try english out there free

 and sign up to our FREE newsletter
Name: 
Email: 
I am a...
Teacher
Learner
Both
IMPORTANT: You will receive an email from us. To receive newsletters you must click on the long hotlink in the email to confirm your email address. 
    follow me on Twitter
    Spanish FlagRussian FlagSouth KoreaJapanese FlagChinese Flag

    The evidence is building...new language acquisition research

    publication date: Jul 29, 2009
     | 
    author/source: Jason West/Patricia Kuhl
    Download Print Send a summary of this page to someone via email.

    From Dr. Kuhl's paper (this research is being carried out using the latest brain imaging equipment and soon I will post another paper from 2008 that is linked to this one):

    http://www.ii.metu.edu.tr/~hohenberger/development/literature/Kuhl_2000_Lang_Magnet.pdf

    "Infants heard 4 native speakers of Mandarin (male and female) during 12 25-min sessions of book reading and play across a 4–6 week period".


    Our students speak to 5+ fluent or native speakers per lesson over a 25-30 minute period in the lesson and our courses last 4 weeks, sometimes a bit more. 

    Remember the stats from the first 700 students we taught?
    http://www.languagesoutthere.com/articles/english-out-there-london-course-statistics-2001-to-2003

    Here's the longer excerpt from the 'social interaction' section of her report:


    "The impact of social interaction on speech learning was demonstrated in a study investigating whether infants are capable of phonetic and word learning at nine months of age from natural first-time exposure to a foreign language. Mandarin Chinese was used in the first foreign-language intervention experiment (Kuhl et al. 2003). Infants heard 4 native speakers of Mandarin (male and female) during 12 25-min sessions of book reading and play across a 4–6 week period. A control group of infants also came into the laboratory for the same number and variety of reading and play sessions but heard only English.Two additional groups were exposed to the identical Mandarin material over the same number of sessions via either standard television or audio-only presentation. After exposure, Mandarin syllables that are not phonemic in English were used to test infant learning using both behavioral (Kuhl et al. 2003) and brain (Kuhl et al. 2008) tests. Infants learned from live exposure to Mandarin tutors, as shown by comparisons with the English control group, indicating that phonetic learning from first-time exposure could occur at nine months of age. However, infants’ Mandarin discrimination scores after exposure to television or audio-only tutors were no greater than those of the control infants who had not experienced Mandarin at all (Kuhl et al. 2003) (
    Figure 3). Learning in the live condition was robust and durable. Behavioral tests of infant learning were conducted 2–12 days (median = 6 days) after the final language-exposure session, and the ERP tests were conducted between 12 and 30 days (median = 15 days) after the final exposure session, with no observable differences in infant performance as a function of the delay".

    Have a good think.  She links the above to SLA in adults in the paper and in another which I want to comment on in more detail in another post/newsletter.

    More to come.

    blog comments powered by Disqus


    0 Comments Posted Leave a comment

     

    Add a comment:

    Sign in to comment on this entry. (Required)


    Copyright. Languages Out There Ltd 2010.  All rights reserved. 

    Buy Now!

    Complete Set for Teachers only £125 Instant download DRM-free ebook English courses, 6 levels, 360 hrs, Full instructions, MP3s, Social media tools, Use offline and online. Available in.. (click flag to buy)

     chinese japanese korean Russian buy english course spanish version

    What they say...

    "Remarkable..a major contribution to what we know works." Professor Stephen Krashen.

    "EOT not only enriched my vocabulary, but also made English speaking become a habit for me. I think that is my improvement." Jane, 27, student, China.

    "It's not just good for your English...it's good for your entire life." Arda, 19, student, Turkey.

    "Congrats on the great review! You have a great product." Eric Pang, President and COO, Italki.com

    "I love that you are using Skype as a tool here—it's so obvious that I can't believe that no one's thought of this already. Kudos to you guys for making it happen." Michael Boezi, Editorial Director, Flatworldknowledge.com

    "I like your program; the issues and concerns about teaching language(s), teaching materials, and teaching strategies that I obtain from your website help me in my delivery to my ESLstudents here in Xavier University, Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines. Thank you." Anita Oblina Associate Chair Department of English Language and Literature

    "It is an original method to learn English, it is more interesting." Marie-Carmen, 16, student, France.

    "It's the right way to learn English." Marion, 35, student, Liechtenstein.

    "I am really enjoying teaching the lessons and the programme is great - the students seem to really get something out of being out and talking to people.  We have had some really interesting classes so far!" Sheree, new EOT teacher, summer 2009

    "My teacher in Russia recommended it" Dmitry, 40, student, Russia.

    "It was very good, especially because the lesson aren't boring like the others." Mari, 16, student, Italy.

    "It is very funny to learn English at this school, when you are scared to speak with people you must visit this school." Claudia, 35, student, Germany.

    Search our resources
    mortgage lenders ntfs recovery