The Silent Period of Second Language Acquisition
The Silent Period of Second Language Acquisition
The Silent Period of Second Language Acquisition
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Julio Foppoli
The first stage of the language acquisition process is called ³The Silent
Period´ simply because the students aren¶t doing much talking yet. In
some learners this period may be shorter or longer, ranging between 2
to 6 months, though it may take much longer too, depending on the
exposure to the foreign language that the learner has.
The main characteristic of this stage is that after some initial exposure
to the language, the learner is able to understand much more than s/he
can produce. You can easily see this in two-year-old babies too! You can
speak to them normally and they can definitely understand whatever
you say. However, even if they wanted to say exactly what you said,
they would not be able to. They may use some of your words but they
would find it impossible to express their ideas in a similarly organized
way, in spite of the fact that they may understand every single word we
said.
This goes hand in hand with the fact that comprehension preceded
production. We will always be able to understand much more than we
can produce. For example, in spite of knowing little or nothing about
economics, accounting and marketing, when I watch or read news
reports on those fields, I can get a pretty good and accurate idea of
what those reports are about. However, if someone asked me to explain
what the reports said, I would surely resort to general language and
simpler explanations to describe what the experts stated using specific
jargon and technical analysis.
³We¶ve been working on the Present Tense for over two months now.
We¶ve been doing drills, lots of repetitions, we¶ve created real-life
situations to make the language come to life and yet, they can produce
little or nothing!´
³How come they not learn after doing this for more than three weeks!´
My reply in most cases is the same: ³Just give them more time.´
What is more, unlike the idea this principal had, she had made
EN
M
US progress. She could already understand most greetings and
basic classroom directives; she could understand several types of
questions on different everyday topics. She could even understand
many things that people told her to do and basic facts! However, when
it came to talking, she could just say one or two greetings and produce
³yes´ or ³no´ replies. Does this mean she had not made any progress?
Does this means she had not learned anything? Not in the least!
n the
contrary, she was way advanced in her initial stage of second language
acquisition and very soon afterwards she entered the early production
period. Plain and simple, she was going through her silent period.
nce more, by knowing this simple fact we can relax, enjoy what we are
doing without the frustrating feeling that we are getting nowhere.
Students can also enjoy the freedom of knowing that sooner or later
they will be able to put into practice whatever they are learning now,
given the right language setting (For more info on the right language
setting, please read my other articles: ³Are you in a eally
Communicative Second Language Classroom?,´ Making the Most out of
Your Second Language Acquisition Program,´ and ³Second Language
Acquisition in Adult Learners ± Parts 1 and 2.´)