Teaching English in the Priy Classroom | Page 30

2. It gives the learner the chance ‘…to test out hypotheses about the target language…’ 3. It helps the learner to move from ‘…a purely semantic analysis of the language to a syntactic analysis of it’. The affective filter hypothesis As was stated above, Krashen considers comprehensible input as a necessary but not sufficient condition for acquisition. This is because, according to Krashen (1987: 30-33), affective factors such as motivation, self-confidence or anxiety can function as an adjustable filter which freely allows, impedes, or blocks ‘input’ in becoming ‘intake’ (Corder 1967 defines intake as that portion of the input which the learner actually attends to and, therefore, uses for acquisition). Thus, in order for the learner not to ‘fossilize’, i.e. not to stop developing linguistically, the teacher has to provide them with comprehensible input in a low filter environment. Especially at the initial steps of language learning, Krashen (1987: 27) suggests that teachers should allow children a ‘silent period’ during which they can internalize language without being forced to speak before they are ready, an approach which is incorporated in the ‘Natural Approach’ (see Krashen and Terrell 1983). 1.2.3 Interactionist theories Interactionists believe that people learn language when they talk to and with each other. Both Pica (1994) and Long (1983b) argue that much Second Language Acquisition (SLA) takes place through conversational interaction, usually referred to as ‘negotiation of meaning’(Pica et al 1993), which occurs whenever there is a communication breakdown. As Lightbown and Spada (1999: 122) stress, negotiation for meaning is accomplished through a variety of modifications which naturally arise in interaction. For example, learners will ask each other or their teacher for clarification, confirmation, repetition, and other kinds of information as they attempt to negotiate meaning. A stronger perspective on the role of interaction in SLA is the one expressed by Lantolf and Appel (1996) who, influenced by Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory of human mental processing, claim that second language learners advance to higher levels of linguistic knowledge when they collaborate and interact with more knowledgeable users of the target language. The enormous role which Vygotsky assigns to instruction for the children’s learning and development upgrades the role of 30