRATEGIES
• metacognitive
• cognitive
• social-
affective
LANGUAGE
LEARNING
(Skehan 2000: 268; Pavičić Takač 2008: 45)
1. Individual learner differences
and language learning
2. Defining learning strategies
Among researchers, there is no consensus as to
whether
cognitive styles
and
learning styles
refer to the same concepts, or whether
intelligence
and
aptitude
overlap.
There is also controversy as to whether
learning strategies
can be distinguished from
ordinary learning activities.
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2. Defining learning strategies
Rebecca Oxford (2011) defines a
learning
strategy
as "a deliberate attempt to
manage and control efforts toward a
learning goal" (p. 288).
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2. Defining learning strategies
(Oxford 1990: 8)
Learning strategies
are specific actions taken by
the learner to make learning
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and more transferrable to new situations.
easier
faster
more enjoyable
more self-directed
more effective
2. Defining learning strategies
A
learning strategy
is:
a specific method of approaching a
problem or a task
a planned design for controlling and
manipulating information
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2. Defining learning strategies
A
learning strategy
is a conscious action
or behaviour that a student engages in,
in order to make his or her learning
more effective and efficient
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2. Defining learning strategies
Learner strategy instruction
(
training
)
refers to teaching effective plans, so
that learners can use adequate study
skills and thus become more self-
directed and autonomous
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3. Types of learning strategies
(
I
) C
OGNITIVE
S
TRATEGIES
involving direct manipulation
of the learning material
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resourcing
repetition
grouping
deduction
imagery
auditory
representation
keyword method
elaboration
transfer
inferencing
note taking
translation
3. Types of learning strategies
(
II
) M
ETACOGNITIVE
S
TRATEGIES
involving knowledge about
or regulation of cognition
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planning
one's
learning
monitoring one's
output and
comprehension
evaluating
one's
learning
3. Types of learning strategies
(
III
) S
OCIOAFFECTIVE
S
TRATEGIES
seeking output opportunities
in social interaction
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asking for
repetition
or
explanation
questioning
for
clarification
negotiating
meaning
4. Learning strategies – a résumé
The outcomes of research into learning
strategies can be summed up as follows (Pavičić
Takač 2008: 45):
• L2 acquisition is
similar to learning of other
complex cognitive skills
;
• learning strategies reflect
conscious efforts
the learner invests in L2 learning and enable
the learner to control the learning process;
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4. Learning strategies – a résumé
• the process of
L2 acquisition is different from
the L1 acquisition
:
whereas L1 is acquired by means of an inborn
language acquisition capacity in a mostly
predetermined order, L2 acquisition is governed by
the use of learning strategies and is characterised
by diverse acquisition patterns;
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4. Learning strategies – a résumé
• learning strategies
affect L2 acquisition
process
, its success or failure;
• learning strategies are a
source
of individual
learner differences;
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4. Learning strategies – a résumé
• learning strategies are the individual learner
characteristic that is seen as the most
amenable to change
:
learning strategies can be taught and practised until
their use becomes automatic, i.e. until learners
become skilled and fast strategy users.
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
Tolerance of ambiguity is the degree to
which an individual is cognitively
prepared to tolerate concepts, ideas
and propositions that conflict with
his/her own inner belief system or
structure of knowledge (Ely 1989).
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
Ambiguity directly refers to anything in
L2 that is
perceived as vague,
incomplete and lacking consistency
.
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
It stems from the fact that L1 and L2 are
usually significantly different systems,
as regards their structure, lexis,
phonology and spelling.
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
It is essential for language learners to
be able to
accommodate any
explanations or rules that run counter
to the ones already accepted
and
internalized at earlier stages of study.
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
The optimum level of ambiguity
tolerance is not high, but
moderate
.
Too much acceptance of vagueness and
wishy-washiness is undesirable.
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5. Ambiguity tolerance
Too high a level of ambiguity tolerance may
lead a language student not only to accept
every linguistic proposal and believe that
indeed "anything goes", but also to make
false assumptions about the system of L2.
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Thank you
for your
attention
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