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The natural approachThe natural approach

The natural approach1983

Tracy D. Terrell, Stephen D. Krashen

About this book

The Natural Approach is based on the following tenets: 1). Language acquisition (an unconscious process developed through using language meaningfully) is different from language learning (consciously learning or discovering rules about a language) and language acquisition is the only way competence in a second language occurs. (The acquisition/learning hypothesis) 2). Conscious learning operates only as a monitor or editor that checks or repairs the output of what has been acquired. (The monitor hypothesis) 3). Grammatical structures are acquired in a predictable order and it does little good to try to learn them in another order.(The natural order hypothesis). 4). People acquire language best from messages that are just slightly beyond their current competence. (The input hypothesis) 5). The learner's emotional state can act as a filter that impedes or blocks input necessary to acquisition. (The affective filter hypothesis)

Details

First published
1983
OL Work ID
OL1981216W

Subjects

Language artsLanguages, ModernModern LanguagesStudy and teachingLanguage and languagesLanguage acquisition

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.