Krashen’s claims through a usage-based lens
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24381Date
2021-07-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Wulff, StefanieAbstract
In the following, I will briefly outline how Krashen's Input Hypothesis, Acquisition/Learning
distinction, and the Natural Order Hypothesis hold up when seen through the lens of usage‐
based approaches. A number of frameworks fall under the umbrella label of usage‐based
approaches, including cognitive‐functional linguistics (Evans et al., 2007), usage‐based construction grammar (Goldberg, 2006, 2019), and dynamic systems theory (de Bot et al., 2007). As
diverse as these frameworks are in terms of the questions they focus on and the methods they
employ, they are united in their commitment to two fundamental assumptions about language
and language acquisition: First, that the primary impetus of language acquisition is the learner's exposure to usage events, that is, their communicative experience using their second
language; and second, that the cognitive mechanisms that learners employ are not exclusive to
language learning, but the same ones at work in any kind of learning (Ellis & Wulff, 2020).
Publisher
WileyCitation
Wulff S. Krashen’s claims through a usage-based lens. Foreign language annals. 2021;54:306-310Metadata
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