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Patsy M. Lightbown

Author of How Languages Are Learned. 3rd edition

5 Works 463 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Patsy M. Lightbown

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1944
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
North Carolina, USA
Map Location
USA

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Reviews

9 reviews
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2327653.html

A textbook mainly for language teachers (which I am not), from which I got two interesting things. The first is that it's amazing how little we actually know. Even the apparently obvious point that children find it easier to learn languages is only weakly backed up by research. There's obviously a big difference between learning your first language (or languages) and learning another after you can already talk. But I didn't feel that researchers had show more got much beyond accumulating data.

The second point is that one of the things that is known is that some grammatical elements are easier to learn than others. Take this list of English grammar points:

present progressive –ing (Mommy running)
plural –s (Two books)
irregular past forms (Baby went)
possessive 's (Daddy's hat)
copula (Annie is happy)
articles the and a
regular past –ed (She walked)
Third person singular simple present –s (She runs)
Auxiliary be (He is coming)

Apparently a child who has learnt the lower items is sure to have also managed the upper ones, but the reverse is not true. (Slightly odd that irregular past tense should be learned before regular past tense; but there you go.)

I'd be hugely interested to know if anyone has tried researching such a table for cases other than English - looking at it, I thought immediately of Russian, which uses neither copula nor articles, but of course has numerous cases for nouns and distinguishes between transitive and intransitive verbs. Surely we could learn quite a lot about deep structure, including whether there is really much evidence for it in the first place, by comparing surveys like that across different (or indeed similar) languages?
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This was way easier to read than a lot of books for university and I gained a lot of interesting knowledge from it.
I recommend this book to anyone interested in both L1 and L2 learning. This is a fantastic introduction to both aspects of language learning. I haven't read prior versions, so I can't compare, but the organization in this edition is logical and easy to follow. The book itself seems a bit short for a textbook, but I found it to be a thorough introduction to language acquisition when combined with "Language Development" by Hoff.
Excellent book. Had to read it for an ESL course, but would re-read it just because I found it so interesing and informative.

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Works
5
Members
463
Popularity
#53,108
Rating
3.8
Reviews
9
ISBNs
13
Languages
2

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