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First Language Acquisition versus Second Language Acquisition Annette Rose - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				When observing children, the speed and accuracy to which they  acquire their native language is quite remarkable to adults.  There  are many different cultures and many ways in which children are  raised, but the rate at which they acquire this information is  consistent all over the world.    In the scientific community,  language acquisition by humans is one of the most unexplainable and  highly studied feats in our everyday lives.  Parents do not teach  their children the grammatical structure of language or how to speak  it, rather it is something that is acquired early in life and  continues to progress into adulthood.  It is said that by the time a  child enters pre-school, he or she already has mastered most of the  mechanics of their mother language (Galasso).  By studying the ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL First Language Acquisition versus Second Language Acquisition #256 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				When observing children, the speed and accuracy to which they  acquire  their native language is quite remarkable to adults.  There  are many  different cultures and many ways in which children are  raised, but the  rate at which they acquire this information is  consistent all over the  world.    In the scientific community,  language acquisition by humans  is one of the most unexplainable and  highly studied feats in our  everyday lives.  Parents do not teach  their children the grammatical  structure of language or how to speak  it, rather it is something that  is acquired early in life and  continues to progress into adulthood.  It  is said that by the time a  child enters pre-school, he or she already  has mastered most of the  mechanics of their mother language (Galasso).   By...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			1st language vs. 2nd language acquisition Rebecca Best - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				'The acquisition of language 'is doubtless the greatest intellectual  feat any one of us is ever required to perform.''Regardless of where we come from in the world we all have the innate  ability to use language. In the early stages of our lives we will  actively seek out ways of interacting with our parents through  various methods such as babbling.Over the past 50 years three theoretical approaches to explaining  how early language development takes place, namely, behaviourist,  innatist and interactionist approaches.It was Noam Chomsky, who in 1983 proposed that language development  should be described as 'language growth,' because the 'language  organ' simply grows like any other body organ.The vast majority of people are not exposed to 2nd language learning  until they are teenagers...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			1st Language vs. 2nd Language Acquisition Raaziya Ahmed - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Language acquisition is the process by which language ability  develops in humans. There are two types of language acquisitions- firs language acquisition and second language acquisition. While the  former deals with early childhood language development, the latter  has a nurture aspect to learning in adults. Humans have long debated whether language can be developed in the  absence of speech and various experiments by Psammeticus, King James  V and Akbar support the hypothesis that language in the absence of  speech is not possible.First language acquisition or the native tongue of a person is the  language a child has heard from birth. The speed with which the  language is acquired is indeed remarkable. All children go through  certain stages in language development even if the rate...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Language Acquisition and Language Learning Mary E. Croy - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Everyone agrees that learning a second language is more difficult  than picking up our native language.  However, why this is so is  still a question of great debate in the scientific community.Most children with normal intelligence and neurological development  will easily pick up their native language.  The ease of this process  is something that still mystifies scientists. Furthermore, parents  do not usually make painstaking efforts to teach their children to  speak.  In many ways, the process appears innate; the child  either “absorbs†the language through immersion or models the  language that he or she hears her parents speaking.Although we speak of language learning as innate, recent scientific  studies seem to point to the fact that the brain is not hard- wired  with...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			First Language vs. Second Language Acquisition Curtis Gardner - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 My first language, or "mother" language, is English, and I can´t  remember learning any bit of it as a child.   I have brief memories  of learning grammar in grade school, but as far as I´m concerned, I  could speak just fine before Kindergarten.  Then why did it take me  over eight years to feel slightly comfortable speaking German'   How  come I could learn so much better as a drooling baby than a  university student'  Let us consider the differences in learning a  first language vs. a second languageIn defense of the hardened university student, studies show that a  baby´s brain is more apt to learn a mother language when compared  with an adult brain learning a second language.   According to  http://www.fcs.uga.edu/pubs/PDF/FACS01-6 , "The baby´s brain is  actually ´primed´ to...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Language Acquisition and Language Learning #255 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Everyone agrees that learning a second language is more difficult  than  picking up our native language.  However, why this is so is  still a  question of great debate in the scientific community.  Most children with normal intelligence and neurological development   will easily pick up their native language.  The ease of this process   is something that still mystifies scientists. Furthermore, parents  do  not usually make painstaking efforts to teach their children to  speak.   In many ways, the process appears innate; the child  either ?absorbs?  the language through immersion or models the  language that he or she  hears her parents speaking.  Although we speak of language learning as innate, recent scientific   studies seem to point to the fact that the brain is not hard- wired   with...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			1st vs 2nd Language Acquisition Sharone Hardesty - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Stephen Krashen differentiates between the concepts of language  acquisition and language learning in this way: He likens the process  of language acquisition to adolescents and young adults living  outside of their native country in a year long exchange program  where they attain near native fluency but remain unfamiliar with  phonology and/or grammar rules. He links the concept of language  learning to the traditional approach of teachers/students in  classrooms with specific focus on structure and grammar rules.  Krashen summarizes, “Language acquisition does not require extensive  use of conscious grammatical rules, and does not require tedious  drill.†He further states, “Acquisition requires meaningful  interaction in the target language-natural communication-in...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL First Language vs. Second Language Acquisition #254 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				My first language, or "mother" language, is English,  and I can´t  remember learning any bit of it as a child.    I have brief memories  of learning grammar in grade school, but as far  as I´m concerned, I  could speak just fine before  Kindergarten.  Then why did it take me  over eight years to feel  slightly comfortable speaking German?   How  come I could learn so much  better as a drooling baby than a  university student?  Let us consider  the differences in learning a  first language vs. a second language  In defense of the hardened university student, studies show that a   baby´s brain is more apt to learn a mother language when  compared  with an adult brain learning a second language.   According to  ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL 1st Language vs. 2nd Language Acquisition #258 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Language acquisition is the process by which language ability  develops  in humans. There are two types of language acquisitions- firs language  acquisition and second language acquisition. While the  former deals  with early childhood language development, the latter  has a nurture  aspect to learning in adults. Humans have long debated whether language  can be developed in the  absence of speech and various experiments by  Psammeticus, King James  V and Akbar support the hypothesis that  language in the absence of  speech is not possible.  First language acquisition or the native tongue of a person is the   language a child has heard from birth. The speed with which the   language is acquired is indeed remarkable. All children go through   certain stages in language development even if...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			First vs Second Language Acquisition G.C. Van Der Watt - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				INTRODUCTIONHow did you learn to speak your native language' Notice, this  shouldn´t be such a puzzling question. Do you remember when you  learned to tie your shoes, ride a bike, and eat with a fork'  Sometimes we can remember a parent helping us to do these things. But have our parents helped us learn to speak our first language' Do  you remember when your mother taught you the past tense' When your  father laid down the rules for passive sentences' We don´t remember  these important moments of our childhood because they never occurred. Sometimes we as adults study for years to acquire a new language. It  is then quite wonderful to think that children, by around the age of  5, have more or less mastered their first language, excepting some  vocabulary and a few grammatical structures....					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL 1st vs 2nd Language Acquisition #257 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Stephen Krashen differentiates between the concepts of language   acquisition and language learning in this way: He likens the process  of  language acquisition to adolescents and young adults living  outside of  their native country in a year long exchange program  where they attain  near native fluency but remain unfamiliar with  phonology and/or  grammar rules. He links the concept of language  learning to the  traditional approach of teachers/students in  classrooms with specific  focus on structure and grammar rules.  Krashen summarizes, ?Language  acquisition does not require extensive  use of conscious grammatical  rules, and does not require tedious  drill.? He further states,  ?Acquisition requires meaningful  interaction in the target  language-natural communication-in which ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Games in the classroom Sandra Pullara - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 One useful approach to encourage language acquisition when teaching  English is using language games. When using games in the classroom,  teachers should have a total understanding of the definitions of  games, which usually are defined as a form of play with rules, a  goal and an element of fun. (The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. VIII,  No. 9, September 2002) This article aims to give a clear  understanding of the benefits of using games in the classroom, how  to choose games and when to use them, and finally, examples of types  of games.Benefits of Games in the ClassroomThere are many advantages of using games in the classroom:1.Games are a break from the normal routine of the language  class.2.They are motivating and challenging.3.Learning a language is hard work. Games help students to ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			The peculiarities of the English Language Elizabeth Rich - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				The English language is undisputedly one of the most challenging  languages to learn, predominantly due to the vast number of  inconsistencies and frequent irregularities and exceptions to the  rule (am almost clichéd term).English, like all languages, is constantly developing and evolving –  it is not fixed, and not unlike to physical environment, is being  subjected to an increasing number of changes (possible the result of  increasing globalization).  Historically, England was the birthplace  of English – it has, however, spread widely, and not exactly, to  many parts of the world.  As language spreads, words become altered,  words become are added, and possibly most frequently – words are  lost.  One only needs to read Shakespeare to appreciate that  language is...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			TEFL and Child Development Gordon Rogowitz - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In this essay I review some issues related to child development  which are useful for ESL teachers to be aware of as they may enhance  or constrain language acquisition.Stages of Language Acquisition:  Much evidence suggests that basic  sounds, vocabulary, negating phrases, forming questions, using  relative clauses, etc., are developed in stages. This appears to be  independent from the learning situation (in the classroom or on the  street) and is generally applicable across a spectrum of learners  from different language backgrounds.   It is analogous to the  learning stages that babies go through when acquiring language:  babbling (bababa), vocabulary (milk then later milk drink), negation  (no play), question forming (where she go) and so on. Interestingly, error correction does not...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Peculiarities of the English Language Laura Frenandez - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 The English language was created in England. Throughout history, this language has spread to many parts of the world. It is used as a link language for International business and diplomacy.According to Madhukar N. Gate, it has taken thousands of words from other languages such as French, Latin, German, Greek and so on. We can even find Sanskrit words in English. For example: Guru and Pundit are two Sanskrit words used in English. English grammar is quite simple, in many languages nouns have grammatical gender which makes some verbs and adjectives change. This doesn't happen in English. The adjective 'big' is used with all nouns such as man, woman, child, book etc, as well as applying to both singular and plural nouns.Counting large numbers in English is very simple. For example,...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			The TEFL/TESOL Certificate - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				TEFL is Teaching English as a Foreign Language; TESOL is Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages. The two terms are generally interchangeable. A TEFL/TESOL certificate is the major qualification required to teach English abroad. There is a huge demand for teachers around the world with opportunities in almost every country.
Taking a TEFL/TESOL Certificate course provides the opportunity to travel and work around the world, to gain knowledge and experience of foreign cultures and languages and to embark upon a career in teaching. No previous teaching experience or specialist qualifications are required. The only requirement is fluency in English.
TEFL/TESOL employment prospects for graduates of our courses are excellent. You will find teaching job opportunities throughout the world,...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Music and song in the classroom Gina Gatman - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 The use of music in classrooms today is widespread, but it's  educational value is in debate.  This article will discuss the  importance of music and song when teaching English as a Second  Language (ESL).  It is my opinion that music is a vital tool that a  teacher can utilise to enhance language retention as well as student  motivation and enjoyment.Music helps create positive feelings about learning English (Uchida,  2003).  Music and song are universal as is the enjoyment of music  and students will already be experiencing music in their own  culture.  Therefore, the introduction of music into the classroom  can be a very non-threatening way of creating a comfortable  classroom atmosphere, establishing a link between the student's  background and the language they are about to learn. ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			The Evolution Of The American English Language Greg Engelhard - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				      In a world full of languages how does one place the English  language'  Most languages have a full history going back thousands  of years.  Can this really be said of English'  No, but we can say  that the history is full, one full of war and violence as well as  compromise and inclusion.       We might start in the year 449 AD in the island of Britain.  At  this time the Anglo-Saxons invaded Britain as the Romans left to  defend their homeland.  The local Celtic people quickly adapted the  ways of the German tribe and we saw the beginning of English, it is  said that the majority of its words can be traced to this.  As the  next thousand years progressed we saw the invasion of the Danes,  French Normans as well as the influence of the Church.  This leads  us up to the time when this...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Problems facing learners of different nationalities #276 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Introduction  Considering the difficulties that learners from different   backgrounds are faced with is appropriate because I will soon embark  on  a teaching career which will bring me in contact with many people  from  different backgrounds and the challenges they face in mastering  the  English language.   Having learnt English myself at some point in life, has made me   aware of some of the difficulties my students are faced with. My   experience in having overcome these difficulties could be a great  help  to my students, if these are used in the proper way. The danger is that  one might compare others to oneself. This is  useless because it?s  extremely difficult to say that people with a  certain background only  face one set of problems. The difficulties  are as many and as varied...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Problems facing learners of different nationalities Debbie Brewster - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				  IntroductionConsidering the difficulties that learners from different  backgrounds are faced with is appropriate because I will soon embark  on a teaching career which will bring me in contact with many people  from different backgrounds and the challenges they face in mastering  the English language. Having learnt English myself at some point in life, has made me  aware of some of the difficulties my students are faced with. My  experience in having overcome these difficulties could be a great  help to my students, if these are used in the proper way. The danger is that one might compare others to oneself. This is  useless because it's extremely difficult to say that people with a  certain background only face one set of problems. The difficulties  are as many and as varied as the...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Foreign Language Experience Will Skadden - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 There are many different methodologies for teaching a foreign  language.  Here at TEFL international, we are exposed to the ESA  (engage-study-activate) method, put to use in the classroom in a  total emersion context, which is quite effective, yet very different  from the way that many of us have been exposed to learning a second  language in our native countries.  Second language study in school  in the United States was always done with the 'Grammar translation'  method, usually in a bilingual classroom, a different yet somewhat  effective way to learn some languages.  These are contrasting  methods yet they seek the same result, to increase communication  skills in a tongue you are not familiar with, and until you are  exposed to the both of them it's hard to say which is more...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Peculiarities of the English language David Broekman - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 A. Why choosing this topic''Studying the peculiarities of English unlocks a wealth of  interesting aspects about the language.  'Full command of the English language is not possible without  mastering the difficulties of these peculiarities.  'To get students thinking about the way in which the language  is used correctly.B. OriginsToday, English is the 'lingua franca' of the world ' a legacy of the  former British Empire's political, economic, and maritime  superiority. English dialects are spoken in many former British  colonies such as India, the Philippines, and Australia. English is  also studied as a second language by millions of people worldwide.Why the peculiarities' Just like many other world languages it is a  mixture of several languages, starting with words of the Anglo-Saxon...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Peculiarities of the English Language Hannah Bullock - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Language. It's something that we have to use on a daily basis in  order to function. Communication is essential to the human  existence, without it we simply can't survive.  Yet as each of us  get up in the morning and begin our day, the last thing that crosses  our minds is why we use the type of  language that we do. Rarely  does it occur to us the many oddities that compose the English  language.  Can we then imagine what it must be like for someone  attempting to learn English as a foreign or second language'!   When  we examine the peculiarities of our native tongue we can sympathize  with those seeking to learn it.In taking a close look at the peculiarities of the English  language, I want to draw attention to two main aspects: grammar and  usage of words and phrases.  Many people...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			English as a global language Shabi S. - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				During the history of mankind, there have been several more or less  universal languages such as Latin (and Greek) in the Roman empire,  medieval Latin in Western Europe, later French and English.No  language has been really universal (global), but the current  position of English comes closest..A ccording to a recent survey  that was carried out among the U:N  officials regarding the langauge  that is best suited for receiving corresponce and publications,the  officials had to choose among english,french,and spanish.and the  result was 130 nations chose english,36 chose french and 19 chose  spanish. This means the representatives of  97% of the earths  population picked english.  English is the language most often studied as a foreign language in  the European union(by 89% of...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			English as a global language Caitlin Clark - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 As I was scanning the list of research options this topic caught my  eye and made me stop and contemplate the status of the English  language in the world today.   As past units in this course have  mentioned, many students of English take up the language in an  effort to improve their salaries or their chances at a decent job in  their home countries.  If English is not even the official language  in these countries, why then does a certain percentage of financial,  economic, and industrial success depend on the knowledge of  English'  Is a world that speaks only one language really as  simplistic and good as it seems'English is the most widely spoken of the Germanic languages  and was initially spread to other parts of the globe with the  expansion of the British Empire.  By the end of...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			English as a Global Language Jarryd Brostrom - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In today's world the term 'global' takes on an entirely new  meaning. Initially termed to mean in reference to the world as a  whole, as opposed to individual countries, but today, while still  holding true, it also means something more. The internet, modern  media, email, and even to a lesser extend telephones, have made it  possible to communicate with almost every person on the planet, a  thought not even considered possible one hundred years ago. People separated by thousands of miles have never been closer and it  takes nothing more than a touch of a button. The French can talk to  the United States of America, the Brazilian to the United Kingdom,  Africa to Asia; you could probably even speak to someone studying in  the Antarctic if you tried hard enough. Or at least these people ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			English as a global language Sandra Oliveira - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 English has had a tremenduous evolution over the ages, where it's  expansion as  a global language is one of the most remarkable  phenomena of both the 20th and 21st century.  In its earlier history, English denoted imperialism; after all it  was the language of the dominating colonial world powers in  conjunction with its neighbouring colonial languages, namely French  and Spanish. The historical timeline of the English language divided  itself into three main phases, namely Old English, Middle English  and Modern English. However, it is crucial to note a recent growing  phase in the growth of English; this latest development is growing  remarkably rapid. It is nevertheless Non-native speakers around the  world that shape this new phase, as they satisfy their need to  communicate and...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Peculiarities of the English language Glen Loveday - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Here I was, waiting to teach a 'Lets Learn English' session with  the Pacific and Asian newcomers to Australia. I was to continue the  conversational English lessons with them. The attendees were looking  forward to the class. I could tell this by the enthusiasm in their  greeting as they arrived and by their hunger to learn in previous  sessions. What's more we were having fun as we journeyed into the  English language together. What's the biggest problem these students have I thought' The simple  answer is 'the peculiarities of the English language, or more  specifically'words. So what are words anyway' They're just sounds or noises that we  utter after all. Unlike lower animals we may not bark neigh, moo,  roar, purr or growl, but we do react instinctively to what's  happening around...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			English as a Global Language Maliga Naidoo - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				English is currently spoken by more people all over the world than  any other language.  Every time we turn on the television to find  out about what is happening in the world, local people are being  interviewed in English.  Wherever one travels in the world these  days English becomes the common language of communication between  nationalities. Much has been made of the Internet as an instrument  for circulating English around the globe.  Eighty percent of what’s  on the Internet is in English.I quote Barbara Wallraff  in her article from the Atlantic November  2000 on What Global Language' Technology is expanding English by  requiring us to come up with new words to describe all the  possibilities it offers. English is used more often in various  technological domains such as...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			


