Mohamed
Khider University. Biskra
Faculty of
Letters and Foreign Languages
Department
of Foreign Languages
Branch of
English
Lecture : Language
Learning Strategies
Module : Study Skills
Level : 1st YEAR LMD
Teacher : Miss.
Warda KHOUNI
Lecture objectives : by the end of the
lecture, students will be able to :
·
Define a learning strategy
·
Classify learning strategies
·
Distinguish three main
different types of strategies (metacognitive, cognitive and social affective).
·
Relate these types to
different purposes of learning.
Lecture content : the lectures covers the
following points :
1. Defining a strategy
2. Defining a learning strategy
3.
The importance of
learning strategies in language learning
4. Taxonomies of language
learning strategies
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References :
·
Oxford, R (2001)“Language-learning strategies: theory
and perception”. ELT Journal.
http://eltj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/55/3/247
http://eltj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/55/3/247
·
Rubin J (1975). “What the ‘Good Language
Learner’ Can Teach Us”. TESOL Quarterly. vol 9 N° 1.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/3586011
http://www.jstor.org/stable/3586011
·
Oxford, R (1989) “The Role of Styles and
Strategies in Second Language Learning,”Eric Digest.
http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9214/styles.htm
http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9214/styles.htm
·
Defining and Organizing Language
Learning Strategies. National Capital Language
Resource Centre.
http://www.nclrc.org/guides/HED/chapter2.html
http://www.nclrc.org/guides/HED/chapter2.html
·
Mhismanoglu, M. H. (2000)Language Learning Strategies in Foreign Language
Learning and Teaching. The Internet TESL
Journal, Vol. VI, No. 8, August. http://iteslj.org/Articles/Hismanoglu-Strategies.html
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1.
Defining « A Strategy »
A Strategy is a long term plan of action
designed to achieve a particular goal, most often
"winning." Strategy is differentiated from tactics, or immediate actions,
with resources at hand by its nature of being extensively premeditated, and
often practically rehearsed. Strategies are used to make the problem easier to
understand and solve. Strategy should always provide competitive advantage.
Because of its ability to provide competitive advantage strategy is
differentiated form planning. Strategy can also be termed as direction enables
companies to achieve its goal and objective
2. Defining
a Learning Strategy
The term language
learning strategy has been defined by many researchers. Wenden and Rubin
(1987:19) define learning strategies as "... any sets of operations,
steps, plans, routines used by the learner to facilitate the obtaining,
storage, retrieval, and use of information." Richards and Platt
(1992:209) state that learning strategies are "intentional behavior
and thoughts used by learners during learning so as to better help them understand,
learn, or remember new information." Faerch Claus and Casper
(1983:67) stress that a learning strategy is "an attempt to develop
linguistic and sociolinguistic competence in the target language."
According to Stern (1992:261), "the concept of learning strategy is
dependent on the assumption that learners consciously engage in activities to
achieve certain goals and learning strategies can be regarded as broadly
conceived intentional directions and learning techniques." All
language learners use language learning strategies either consciously or
unconsciously when processing new information and performing tasks in the
language classroom. Since language classroom is like a problem-solving
environment in which language learners are likely to face new input and
difficult tasks given by their instructors, learners' attempts to find the
quickest or easiest way to do what is required, that is, using language
learning strategies is inescapable.
3.
The
importance of learning strategies in language learning
Research supports the effectiveness of using L2 learning strategies and has
shown that successful language learners often use strategies in an orchestrated
fashion. Some findings are listed below:
- Use of appropriate language learning strategies often results in improved proficiency or achievement overall or in specific skill areas (Oxford et al., 1993; Thompson & Rubin, 1993).
- Successful language learners tend to select strategies that work well together in a highly orchestrated way, tailored to the requirements of the language task (Chamot & Kupper, 1989). These learners can easily explain the strategies they use and why they employ them (O'Malley & Chamot, 1990).
- Cognitive (e.g., translating, analyzing) and metacognitive (e.g., planning, organizing) strategies are often used together, supporting each other (O'Malley & Chamot, 1990). Well tailored combinations of strategies often have more impact than single strategies.
- Certain strategies or clusters of strategies are linked to particular language skills or tasks. For example, L2 writing, like L1 writing, benefits from the learning strategies of planning, self-monitoring, deduction, and substitution. L2 speaking demands strategies such as risk-taking, paraphrasing, circumlocution, self-monitoring, and self-evaluation. L2 listening comprehension gains from strategies of elaboration, inferencing, selective attention, and self-monitoring, while reading comprehension uses strategies like reading aloud, guessing, deduction, and summarizing (Chamot & Kupper, 1989). See Oxford (1990b) for a detailed chart that maps relevant strategies with listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills.
- The powerful social and affective strategies are found less often in L2 research. This is, perhaps, because these behaviors are not studied frequently by L2 researchers, and because learners are not familiar with paying attention to their own feelings and social relationships as part of the L2 learning process (Oxford, 1990).
4.
Types of
language learning strategies
O’ Malley proposed three-part strategy
taxonomy:
1)
Meta-cognitive strategies are strategies which involve
“knowing about learning, and controlling learning through planning, monitoring
and evaluating the learning activity”(O’Malley 1988:422). Among the main
meta-cognitive strategies, it is possible to include advance organizers,
directed attention, selective attention, self-management, functional planning,
self-monitoring, delayed production, self-evaluation.
2)
Cognitive strategies are more limited to specific
learning tasks and involve the manipulation or transformation of the material
to be learned. Repetition, resourcing, translation, grouping, note taking,
deduction, recombination, imagery, auditory representation, key word,
contextualization, elaboration, transfer, inferencing are among the most
important cognitive strategies.
3)
Socio/affective strategies, it can be stated that they
are related with social-mediating activity and transacting with others.
Cooperation and question for clarification are the main socio-affective
strategies (Brown 1987:93-94).
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