THE
KIND OF ERROR IN SLA
Makalah
ini kami buat untuk memenuhi tugas mata kuliah
Second
Language Acquisition
Disusun
oleh:
Rofiatus
syamsiah
IKIP BUDI UTOMO MALANG
FAKULTAS PENDIDIKAN ILMU SOSIAL DAN HUMANIORA
JURUSAN PENDIDIKAN BAHASA INGGRIS
UNIT
1
INTRODUCTION
1.What the kind of error in SLA?
Making errors is the
most natural thing in the world and it is evidently attached tothe human being.
But, how do we define error? There are different definitíons of theword and as
eui’s explains "learners make errors in both comprehension and
production, the first being rather
investigated.
Children learning
their first language (Ll), adult native speakers, second language leamers; they
all make errors which have a different name according to the group committing
the error. Children's errors have been seen as "transitional forms",
the native speakers'ones are called "slips of the tongue" and the
second language (L2) errors are considerad "unwanted forms" (George,
1972)".
According to Lennon
(1991) an error is "a linguistic form or combination of forms which in the
same context and under similar conditions of production would, in all likelihood,
not be produced by the speakers' native speakers counterparts". In the
second language teaching learning process the error has always been regarded as
something negative which must be avoided. As
a consequence, teachers have always adopted a repressive attitude towards it.
On one hand, it was considered to be a sign of inadequacy of the teaching
techniques and on the other hand it was seen as a natural
Result of the fact
that since by nature we cannot avoid making errors we should accep the reality
and try to deal with them. Fortunately, little by little the error has been
seen, from a different point of view being made obvious that we can leam from
our
mistakes.
One of the most generally
known approaches concerning the error throughout
human history is to consider it a negative
effect or result, even worth to be punished.
The error in the Second Language Acquisition.
Different
societies have regarded error as indicating failure and obstructing
progress.Punishing the error has always occurred along with teaching and
leaming processes and has always been used as an instrument of power and a
teaching strategy. At all times has the error been systematically persecuted
and even in our days despite the numerous protesting voices. The idea of the
error as an effect to be avoided has been especially supported by behaviourism,
being considered an obstacle to language learning. The behaviourist viewed
error as a symptom of ineffective teaching or as evidence of failure and they
believed that when they occur they are to be remedied by provision correct forms, that is to say, use of
intensive drilling and over-teaching.
Although Behaviourism
may be strongly criticised as a conception it has represented considerable
progress as far as error treatment is concern, placing emphasis on the different
characteristics of the different subjects and eliminating hard punishment.
A quite different
conception from the behaviouristic one is the one that affirms that without
error there is no progress. What the error-as-progress conception is based on is
Chomsky's idea that a child generates language through innate universal
structure.So, using this symbolic code one can have access to different pieces
of knowledge not as something mechanically learned but as mentally constructed
through try and error.
The idea is now that
the second language learns form hypotheses about the rules to be formed in the
target language and then test them out against input data and modified them
accordingly.
This is how the error
promotes progress and improvement in learning. The behaviourist model is now
substituted by the mentalists' one and thanks to this new conception the error
is fínally seen as something positive and not as a problem.
The third approach
concerning error is the one considering error to be the result of the social
-cognitive interaction. This means that the error implicitly cardes a social
norm as well as a cognitive process. The
error or mistake also carnes a social and
cultural component which makes it different
in different societies.
An outline of the
recent evolution of conceptions, ideas and research on this area helps US to
conceive how and why language teaching nowadays has come to focus on
the learners and the learning process. According
to the Contrastive Analysis Hypothesis,errors occur as a result of interference
when the learners transfer native language habits into the L2. It was also
believed that interference takes place whenever there is a difference between
native mother tongue and the target language. A hypothesis based on Lado's
suggestion in linguistic across cultures where he states "in the
comparison between native and foreign language lies the key to ease all
difficult in foreign language learning" (Lado, 1957).
Lado underlined the
tight relation between Contrastive analysis and language
teaching; although it constitutes an
important contribution to language teaching, to date Contrastive Analysis is
just one more among a number of analyses. In fact, it limits It’s self to
providing us with didactic information. The most important contribution of this
kind of analysis is the delimitation of second language structures which
obstruct learning. Based on this information it is possible to make decisions
concerning teaching. In fact, it is the knowledge of the difficulties resulting
from the difference between first language structures and target language ones
which permits the development of efficient strategies to face error.
The error analysis
supplanted Contrastive Analysis and became a recognised part of Applied
Linguistics owing to the work of Corder (1967) who saw it from a different,point
of view .
A learn's errors
then, provide evidence of the system of the language that he is using.they are
significant in three different ways:
Ø First
to the teacher, in that they tell him, if he undertakes a systematic analysis,
how far towards the goal the learner’s has progressed
Ø Second,
they provide the researchers with evidence of how language is learned
or acquired.. .
Ø Thirdly
they are indispensable to the learner himself because he can regard the
making of error as a
device used in order to learn
.
The Error Analysis is
concerned with the same problems as Contrastive Analysis but from an opposing
point of view. In Error Analysis,the error has been defined as a deviation from
the norm of the target language and a distinction has been made between errors
and mistakes. The error is what takes place when the deviation arises as a
result of lack of knowledge whereas the mistake comes up when learners fail to perform
their competence. Errors have been further divided into overt and covert (Corder,
1971), errors of correctness and appropriatness, as far as identification of
error is concerned, and into presystematic, systematic and postsystematic
regarding their description (Corder, 1974).
In general, L2
acquisition research tackled with the error sources which might be psycholinguistic,
sociolinguistic, epistemic or residing in the discourse structures.
Richards (1971), when trying to identify the
causes of competence errors he came up with three types of errors: interference
errors, which reflect the use of elements from one language to the other,
intralingual errors, subdivided into errors due to
Over generalization, or to ignorance of rules
restriction, which is incomplete
application of the rules, or formally due to
the false concept hypothesis, which
demonstrate the general characteristics of
rule learning and third developmental errors when the learnes builds hypothesis
about the target language based on limited experience.
Another division was
made by Dulay and Burt in 1974 according to which there are three types of
error: the developmental ones which are based on the identity hypothesis are
similar to the errors made in Ll acquisition, interference errors and unique
errors.
which cannot fall
into either of the above mentioned categories. Error Analysis was criticised
for its weaknesses in the methodological procedures and its Hmited scope. It
has been claimed that the Error Analysis has not succeeded in providing a
complete,view of language acquisition describing it as exclusively a collection
of errors. Schachter, Celce-Murcia(1977) criticised Error Analysis on the
grounds of its
focusing on errors, of the fact that
researchers are denied access to the whole picture and of failing to account
for all the areas of the L2 in which learnes have difficulties.Nevertheless,
despite the constructive criticism the Error Analysis has been very important
in the sense that it has given the error respectability and it has made obvious
that the errors are a positive element in language learning.
It is well known,
that in the last years the approach to language learning has
changed substantially. Nowadays, language
teaching basically focuses on the
communicative competence.The communicative
approach is different than the previous teaching methods even where error
correction is concerned. In Communication Language Teaching there is a minimal
focus on form. Including a lack of emphasis on error correction. If it ocurrs
it is likely to be meaning focused. Through errors the teachers can get
improvement in learning.
The errors can be
used in order to help teachers evaluate the students' cognitive development.One
way in which a teacher can make the error come up, when he suspects that it causes
a students' not progressing as he should, is to organize his material in such a
way, that there is more possibility that the error will be produced. As a
result, the student will realize on his own what the cause of his difficulties
is.
A different approach would be that the teacher
reduces the possibility of error making so that the student may get over his
difficulties To be able to apply error correction one should take into account
the students' age and the teaching subjects among other things. To treat the
error the teachers should consider the three phases of its treatment:
localization, Identification and correction. Many times teachers just care for
the localisation of the errors without moving on to the Identification of the
type of the error made or its cause. It is of great importance to try to find
out why the error is made,because not all types of error must be treated in the
same way. It is not just the teacher that should correct the students, they
should actually be motivated to do so themselves. How can that be? It is
possible if the student knows
How to make the right
question .The teacher s role is to help the students become conscious of their
errors and give them incentive to try and find for themselves why they have
made the error and how they could avoid repeating it. Chaudron (1977) speaking
about feedback as oral correction asks the following questions: Should learn error be corrected? The answer to this
question should follow from evidence of the effectiveness of error correction,
a difficult phenomenon to demonstrate.When should they be corrected? The
general tendencies vary according to the instructional focus when focus is on
form corrections occur more frequently. On the other hand when focus is on the
communicative competence teachers tend to correct those errors which seem to
obstruct communication. Which errors should be corrected?
According to
Hendrickson errors which impair communication significantly, errors that have
stigmatizing effects on the listener or the reader. And those which occur frequently
in students' speech and writing.
In the language
classroom the teacher tends to correct the errors automatically and usually
regards all hesitation on part of the student as a request for help. It seems
that delay in the correction would allow the learnes a greater opportunity of
self correction and would help the development of autonomous control processes,
which are characteristic of the competence in communication of the mother
language and which are considered to be essential in the socialization of the
second language. The routine correction on part of the teacher actually runs
the risk of making the learnes depended on correction by others. Moreover, the
correction of an error by the teacher as self correction of a problem of
perception would reduce the risk of hurting the student's self-esteem and would
imitate the conditions of acquisition found in a natural
setting.
Allwright (1988)
argues: "to focus on the teacher treatment of leaner’s error is to adapt a
rather narrow focus because it means concentrating on what might be called the potential
crisis points in the process.It is a much broader view point because it attempts
to deal with the classroom context in which occur as well as with the errors themselves
and secondly because it atttempts to take into account the social nature of this
context in terms of a complexity of relationships between teacher and learnes.
After all the
research and theories over the year we must admit that no definite conclusions
have come up and there is a lot yet to be done in this field. However, it is finally
generally accepted that error making is a necessary part of learning and language
teachers should use the errors with a view to having better results in the classroom.
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