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matahari asked in Education & ReferenceTeaching · 1 decade ago

Importance of native speaker in learning a language?

Hi,

Im doing a research on the Importance of having native speaker to come occassionally to classes to help students learn the language as well as the culture in a language subject.

If any of you have any ideas about this or any articles that can support my topic, that will be great!!

Cheers

3 Answers

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  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    Hi,

    i think it's really important to have someone with a BACK GROUND from the country to teach so the correct wording can then be correctly understood. Hope this helps you.

  • 1 decade ago

    learning a new language means learning a new culture.

    no one knows culture as good as someone who comes from that culture.

    besides, you mite not know what some words are idioms mean except from someone who uses them most frequent.

    like when you refer the word pig to a species of animal but french people use it to call taxi driver (and it is very common).

    however, the native speaker you are learning a language from will effect you a lot.

    as i say that you learn english from australian since you say 'cheers' because only australian says that. and american says 'regards'

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    The usage of these terms is far from standardised, however.

    Sometimes the term first language is used for the language that the speaker speaks best (his second language then being the language he speaks less well than his first language, etc).

    Sometimes the terms first language, second language and third language are used to indicate various levels of skill in a language, so that it can be said that a person knows more than one language at first or second language level.

    Sometimes the term native language is used to indicate a language that a person is as proficient in as a native inhabitant of that language's base country, or as proficient as the average person who speaks no other language but that language.

    Sometimes the term mother tongue or mother language is used for the language that a person learnt at home (usually from his parents). Children growing up in bilingual homes can according to this definition have more than one mother tongue.

    In the context of population censuses conducted on the Canadian population, Statistics Canada defines mother tongue as "the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood by the individual at the time of the census"[1].

    [edit] Terms can be misleading

    The terms first, native, and mother can also be misleading, regardless of their definitions. It is quite possible that the first language learned is no longer a speaker's dominant language. Young immigrant children, whose families have moved to a new linguistic environment may lose, in part or in totality, the language they first acquired.

    Good skills in one's native languages are essential for further learning, as a native language is thought to be a base of thinking, however, this is highly controversial. Incomplete first language skills often make learning other languages difficult. Native language has therefore a central role in education.

    [edit] Mother tongue

    The term "mother tongue" should not be interpreted to mean that it is the language of one's mother. In some paternal societies, the wife moves in with the husband and thus may have a different first language, or dialect, than the local language of the husband. Yet their children usually only speak their local language. Only a few will learn to speak their mothers' languages like natives. Mother in this context probably originated from the definition of mother as source, or origin; as in mother-country or land.

    In some countries such as Kenya and India, "mother tongue" is used to indicate the language of one's ethnic group (ethnic tongue), in both common and journalistic parlance (e.g. 'I have no apologies for not learning my mother tongue' [2]), rather than one's first language. A similar usage of the term was employed in Ireland in the early-to-mid twentieth century, with Irish being referred to as the "mother tongue" of all Irish people, even of those whose first language was English.

    [edit] On multilinguality

    One can have two or more native languages, thus being a native bilingual or indeed multilingual. The order in which these languages are learned is not necessarily the order of proficiency. For instance, a French-speaking couple might have a daughter who learned French first, then English; but if she grew up in the United States, she is likely to become more proficient in English.

    The Brazilian linguist Cleo Altenhofen considers the denomination "mother tongue" in its general usage to be imprecise and subject to various interpretations that are biased in linguistic prejudices, especially with respect to bilingual children from ethnic minority groups. He cites his own experience as a bilingual speaker of Portuguese language and Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, a German-rooted language brought to southern Brazil by the first German immigrants. In his case, like that of many children whose home language differs from the language of the environment (the 'official' language), it is debatable which language is his 'mother tongue'. Many scholars gave definitions of 'mother tongue' through the years based on common usage, the emotional relation from the speaker towards the language, and even its dominance in relation to the environment. However, all of these criteria lack precision.

    [edit] Definitions

    Definition based on origin: the language(s) one learned first (the language(s) in which one has established the first long-lasting verbal contacts).

    Definition based on internal identification: the language(s) one identifies with/as a native speaker of;

    Definition based on external identification: the language(s) one is identified with/as a native speaker of, by others.

    Definition based on competence: the language(s) one knows best.

    Definition based on function: the language(s) one uses most.

    Reference: Terralingua Definition: Mother Tongue

    [edit] References

    ^ Language By Leonard Bloomfield ISBN 8120811968

    ^ The Native Speaker: Myth and Reality By Alan Davies ISBN 1853596221

    [edit] See also

    Child of deaf adults

    Heritage speaker

    Language acquisition

    Language attrition

    Literacy

    Multilingualism

    Second language

    International Mother Language Day

    Third Culture Kids

    Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_language%22

    Categories: Cleanup from August 2007 | All pages needing cleanup | Language acquisition

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