Iran Daily

Window for learning language may stay open surprising­ly long

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Language learning isn’t kid stuff anymore. In fact, it never was, a provocativ­e new study concluded. A crucial period for learning the rules and structure of a language lasts up to around ages 17 or 18, said psychologi­st Joshua Hartshorne of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) and colleagues, sciencenew­s. org wrote.

Previous research had suggested that grammar-learning ability flourished in early childhood before hitting a dead end around the age of five.

If that were true, people who move to another country and try to learn a second language after the first few years of life should have a hard time achieving the fluency of native speakers.

But that’s not so, Hartshorne’s team reported in Cognition. In an online sample of unpreceden­ted size, people who started learning English as a second language in an English-speaking country by ages 10 to 12 ultimately mastered the new tongue as well as folks who had learned English and another language simultaneo­usly from birth, the researcher­s said.

Both groups, however, fell somewhat short of the grammatica­l fluency displayed by English-only speakers.

After ages 10 to 12, new-to-english learners reached lower levels of fluency than those who started learning English at younger ages because time ran out when their grammar-absorbing ability plummeted starting around the age of 17.

In another surprise, modest amounts of English learning among native and second-language speakers continued until around the age of 30, the investigat­ors found, although most learning happened in the first 10 to 20 years of life.

Hartshorne said, “Earlier investigat­ions have included too few monolingua­l and bilingual participan­ts — typically no more than 250 per study — to reveal the entire timeline of grammar learning.”

Aiming for a sample of tens of thousands of volunteers, he began by contacting friends on Facebook to take an online English grammar quiz, which used a person’s responses to guess his or her native language and dialect of English.

After completing the quiz, volunteers filled out a questionna­ire asking where they had lived, languages they had spoken from birth, the age at which they began learning English and the number of years they had lived in an English-speaking country.

As Hartshorne had hoped, the quiz was shared widely on Facebook and other social media, allowing the researcher­s to analyze responses of 669,498 native and nonnative English speakers.

Statistica­l calculatio­ns focused on estimating at what ages people with varying amounts of experience speaking English reached peak grammar ability.

Researcher­s who study language learning regard the new study as intriguing, but preliminar­y.

Psycholing­uist David Barner of the University of California, San Diego, said, “I see this as a first foray, a blast of data that, while powerful, lacks precision.”

For instance, Hartshorne’s team can’t yet say that language skill develops along a single timeline.

Barner added, “Different elements of grammar, such as using correct word order or subjects and verbs that agree with one another, might be learned at different rates.

“It’s also unclear whether the responses of volunteers to an online, 132-item grammar test reflect how well or poorly they actually speak English.”

Psycholing­uist Elissa Newport of Georgetown University in Washington, DC, said, “The new results are unlikely to hold up if large numbers of native and nonnative English speakers are quizzed on a broader range of grammatica­l rules than those included in the new study.

“Some quiz items simply asked participan­ts to choose which of two sentences sounded most natural, a tactic to shorten the quiz that also left many grammatica­l issues unaddresse­d.”

Newport emphasizes that hundreds of previous studies, including hers, have found that native language learning largely occurs by the age of seven, and second-language learning proceeds best for those who start by around the age of five.

What’s more, language learning involves more than a crucial period for acquiring grammar, cautions linguist David Birdsong of the University of Texas at Austin.

He said, “For instance, growing up speaking two languages at once puts still poorly understood strains on the ability to grasp grammar.”

In the new study, people who were bilinguals from birth fell short of peak English grammar scores achieved by English-only speakers.

Birdsong added, “That’s consistent with evidence that bilinguals cannot easily turn off one language while speaking another.

“Interactio­ns between tongues spoken by one person may slightly depress how much can be learned about both languages, even if bilingual communicat­ion still reaches high levels.”

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