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New from the world of applied linguistics…

…a dash of realism, a big dollop of the painfully obvious and a side serving of hedging their bets:

“…for teachers, the distilled research finding that positive attitudes and motivation contribute to successful learning yields little useful insight into their day-to-day problems of how to motivate little Samantha in Class 2B and keep her motivated.

Fundamentally, two key principles seem crucial to the maintenance of motivation: first, motivation must emanate from the learner, rather than be externally regulated by the teacher;second, learners must see themselves as agents of the processes that shape their motivation.” 

The first sentence is a breath of the fresh air of realism in the usually bs smelling world of applied linguistics. Not sure what to do with the information in the second sentence, in fact I’m half tempted to say it “yields little useful insight into…”. 

And so the book goes on, telling us that (in my own simplistic words, based on my limited understanding):

-When they move to a foreign country kids are more likely to get a native or near native level than adults (but we don’t know if that tells us anything relevant about students studying a few hours a week in their own country) (Chapter 2- Age and Good Language Learners- Carol Griffiths)

- The students who are more likely to progress quickly, especially at lower levels, tend to be extrovert but the ones in the top classes tend to be people who are introverted but can look at the big picture and take guesses in an intuitive (i.e. not anally retentive) way. But again, we don’t know what that means for classroom practice,e.g. whether we should just use and try to reinforce students’ strengths or whether we should concentrate on developing their weaknesses (Chapter 4- Personality and Good Language Learners- Madeline Ehrman)

-Despite not being able to come up with any statistical evidence, the writer and we all know that the fact that fitting in for boys means not being seen to be studying too hard can be a problem for teachers. Boys also have different motivations and preferred ways of learning to girls (Chapter 5- Gender and Good Language Learners- Martha Nyikos)

- Students who are in higher level classes tend to use more strategies for language learning such as reading newspapers. It can be difficult to determine if they actually do some of these things because they have a high level rather than reach the level because they do these things, and even more difficult to determine if those study skills can and should be forced on students who don’t use them (Chapter 6-Strategies and Good Language Learners- Carol Griffiths again. Is she sleeping with the editor? Oh, she is the editor…)

- Etc

Etc. being a very useful word to hide the fact that I’m making comments about the book when I’ve only read a quarter of it. Oh well, surely that’s what blogs are for- half formed judgements and thinking aloud. The real review will be along in a month or so on TEFL.net reviews. Books I’ve been flicking through that I would highly recommend are:

A History of ELT

The Experience of Language Teaching

And it is quite possible I will end up recommending Lessons from Language Learners in the end as well, now I’ve got that little rant off my chest…

8 Responses to “New from the world of applied linguistics…”

  1. Sandy McManus Says:

    Well, why not? After all, the book’s only 80 bucks, and is based on research first done in 1975! Must be a winner, then.

    The problem with many of these books is that they all seem to disregard the cultural baggage that each learner has, and treat “the model learner” as a reality. In truth, and in my opinion, is that such books tend to be as much use a chocolate chisel to most teachers.

    Give me a book that tells me how best to motivate the students I have now, in terms of nationality, religion, race, etc., and I’ll buy it. But this sort of generic crap is best suited for the bottom of my waste bin.

  2. Pete Yilquist Says:

    Race? How is that relevant?

  3. Sandy Says:

    Different races have different approaches and expectations regarding education, Pete - at least in my experience. Teaching Asian types is quite different from teaching Europeans and Africans, I would say. I don’t think the difference is genetic, but rather more cultural, though - a result of social conditioning.

  4. Alex Case Says:

    Let’s just all agree that Sandy meant to say “culture” every time he mentions “race” above, shall we?

  5. Pete Yilquist Says:

    But he doesn’t say that, he clearly says ‘race.’
    Now that the TEFL Tradesman site has been turned into a neo-nazi/anti-semitic venue (see the latest comments on there) I feel Alex Case would be wise to clarify why exactly he allows this person publicity here.

  6. Alex Case Says:

    I’ve slapped Sandy on the wrist for his racist comments and unsubstantiated claims many times here and elsewhere, but I still think having an angry man of TEFL does more good than harm.

  7. Pete Yilquist Says:

    Alex, you seem a nice guy, but the fact remains that you are being used as a distribution point for violent anti-semitic propaganda. At some point, surely you need to do something about that.

  8. Alex Case Says:

    I’ve had a quick skim (I try not to read too much Sandy when I’m feeling happy), and I couldn’t see anything anti-semitic. Without actually reprinting it if it is that nasty, could you point me in the right direction?

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