Language Learning Theories Overview
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This document presents an overview of various language learning theories. It defines and explains key concepts, such as cognitivism, nativism, behaviorism, and affective filter. It also provides information about proponents of these theories, including figures like Noam Chomsky, Jean Piaget, and Jerome Bruner.
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**Cognitivist Theory** - **Definition:** Focuses on the mental processes involved in language learning, emphasizing the role of the brain in understanding, storing, and producing language. - **Proponents:** Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner **Nativist Linguistics** - **Definition:** P...
**Cognitivist Theory** - **Definition:** Focuses on the mental processes involved in language learning, emphasizing the role of the brain in understanding, storing, and producing language. - **Proponents:** Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner **Nativist Linguistics** - **Definition:** Proposed by Noam Chomsky, this theory argues that humans are born with an innate ability to acquire language through a universal grammar. - **Proponent:** Noam Chomsky **Behaviorist (Skinner)** - **Definition:** Language learning is seen as a behavior acquired through imitation, reinforcement, and conditioning. - **Proponent:** B.F. Skinner **Affective Filter** - **Definition:** A hypothesis in second-language acquisition that emotional factors such as anxiety and motivation influence the success of language learning. - **Proponent:** Stephen Krashen **Acculturation** - **Definition:** Refers to the process of adapting to a new culture, which includes acquiring the language and social practices of the new cultural environment. - **Proponent:** John Schumann **Cartesian Linguistics** - **Definition:** A theory associated with Descartes, emphasizing the mind's role in language, viewing language as an expression of innate, logical thought processes. - **Proponent:** Noam Chomsky **Tabula Rasa (Locke)** - **Definition:** The idea that the human mind is a \"blank slate\" at birth, with knowledge and language acquired through experience and sensory perception. - **Proponent:** John Locke **Speech Acts: Maxims** - **Definition:** Based on Grice\'s Cooperative Principle, maxims guide effective communication, focusing on quality, quantity, relevance, and manner. - **Proponent:** H.P. Grice **Speech Acts: Politeness Theory** - **Definition:** A theory by Brown and Levinson, explaining how people manage face (public self-image) in communication to avoid threats to others\' dignity. - **Proponents:** Penelope Brown and Stephen Levinson **Conversational Implicature** - **Definition:** Implies that speakers can mean more than what is explicitly stated, relying on shared knowledge and context to convey meaning indirectly. - **Proponent:** H.P. Grice **Cooperative Principle** - **Definition:** Proposed by Grice, it suggests that effective communication relies on speakers cooperating by following conversational maxims. - **Proponent:** H.P. Grice **Semiotics (de Saussure)** - **Definition:** The study of signs and symbols in language, where meaning is derived from the relationships between the signifier (form) and signified (concept). - **Proponent:** Ferdinand de Saussure **Cognitive Grammar** - **Definition:** A usage-based model that sees linguistic knowledge as part of general cognition, emphasizing meaning and conceptualization in grammar. - **Proponent:** Ronald Langacker **Translation Studies** - **Definition:** Examines the process of translating between languages, focusing on accuracy, equivalence, and cultural context. - **Proponents:** Eugene Nida, Lawrence Venuti **Discourse Analysis** - **Definition:** Studies how language is used in texts and contexts, focusing on patterns of communication in different social and cultural settings. - **Proponents:** Michael Bakhtin, Erving Goffman **Functional Grammar** - **Definition:** Views grammar as shaped by communicative needs, with a focus on how language is used to express meaning in context. - **Proponent:** M.A.K. Halliday **Word Grammar Theory** - **Definition:** A dependency-based theory that posits words as the basic units of syntax, with grammatical structure emerging from word relationships. - **Proponent:** Richard Hudson **Language Policy and Planning** - **Definition:** Refers to the efforts by authorities to influence or regulate the use of languages within a community, often for sociopolitical goals. - **Proponents:** Joshua Fishman, Bernard Spolsky **Word Formation Theory** - **Definition:** Studies the ways in which new words are created in a language, such as through compounding, affixation, or blending. - **Proponents:** Eric S. Renner, Martin Haspelmath **Typology** - **Definition:** Classifies languages according to their structural features, such as syntax, morphology, and phonology, identifying universal patterns. - **Proponent:** Bernard Comrie **Inflection and Derivation** - **Definition:** Inflection refers to modifying a word for grammatical purposes (e.g., tense), while derivation creates new words by adding affixes. - **Proponents:** Noam Chomsky (for inflection); other linguists like David Beck and Paul Kiparsky contribute to derivation. **Syntagmatic Relations** - **Definition:** The relationship between words or elements in a sequence, determining how they combine to create meaningful phrases or sentences. - **Proponent:** Ferdinand de Saussure **Distinctive Feature Theory** - **Definition:** A phonological theory that defines sounds by a set of binary features (e.g., \[+voice\] or \[-nasal\]) that distinguish one sound from another. - **Proponent:** Roman Jakobson **Natural Phonological Theory** - **Definition:** Proposes that speech errors and patterns in child language acquisition reflect natural processes inherent in human phonology. - **Proponent:** Patricia K. K. Johnson **Optimality Theory** - **Definition:** A model of phonology that argues that surface forms of words are the result of competing constraints, with the optimal form balancing these constraints. - **Proponents:** Alan Prince, Paul Smolensky **Formalism** - **Definition:** Emphasizes the structural aspects of a text, focusing on its form rather than the content or social context in which it was produced. - **Proponents:** Roman Jakobson, Claude Lévi-Strauss **Reader-Response** - **Definition:** A literary theory that emphasizes the reader\'s role in interpreting a text, suggesting that meaning is co-created by the text and its audience. - **Proponents:** Wolfgang Iser, Stanley Fish **Structuralism and Semiotics** - **Definition:** Focuses on the underlying structures that govern language, culture, and society, often examining systems of signs and symbols. - **Proponent:** Ferdinand de Saussure **Narratology** - **Definition:** The study of narrative structure and how stories are told, focusing on elements like plot, perspective, and character development. - **Proponents:** Gerard Genette, Mikhail Bakhtin **Stylistics and the Figures of Speech** - **Definition:** Examines how language style (word choice, syntax) and rhetorical devices (metaphor, simile) contribute to meaning and effect in texts. - **Proponents:** M.A.K. Halliday, Leech and Short **Deconstruction** - **Definition:** A postmodern approach that seeks to uncover hidden meanings in texts, often challenging traditional interpretations and binary oppositions. - **Proponent:** Jacques Derrida **Post-structuralism** - **Definition:** A critical theory that questions the stability of meaning and the idea of fixed structures, emphasizing the fluid and dynamic nature of language and texts. - **Proponents:** Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault **Psychoanalysis** - **Definition:** Applies Freudian concepts of the unconscious, desire, and repression to literature, exploring how texts reflect the psychological states of their characters and creators. - **Proponents:** Sigmund Freud, Julia Kristeva **Marxism** - **Definition:** Analyzes literature through the lens of class struggle and economic power, often focusing on how texts reflect and perpetuate social inequality. - **Proponents:** Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Terry Eagleton **New Historicism** - **Definition:** Explores the historical and cultural contexts of literature, emphasizing how texts are influenced by and influence the power structures of their time. - **Proponent:** Stephen Greenblatt **Hermeneutics** - **Definition:** The theory and methodology of interpretation, especially of texts, focusing on understanding meaning within cultural and historical contexts. - **Proponents:** Hans-Georg Gadamer, Paul Ricoeur **Feminist Criticism** - **Definition:** Analyzes literature and culture from the perspective of gender inequality, critiquing how texts reinforce or challenge patriarchal norms. - **Proponents:** Virginia Woolf, Elaine Showalter, Sandra Gilbert **Queer Theory** - **Definition:** Explores how literature and culture represent and construct sexuality and gender, often challenging traditional binaries of male/female and heterosexual/homosexual. - **Proponents:** Judith Butler, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick **Post-colonial Criticism** - **Definition:** Examines literature produced in or about former colonies, focusing on issues of identity, power, and cultural conflict between colonizers and the colonized. - **Proponents:** Edward Said, Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak **Ethnicity Studies** - **Definition:** Investigates how literature portrays ethnic identities, often focusing on issues of representation, discrimination, and cultural diversity. - **Proponents:** Stuart Hall, Cornel West **Orientalism** - **Definition:** A concept by Edward Said that critiques how the West constructs an exotic, inferior image of the East to assert dominance and justify colonial rule. - **Proponent:** Edward Said