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 »  Home  »  Learning tips  »  The Problems with Immersion

The Problems with Immersion
By Mollie Immel-Brown | Published  11/20/2006 | Learning tips | Rating:
The Problems with Immersion
It's a commonly held belief among American language educators that the only way to teach a child (or an adult, for that matter) a second language is to fully immerse he or she in the language's vocabulary and lexicon. Structured immersion, as it's widely known, is a system of instruction by which the teachers speak to the language learners in nothing but the language they are studying, even if the instructor's words and sentence constructions are on a level far above that of the student's understanding. Sit in on any high school Spanish class, and you'll see this method at work.

Structured immersion does, of course, have its benefits. Fully immersion students in a language allows them the opportunity to truly adapt to the phonetics of the words themselves and understand, on a basic level, how phrases are put together. And certainly any intensive study of a language will achieve some results (though it's unclear whether or not students will retain the information after the class has ended). But structured immersion becomes problematic by way of assumption; assuming that students will naturally pick up a language by hearing it constantly is a logical fallacy. This is, after all, second language acquisition, not first. The rules are a little different.

To simplify a very complicated theory, first language acquisition (what happens when a child is first exposed to language) is believed to be tied to the properties of vocabulary naming. Children learn the word chair, for instance, because that is the only option they've been given for the object. A child's first basic lexicon is built of the words they've heard used for the things surrounding them. But when more than one word is presented for an item (such as mom or mommy, dad or daddy), the child will often latch onto to only one term. At times, he or she will shift back and forth between the terms based on context, but there will usually be a clear preference.

Second language acquisition, on the other hand, is based on providing substitutes for an already learnt lexicon. Even if the language learner is a mere five years old, he or she has already latched onto the most comfortable terminology, thereby creating for him or herself a first language. Anything thereafter will be an alternative and significantly more difficult to understand.

There is no conclusive research that an environment devoid of that first language will provide any student with a more rounded learning experience; if anything, it has the potential to confuse and frustrate students already so connected to their first language by shunning that linguistic backbone and refusing to acknowledge the lexicon they've known for so long.

Structured immersion is by no means an irresponsible, or even incorrect, way to teach a second language. It's benefits are clearly outlined for any educator who wishes to instruct in such a manner. But in order to truly reap those benefits, one must understand that structural immersion does not erase the linguistic rules of second language acquisition. There is no magic way to learn a language as if it were your first.
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by felice206)
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    Quite a good article. I have to agree here, total immersion sounds like a good idea, but it does have its pitfalls. I believe I've heard the best age to learn a language by is 2 or 3 years after that it becomes much harder.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by FourBear)
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    Very interesting article; I like to read something that actually goes against the idea of immersion. Continuing to question such methods will hopefully help in the development of new methods for language learning.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by tater03)
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    To be honest I never really thought about total immersion and the pitfalls. But this was a very good article.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by sweet_mayhem)
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    i am glad to read an article which takes a unique angle in discussing immersion as a way to learn a second language. i have to agree that structured immersion may be a hard way for students to learn another language because it is, well, structured. but of course, the same cannot be said in the natural immersion that one can gain through living in a place where everyone speaks the target language he/she wants to learn.
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Starlily)
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    Interesting article. I have wondered if students in an immersion situation would feel confused and frustrated at times about learning new levels of education in a language they are not completely familiar or comfortable with. It would be challenging definitely.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by papia)
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    I agree with all members . It is a very good and useful article.
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by FourBear)
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    I would really like to see a followup article on unstructured immersion and how it compares to structured immmersion. One of my professors learned Spanish that way, and sometimes finds it easier to speak than English!
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by sweet_mayhem)
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    wow, that's pretty awesome, fourbear. i sure would love to read an article about unstructured immersion. i bet it's one of the best ways to learn a target language. :)
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by tater03)
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    Yes, I would imagine if you lived in the place that the language would be easier to learn. I just wish I could do that.
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by riskey58)
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    I total immersion is a good idea but I do not think that it would work for everyone.
     
  • Comment #11 (Posted by Paula62)
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    the biggest drawback I see to full immersion is that adults dont' think the way yound children do. Kids begin to use the words they hear because they only think in one or two word groupings at first. Adult learners are tyring to express complicated thoughts, and learning by immersion is slow for that type of thing.
     
  • Comment #12 (Posted by trick-r-treat)
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    Children learn new languages faster than adults do, and I think structured immersion is an excellent way to go about it.
     
  • Comment #13 (Posted by FourBear)
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    I'm just wondering is something other than structured immersion would work better with the multitudes of adult learners out there. I'm betting that a bit of psych research needs to be done in this area to find out which methods could work best.
     
  • Comment #14 (Posted by tater03)
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    I think in the end total immersion would work for some but not others. Some people just would get to stressed with total immersion, I think.
     
  • Comment #15 (Posted by Starlily)
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    I agree Paula...I think a major reason that adults get so frustrated with learning a new language is that we are trying to communicate ideas, not just labelling things...
     
  • Comment #16 (Posted by FourBear)
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    I think that idiomatic expressions are one of the hardest things to overcome, especially in immersion. You don't even realize that many English saying are idiomatic!
     
  • Comment #17 (Posted by Paula 62)
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    Actually, I would expect immersion to be the best way to learn idioms. In immersion you would learn the phrase and meaning as a whole, all together. In traditional classroom learning you would have learned vocabulary words, which would make the phrase nonsensical in its meaning based on the meaning of individual words.
     
  • Comment #18 (Posted by sweet_mayhem)
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    that is a good point there, paula. language learners may be taught idioms even in a classroom but, of course, an ideal way to learn it is through actual immersion since you get to practice the idioms and see people use them in life's real context.
     
  • Comment #19 (Posted by tater03)
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    You bring up a good point Paula about immersion. I just know me. I would probably get frustrated more easily with total immersion.
     
  • Comment #20 (Posted by FourBear)
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    I'm not sure, Paula. You would be very confused until you learned that a phrase was an idiom. There is no doubt, however, that you would remember it after you learned it's meaning as you pointed out :)
     
  • Comment #21 (Posted by trick-r-treat)
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    I think we have a whole different concept about language when we are babies. We are just copying words and sounds that we hear, and then we are comfortable with it because we are communicating. It is totally different when we try it later in life and already have an established vocabulary.
     
  • Comment #22 (Posted by reviewer)
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    How interesting! I had so much luck with immersion myself that I believed in the method, but I have lost many of my skills since.
     
  • Comment #23 (Posted by snowbirdfsf)
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    this is an interesting article to consider in relation to teaching at a younger age. my latin teacher's wife was involved in a program focused on teaching second language in elementary school. i'm not sure what menthoded was used but i only thought of the benefits of learning the second language earlier. i suppose only time will tell if this really does help or how the child may grown to simply confuse the two languages.
     
  • Comment #24 (Posted by reviewer)
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    I didn't expect to hear anyone comment about Latin related to an immersion article! Did you send the kid to Latin America? ;)
     
  • Comment #25 (Posted by tater03)
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    You would think kids would get confused learning two different languages but from what I have seen they don't seem to have that many problems with it. Oh to be young again and know this little tidbit.
     
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