2023 Fall
FRENCH 206 001 - SEM 001
Special Topics in French Linguistics
Second Language Acquisition: Concepts, Theories, and Debates
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
4
Enrolled: 4
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 8
Waitlist Max: 5
No Reserved Seats
Hours & Workload
9 hours of outside work hours per week, and 3 hours of student-instructor coverage of course materials per week.
Final Exam
TUE, DECEMBER 12TH
08:00 am - 11:00 am
Other classes by Richard Kern
- FRENCH 1 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 1 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 1 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 1 004 004LEC
- FRENCH 1 006 006LEC
- FRENCH 1 007 007LEC
- FRENCH 1 009 009LEC
- FRENCH 13 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 137 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 1R 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 2 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 2 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 2 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 2 006 006LEC
- FRENCH 3 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 3 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 3 004 004LEC
- FRENCH 3 005 005LEC
- FRENCH 4 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 4 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 4 004 004LEC
- FRENCH C26 001 001LEC
- FRENCH R1A 001 001LEC
- FRENCH R1B 001 001LEC
- ITALIAN C26 001 001LEC
- SPANISH C26 001 001LEC
Course Catalog Description
Topics may vary from semester to semester.
Class Description
This seminar will explore the field of second language acquisition, taking account of not only its central concepts and theories but also its tensions and controversies. We will begin by considering canonical psycholinguistic and interactional theories of second language acquisition and then contrast them with more recent sociocultural and ecological/emergentist theories. Along the way, we will see how perspectives on language, culture, context, and competence have shifted over time. We will consider some of the linguistic, cognitive, and social dimensions of children’s acquisition of a mother tongue and compare them with processes of second language development and the diverse factors that affect those processes in older children and adults. In the first part of the semester, we will consider questions such as: What is the relationship between age and language learning? Why are some people better at learning languages than others? Is successful language development a matter of aptitude? length of exposure? practice? motivation? What is the importance of the first language in second language acquisition? What is the role of explicit instruction? We will focus on key concepts such as competence and performance, input and interaction, aptitude and motivation, form and meaning, critical periods, interlanguage and fossilization, learning versus acquisition. We will then turn to questions that reflect a focus on discourse rather than on language as viewed from a structural perspective. Here we will be concerned with relations between discourse and culture, mediation, language socialization, identity issues, multilingual subjectivity, and how all these come into play in language education. This latter portion of the course will consider alternative approaches to second language acquisition, including the adaptation of sociocultural theory, ecological theories, and different notions of competence (e.g., translingual competence, intercultural communicative competence, symbolic competence). The seminar will also examine research methods associated with these various approaches.
Articles/chapters supplemented by VanPatten, Bill, Gregory D. Keating, and Stefanie Wulff, eds. 2020. "Theories in Second Language Acquisition: An Introduction." Third Edition. New York: Routledge.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
No Reserved Seats
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials
Associated Sections
None