英文摘要 |
The field of language learning has witnessed a shift in the view about how language is to be learned or taught. In this view, language is a cognitive and social tool human users utilize for establishing proper relationships with the environment. Learning a language is learning to use the tool to build up such a relation and acquire the meaning of living and life. This ecological perspective on language and language learning is not only consonant with the pedagogical spirits of Content-Based Instruction (North America) and Content and Language Integrated Learning (Europe and Australia), which have gained increasing popularity in recent years, but can usefully serve as the theoretical basis of the latter. In this article, we explicate the ten ecological features of language learning proposed by van Lier (2004). We summarize them into a simple principle, namely ‘Language is living, society is classroom,’ and suggest that it can be used as a criterion-check for ensuring the pedagogical spirits claimed to be in the CBI or CLIL practices. We also point out that the ecological perspective on language and language learning explains the power needed for driving a language learning machine. It is distinct from the traditional cognitive perspective, which emphasizes the mechanics of the machine. The ecological perspective calls for more attention given to helping students to explore and acquire the meaning of language and language learning, i.e., to turn on their language learning machine. (本文於2020.03重新修訂) |