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Objectification, Positivsm and Language Studies : A Reconsideration
Oleh:
Reagan, Timothy
Jenis:
Article from Journal - e-Journal
Dalam koleksi:
Critical Inquiry in Language Studies vol. 1 no. 1 (2004)
,
page 41-60.
Fulltext:
Vol 1, no 1, p 41-60.pdf
(161.11KB)
Isi artikel
Linguists and language specialists, as well as the lay public, have generally viewed language from a perspective that is fundamentally positivist in orientation. We tend to assume that language as an abstract entity exists as just such a knowable entity. More problematically, we assume that particular languages also exist as knowable entities which can be described and analyzed. Such assumptions are embedded in our discourse, and in turn have important implications for applied language studies. We commonly make claims about English, Spanish, etc., just as we make claims about the nature of human language more generally. When we engage in teaching languages, our goal is to move the student’s linguistic behavior in the second language closer to the norms of the singular reality of that target language. What we do is to engage in the objectification of the construct of “language,” which then leads us to misunderstand the nature of language and to accept technicist views of the teaching and learning of languages.
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