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Thanks all for such a great discussion!
Yes, I should have been more specific on what I mean by "study grammar." I suppose I mean paying special attention to it separately from anything else, as in studying bullet-point rules. As people pointed out though, it's hard to really completely separate it 100% from organic study (or vice-versa), nor should anyone want to and that wasn't really the point of my question.
I don't agree that children and adults learn in the same way. I do see the value of using grammar as a shortcut, which is something children learning a language aren't capable of but adults can use to their advantage. Why not take advantage? At the same time though, I tend to agree with nadiatims about exposure really being what cements it in, rather than the initial studying of a rule.
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Sound reasoning, I think.
As for me, I don't like devoting free time to trying to drill grammar rules, so I don't do it mostly for that simple reason. But making references to, or reviewing grammar guides and charts when needed - just enough so that I can understand a particular point for the time being - is the same kind of shortcut as looking up words. I don't categorize that as "studying grammar", but in any case it is taking advantage of them.
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I think it's usually a bad idea to get caught in the trap of thinking that native kids learn a language in such and such a way so adults should too. The way children learn the language is a complete package involving constant exposure and regular correction by adults and teachers. You can't just take one element out of this package and hope to achieve the same results. I'm sure if an adult were put in the same position as a young child (i.e. being completely surrounded by the language and not being allowed to use their own native language) then they would progress pretty quickly too. They would also probably go crazy. The closest I can really imagine an adult getting would be to stay with a Japanese host family while attending a language school where none of the other pupils spoke that person's native language.
It is also mis-leading to say that native speakers don't learn grammar. Maybe they don't learn it in terms of learning a grammar point first and then looking at material using it, but they do have good grammar reinforced through correction by their parents and teachers. Elementary school 国語 books seem to have plenty of exercises reinforcing the correct uses of the particles, word order and so on. The junior high school books I saw had verb tables and some pretty long grammar explanations at the back of them. Maybe the point is that they were at the back of the book.
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I've definitely wanted to block out Japanese in my head but I couldn't. I was on a bus in Sapporo two weeks ago and there were three Japanese high school guys having the worst conversation ever, and I so desperately wanted them to shut the ***** up (as did all the other Japanese people on the bus).
So yeah, there's a point where you get fluent enough that you can understand most conversations without concentration. If I have the news on or something I block out most of it if I don't concentrate, but daily conversations are easy enough that my mind processes them automatically. So it seems to just be a matter of fluency level.
(Edit 1: This forum still blocks *****? Testing: Cunt faggot nigger.)
(Edit 2: There ya go people, apparently ***** is worse than cunt faggot or nigger.)
Edited: 2012-02-20, 4:14 am
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I dont know why people make the comparison of child vs adult learners.
Its not even a fair argument.
About 100% of all children learn their mother language, then again, these children all are given about 4 to 6 years to produce grammatically correct sentences. Im sure if an adult was driven enough to not produce or think in their mother language, they would have impressive results as well, after 4 to 6 years. A child cant read native books after a year or two but an adult sure can.
Adults have the luxury of being able to navigate society without speaking L2 by using L1 in conjunction with common sense and world knowledge / experience. Stuck in an L2 environment, you often dont even need to use it. This is probably the only reason adults often fail at language learning.
Give an adult a 6 year paid vacation to the L2 country with the only objective being to acquire the language, and you can be sure they will do well.
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Language acquisition is a scientific field; you can't just sit around and say "well, this makes sense to me" any more than you can just start spouting off about biology or chemistry if you haven't studied it. There are a lot of good introductory linguistics books that would cover language acquisition; I recommend you pick up one of those if you want to learn more about it.
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Arguments that adults would learn like children were they in a similar situation are wrong, even if the argument admits that creating the situation is impossible.
Children really do learn language differently than adults. Finding scientists in the field who argue otherwise is like finding biologists that don't believe in evolution--there are a couple, but nobody takes them seriously.
(Just as an example, babies at 6-8 months can recognize and distinguish between sounds in ANY language with about the same accuracy. This is tested by a head-turn test where the babies are taught to turn there head when a sound changes. In the next 2-4 months babies stop being able to do this. They get about 15 percent better at distinguishing between similar sounds in their own language, and 15 percent worse at distinguishing between sounds that are not in their language.
Adults can't mimic this at all. As an adult you don't have some magic period where you can distinguish between all sounds with 65% accuracy [the value from one of the studies], and then gradually get better at the important ones and worse at the others. Instead you can distinguish between sounds in your language with a very very high degree of accuracy, and you completely suck as distinguishing between sounds not in your language.
Deal with it, you suck at learning language after you're seven. That's the truth.)
Edited: 2012-02-20, 7:30 am
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Where are the studies where an adult has been placed in a foreign language environment, completely isolated from their l1, dependent on the l2 for all and any communication, and having a special person(s) assigned to them giving them comprehensible input almost all waking hours of the day (to simulate family & classmates) for several years and they didn't achieve a high level of fluency? If you can't show those studies, why assume that adult language acquisition somehow cannot follow the natural acquisition process that works for children?
edit: just saw your post Tzadeck. Re: that head turn test, a) link please (I find most language acquisition related studies that get posted woefully inadequate and short-term). b) Maybe that just means it takes adults slightly longer to develop an good ear for and accent in the language, not necessarily for other aspects of the language. At any rate, I know plenty of people who have developed perfect accents in English as a second language (both my parents being examples).
Edited: 2012-02-20, 7:33 am
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You can't do that study because you can't fund it and you can't find people willing to invest that much time in it. It's an impractical study, and the suggestion of it just makes it sound like you don't know much about science and the history of science.
The way science generally works is not by creating those kinds of perfect studies. Perfect studies are almost always impossible. So what we have to do is make studies that are indirect but are clever and can nevertheless get to the heart of what we are trying to figure out. There are plenty of such studies that suggest that children learn languages different from adults.
An example of one experiment in another field is this: to determine the charge of an electron we had to determine the charge of oil droplets in mechanical equilibrium tons and tons and tons of times and then we determined that the charges were multiples of a fundamental value. We then assumed that the fundamental value was the charge of an electron. A very round about way of doing it, but as we did more and more studies and relied on that number more and more it became obvious that yes, that number was in fact correct even though the original study was done in a rather complicated roundabout way. The results of that study were ridiculously accurate, though we have refined the number a bit over the years.
It's not like we made some machine that could just measure the charge of an electron, even to this day. And there weren't scientists going, "Yeah, but did you make a machine that could measure the charge! No! So you're totally wrong! Where's the machine!? This study isn't perfect so it doesn't prove anything!"
Edited: 2012-02-20, 7:47 am