Age in second language acquisition

Bibliographic Information

Age in second language acquisition

Birgit Harley

(Multilingual matters / series editor, Derrick Sharp, 22)

Multilingual Matters, c1986

  • pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 131-139

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

It is commonly held that young children pick up new languages "naturally" and with remarkable ease, while older learners generally have a long hard struggle to achieve even moderate fluency. The major purpose of this book is to carry out an examination of empirical studies in light of the various theoretical perspectives that have been brought to bear on the age issue. The analysis leads to a number of conclusions concerning the need for future research on specific aspects of L2 acquisition by older and younger learners. The study in Part 2 concentrates on some specific aspects of oral language proficiency as demonstrated in an interview setting to: (i) determine whether there are differences in L2 acquisition that can be associated with particular starting ages; (ii) and provide information of value to educators concerned with designing curriculae for such communicative L2 programs commencing at different age levels.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION PART l: THE AGE ISSUE 1. Theoretical Perspectives 2. Empirical Studies of Age Differences PART II: EARLY AND LATE IMMERSION: A COMPARISON 3. Research Questions and Design 4. The Findings 5. Interpretation of the Findings APPENDIX 1: THE INTERVIEW APPENDIX 2: STORY REPETITION TASK APPENDIX 3: TRANSLATION TASK

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