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Critical Period Hypothesis
Narottam Dev Sharma
BA (Hons), MA in English
Language and Literature Eastern
University
MA in TESOL
BRAC Institute of Languages (BIL)
BRAC University
TOPIC:
Critical Period
Hypothesis (CPH)
Revisited in
Second Language
Acquisition
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
OUTLINE
Introduction
What is CPH?
Historical Background
Supportive Studies and
Findings
Study Against CPH and
Findings
CPH in Chinese context
Our point of view
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
INTRODUCTION
 The critical period
hypothesis is the subject of
a long-standing debate
in linguistics and language
acquisition over the extent
to which the ability to
acquire language is
biologically linked to age.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
INTRODUCTION
 The hypothesis claims that there
is an ideal 'window' of time in a
person’s life to acquire language
in a linguistically rich
environment, after which further
language acquisition becomes
much more difficult and effortful.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
WHAT IS (CPH)?
 The critical period
hypothesis states that the
first few years of life is the
crucial time in which an
individual can acquire
a native language (L1) if
presented with adequate
stimuli.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
WHAT IS (CPH)?
Brown (2007) defines
CPH as “a biological
timetable during
which, both first &
second language is
more successfully
accomplished”.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
WHAT IS CPH?
Ellis (1997) defines CPH
as a period during
which “target-language
competence in an L2 can
only be achieved if
learning commences
before a certain age is
reached. (e.g. the onset
of puberty)”
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
 The critical period hypothesis
was first proposed by
Montreal neurologist Wilder
Penfield and co-author 
Lamar Roberts in 1959.
 Popularized by Eric
Lenneberg in 1967 with his
famous book Biological
Foundations of Language.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
 Lenneberg proposed that
brain lateralization (the
longitudinal fissure that
separates the brain into two
distinct cerebral hemispheres)
at puberty is the mechanism
which closes down the brain's
ability to acquire language.
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
Another well-known
person who supports the
critical period hypothesis
would be Noam
Chomsky, who believes
that children are born
with an inherited ability
to learn any human
language.
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
CONTINUED
 Chomsky: every child has a
‘language acquisition device’ or
LAD which encodes the major
principles of a language and
its grammatical structures
into the child’s brain.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
CONTINUED
Lenneberg: there are
maturational constraints on
the time a first language
can be acquired.
If language acquisition does
not occur by puberty, some
aspects of language can be
learnt but full mastery
cannot be achieved.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
SUPPORTIVE STUDY-1 ON
CPH
 Johnson and Newport (1989)
sought to further probe the
relationship between the effects of
maturation and the ability of an
individual to acquire a second
language.
 They aimed at either verifying or
disproving the existence of age-
related effects on second language
acquisition of grammar by
establishing a correlation between
age of first exposure to a language
and level of morphosyntactic
accuracy in that language.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
SUPPORTIVE STUDY-1 ON
CPH
 Forty-six native Chinese and
Korean speakers who had
arrived in the United States
between the ages of 3 to 39 and
had learned English as a second
language were asked to
determine the grammaticality of
a variety of English sentences in
order to determine their
respective knowledge of English
morphosyntax.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
FINDINGS FROM STUDY-1
 After the study Johnson and
Newport (1989) simply stated,
“success in learning a
language is almost entirely
predicted by the age at which
it begins” (p. 81).
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
FINDINGS FROM STUDY-1
 Furthermore, they argue that
although there is widespread
individual variation in the
competence of adult learners of
a second language, a late age of
first exposure to a second
language prevents native or
native-like performance in that
language.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
SUPPORTIVE STUDY-2 ON
CPH
Thompson (1991) for his
study surveyed 39
Russian-born subjects who
had immigrated to the
United States between the
ages of 4 and 42.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
SUPPORTIVE STUDY-2 ON
CPH
 Each of them were given three
types of speaking tasks:
1. reading a list of 20 sentences
which were intentionally
“seeded” with English sounds
2. reading a 160-word passage
which had not been seeded
3. speaking spontaneously for
one minute about their activities
on the day of the experiment.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
FINDINGS FROM STUDY-2
 Thompson’s results pointed that
subjects who got the exposure to
English at early age spoke consistently
and considerably better than adult ones
in term of foreign accent.
 Finally, Thompson concluded that
“the age at which [the immigrants]
arrived in the U.S. was the best
indicator of the accuracy of their
pronunciation in English” (p. 195)
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
STUDY -1 AGAINST CPH
In opposition to Johnson
and Newport’s (1989) claim
Long (1990) claims that the
existence of a critical period
in second language
acquisition is totally false.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
STUDY -1 AGAINST
CPH
 He states, “the easiest way
to falsify [claims supporting]
would be to produce learners
who have demonstrably
attained native like
proficiency despite having
begun exposure well after the
closure of the hypothesized
sensitive periods” (p. 274).
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
STUDY - 2 AGAINST CPH
 White and Genesee (1996),
conducted a study on highly
proficient adult to determine
whether acquirers of a L2
were indeed at a nativelike
level, tested 89 speakers of
English as L2.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
 He used a grammaticality
judgment task, a question
formation task, and an
interview task in which they
were evaluated on their
performance in terms of
pronunciation, morphosyntax,
fluency, choice of vocabulary,
and overall nativeness.
STUDY - 2 AGAINST
CPH
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
FINDINGS FROM STUDY -
2
The results of White
and Genesee’s (1996)
study provided them
with ample evidence to
controvert the CPH.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
FINDINGS FROM STUDY
- 2
 White and Genesee also
found that “the performance
of [these] near-native subjects
on the grammaticality
judgment task, both in terms
of their accuracy and their
speed, was indistinguishable
from that of the native
speakers, as was their
performance on the written
production task” (p. 258).
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
CPH IN CHINESE CONTEXT
 Few empirical studies on CPH
(Dong, 2003; Wang, 2003; Shu,
2003; Lu, 2004; Liu, 2005; Xin &
Zhou 2006; Zhao & Zou, 2008) have
been found in Chinese EFL context.
 Zhao and Zou (2008) conducted a
qualitative analysis of 42
autobiographies of contemporary
renowned foreign language experts
in China to examine the age related
factors.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
CPH IN CHINESE
CONTEXT
This finding does not
support the CPH and
argues that the other
important factors such
as motivation, teachers
and language aptitude
may decide L2 success
for the learners.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
CPH IN CHINESE
CONTEXT
 The result of another study
(Wang 2003, Liu 2005) shows
that there does not really exist
a so-called optimum age for
Chinese learners. The author
thus proposes that a strong
motivation, proper learning
strategies and intense efforts
are decisive factors in
successfully learning a foreign
language.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
 The result of Lu (2004),
Xin and Zhou( 2006) says
that CPH really exists.
Thus they suggest that,
the initial English
program should be begun
in elementary school
rather than in junior high.
CPH IN CHINESE
CONTEXT
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
NOTHING EXISTS LIKE
CPH (?)
White and Genesee
challenge the notion that
a critical period exists in
the domain of second
language acquisition
which bars nativelike
proficiency.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
NOTHING EXISTS LIKE
CPH (?)
 They argue that the existence of
adult learners of a language whose
competence is indistinguishable
from that of native speakers
proves that adults have access to
the language learning mechanisms
to which children have access, and
disproves the notion that after the
closing of a critical period,
nativelike performance in a second
language is unattainable.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
OUR POINT OF
VIEW
After reviewing data
on both sides of the
controversy, we
believe that critical
period in second
language acquisition
is not relevant to
proficiency level
attainment.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
OUR POINT OF VIEW
 Though we explained some
studies in favour of the
existence of CPH, we think
that there are too many
variables with strong
factual support that explain
second language acquisition
differences in learners, and
too few factual explanations
of the critical period theory
to warrant its belief.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
OUR POINT OF
VIEW
We feel that the study of
second language
acquisition would greatly
benefit from additional
studies examining all
possible variables that
result in different second
language proficiency.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
OUR POINT OF VIEW
Finally, it is our hope that
our colleagues who wish
to tackle a second
language will not
dissuade by the prospect
of a critical period being
passed, because there is
just not enough factual
evidence to support it at
this time.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
CONCLUSION
Despite huge debate
CPH still matters in
Language acquisition.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
CONCLUSION
 Along with CPH, learner
factors like age, motivation,
anxiety, culture, aptitude,
cognitive style, learning
style are also important in
language acquisition.
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH

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Critical period hypothesis

  • 1. Critical Period Hypothesis Narottam Dev Sharma BA (Hons), MA in English Language and Literature Eastern University MA in TESOL BRAC Institute of Languages (BIL) BRAC University
  • 2. TOPIC: Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH) Revisited in Second Language Acquisition Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 3. OUTLINE Introduction What is CPH? Historical Background Supportive Studies and Findings Study Against CPH and Findings CPH in Chinese context Our point of view Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 4. INTRODUCTION  The critical period hypothesis is the subject of a long-standing debate in linguistics and language acquisition over the extent to which the ability to acquire language is biologically linked to age. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 5. INTRODUCTION  The hypothesis claims that there is an ideal 'window' of time in a person’s life to acquire language in a linguistically rich environment, after which further language acquisition becomes much more difficult and effortful. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 6. WHAT IS (CPH)?  The critical period hypothesis states that the first few years of life is the crucial time in which an individual can acquire a native language (L1) if presented with adequate stimuli. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 7. WHAT IS (CPH)? Brown (2007) defines CPH as “a biological timetable during which, both first & second language is more successfully accomplished”. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 8. WHAT IS CPH? Ellis (1997) defines CPH as a period during which “target-language competence in an L2 can only be achieved if learning commences before a certain age is reached. (e.g. the onset of puberty)” Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 9. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND  The critical period hypothesis was first proposed by Montreal neurologist Wilder Penfield and co-author  Lamar Roberts in 1959.  Popularized by Eric Lenneberg in 1967 with his famous book Biological Foundations of Language. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 10.  Lenneberg proposed that brain lateralization (the longitudinal fissure that separates the brain into two distinct cerebral hemispheres) at puberty is the mechanism which closes down the brain's ability to acquire language. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 11. Another well-known person who supports the critical period hypothesis would be Noam Chomsky, who believes that children are born with an inherited ability to learn any human language. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 12. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND CONTINUED  Chomsky: every child has a ‘language acquisition device’ or LAD which encodes the major principles of a language and its grammatical structures into the child’s brain. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 13. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND CONTINUED Lenneberg: there are maturational constraints on the time a first language can be acquired. If language acquisition does not occur by puberty, some aspects of language can be learnt but full mastery cannot be achieved. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 14. SUPPORTIVE STUDY-1 ON CPH  Johnson and Newport (1989) sought to further probe the relationship between the effects of maturation and the ability of an individual to acquire a second language.  They aimed at either verifying or disproving the existence of age- related effects on second language acquisition of grammar by establishing a correlation between age of first exposure to a language and level of morphosyntactic accuracy in that language. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 15. SUPPORTIVE STUDY-1 ON CPH  Forty-six native Chinese and Korean speakers who had arrived in the United States between the ages of 3 to 39 and had learned English as a second language were asked to determine the grammaticality of a variety of English sentences in order to determine their respective knowledge of English morphosyntax. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 16. FINDINGS FROM STUDY-1  After the study Johnson and Newport (1989) simply stated, “success in learning a language is almost entirely predicted by the age at which it begins” (p. 81). Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 17. FINDINGS FROM STUDY-1  Furthermore, they argue that although there is widespread individual variation in the competence of adult learners of a second language, a late age of first exposure to a second language prevents native or native-like performance in that language. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 18. SUPPORTIVE STUDY-2 ON CPH Thompson (1991) for his study surveyed 39 Russian-born subjects who had immigrated to the United States between the ages of 4 and 42. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 19. SUPPORTIVE STUDY-2 ON CPH  Each of them were given three types of speaking tasks: 1. reading a list of 20 sentences which were intentionally “seeded” with English sounds 2. reading a 160-word passage which had not been seeded 3. speaking spontaneously for one minute about their activities on the day of the experiment. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 20. FINDINGS FROM STUDY-2  Thompson’s results pointed that subjects who got the exposure to English at early age spoke consistently and considerably better than adult ones in term of foreign accent.  Finally, Thompson concluded that “the age at which [the immigrants] arrived in the U.S. was the best indicator of the accuracy of their pronunciation in English” (p. 195) Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 21. STUDY -1 AGAINST CPH In opposition to Johnson and Newport’s (1989) claim Long (1990) claims that the existence of a critical period in second language acquisition is totally false. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 22. STUDY -1 AGAINST CPH  He states, “the easiest way to falsify [claims supporting] would be to produce learners who have demonstrably attained native like proficiency despite having begun exposure well after the closure of the hypothesized sensitive periods” (p. 274). Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 23. STUDY - 2 AGAINST CPH  White and Genesee (1996), conducted a study on highly proficient adult to determine whether acquirers of a L2 were indeed at a nativelike level, tested 89 speakers of English as L2. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 24.  He used a grammaticality judgment task, a question formation task, and an interview task in which they were evaluated on their performance in terms of pronunciation, morphosyntax, fluency, choice of vocabulary, and overall nativeness. STUDY - 2 AGAINST CPH Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 25. FINDINGS FROM STUDY - 2 The results of White and Genesee’s (1996) study provided them with ample evidence to controvert the CPH. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 26. FINDINGS FROM STUDY - 2  White and Genesee also found that “the performance of [these] near-native subjects on the grammaticality judgment task, both in terms of their accuracy and their speed, was indistinguishable from that of the native speakers, as was their performance on the written production task” (p. 258). Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 27. CPH IN CHINESE CONTEXT  Few empirical studies on CPH (Dong, 2003; Wang, 2003; Shu, 2003; Lu, 2004; Liu, 2005; Xin & Zhou 2006; Zhao & Zou, 2008) have been found in Chinese EFL context.  Zhao and Zou (2008) conducted a qualitative analysis of 42 autobiographies of contemporary renowned foreign language experts in China to examine the age related factors. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 28. CPH IN CHINESE CONTEXT This finding does not support the CPH and argues that the other important factors such as motivation, teachers and language aptitude may decide L2 success for the learners. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 29. CPH IN CHINESE CONTEXT  The result of another study (Wang 2003, Liu 2005) shows that there does not really exist a so-called optimum age for Chinese learners. The author thus proposes that a strong motivation, proper learning strategies and intense efforts are decisive factors in successfully learning a foreign language. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 30.  The result of Lu (2004), Xin and Zhou( 2006) says that CPH really exists. Thus they suggest that, the initial English program should be begun in elementary school rather than in junior high. CPH IN CHINESE CONTEXT Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 31. NOTHING EXISTS LIKE CPH (?) White and Genesee challenge the notion that a critical period exists in the domain of second language acquisition which bars nativelike proficiency. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 32. NOTHING EXISTS LIKE CPH (?)  They argue that the existence of adult learners of a language whose competence is indistinguishable from that of native speakers proves that adults have access to the language learning mechanisms to which children have access, and disproves the notion that after the closing of a critical period, nativelike performance in a second language is unattainable. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 33. OUR POINT OF VIEW After reviewing data on both sides of the controversy, we believe that critical period in second language acquisition is not relevant to proficiency level attainment. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 34. OUR POINT OF VIEW  Though we explained some studies in favour of the existence of CPH, we think that there are too many variables with strong factual support that explain second language acquisition differences in learners, and too few factual explanations of the critical period theory to warrant its belief. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 35. OUR POINT OF VIEW We feel that the study of second language acquisition would greatly benefit from additional studies examining all possible variables that result in different second language proficiency. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 36. OUR POINT OF VIEW Finally, it is our hope that our colleagues who wish to tackle a second language will not dissuade by the prospect of a critical period being passed, because there is just not enough factual evidence to support it at this time. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 37. CONCLUSION Despite huge debate CPH still matters in Language acquisition. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH
  • 38. CONCLUSION  Along with CPH, learner factors like age, motivation, anxiety, culture, aptitude, cognitive style, learning style are also important in language acquisition. Sunday,April10,2016Narottam/CPH