Foreign Language Teaching and Learning



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Definition
A language is considered foreign if it is learned largely in 
the classroom and is not spoken in the society where the teach-
ing occurs. Study of another language allows the individual to 
communicate effectively and creatively and to participate in 
real-life situations through the language of the authentic cul-
ture itself. Learning another language provides access into a 
perspective other than one’s own, increases the ability to see 
connections across content areas, and promotes an interdisci-
plinary perspective while gaining intercultural understand-
ings. Language is the vehicle required for effective human-
to-human interactions and yields a better understanding of 
one’s own language and culture. Studying a language pro-
vides the learner with the opportunity to gain linguistic and 
social knowledge and to know when, how, and why to say 
what to whom National Standards in Foreign Language Edu-
cation Project (NSFLEP) (2014). Language scholars distinguish 
between the terms acquisition and learning: ‘acquisition’ re-
fers to the process of learning first and second languages nat
-
urally, without formal instruction, whereas ‘learning’ is re-
served for the formal study of second or foreign languages in 
classroom settings. One usually distinguishes between the rel-
atively effortless process of SLA by children and the more for-
mal and difficult SLA by adults. Foreign language education 
refers to the teaching of a modern language that is neither an 
official language nor the mother tongue of a significant part 
of the population. 
Theories of Language Learning
Foreign language learning and teaching have undergone 
a significant paradigm shift as a result of the research and 
experiences that have expanded the scientific and theoreti
-
cal knowledge base on how students learn and acquire a for-
eign language. Traditionally, learning a foreign language was 
thought to be a ‘mimetic’ activity, a process that involved stu-
dents repeating or imitating new information. Grounded in 
behaviorist theories of learning and structural linguistics, 
the quality and quantity of language and feedback were re-
garded as the major determinants of language learning suc-
cess. A popular method of teaching in the 1950s, called the 
audio-lingual approach (ALM), promoted an imitation and 
practice approach to language development. The major fig
-
ure in the ALM classroom was the instructor who was cast 
into the role of drill sergeant, expert, and authority figure. 
Students were relegated to practicing and imitating patterns 
to a point of automatic response in the belief that the learner 
would then merely have to slot in lexical items appropriate to 
the conversational situation. It was believed that the first lan
-
guage interfered with the acquisition of the second language 
and that a transfer would take place from the first to the sec
-
ond language, resulting in errors. In 1959, Noam Chomsky’s 
review (Chomsky, 1959) of B.F. Skinner’s (1957) Verbal Behav-
ior dramatically changed the way of looking at language by ar-
guing that language was a rule-governed activity, not a set of 
habits. Chomsky argued that stimulus–response psychology 
could not adequately account for creativity involved in gen-
erating novel utterances using internalized rules. The creative 
aspect of language behavior implies that the human mind is 
involved in deep processing of meaning rather than in memo-
rized responses to environmental stimuli. Chomsky’s view of 
language and cognitive psychology, dubbed generative trans-
Published in J.D. Wright (ed.), 
International Encyclopedia for Social and Behavioral Sciences 2nd Edition.
Vol 9 (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 2015), pp. 327-332. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.92082-8
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. Used by permission.

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