A History of Applied Linguistics - From 1980 to the present

(Kiana) #1

of the learner in order to allow the learner’s system to self-organize in new
ways” (Larsen-Freeman and Cameron 2008: 122). In the sociolinguistic
approach to variation, the factors looked at (age, level of education, SES) are
typically treated asfixed and static variables. In development, variation is
often assessed by comparing individuals’data with group data and in par-
ticular with native speakers of a language. Variation in that perspective is
basically a deviation from the norm. CDST radically rejects the automatic
retreat to such an error hypothesis and claims that variability bears impor-
tant information about the nature of the developmental process. CDST
stresses the importance of the context in which the behavior is displayed.
Development takes place in real time and is considered highly context
dependent. Therefore, it can be compared with an evolutionary process,
which is also mindless and opportunistic. Thelen and Smith agree with the
classical Darwinian emphasis on variability as the source of new forms. They
state:“We believe that in development, as in evolution, change consists of
successive make-do solutions that work, given abilities, goals and history of
the organisms at the time”(1994: 144). Variability is considered to be the
result of the systems’flexibility and adaptability to the environment. From a
dynamic systems angle, variability has been viewed as both the source of devel-
opment and the indicator of a specific moment in the developmental process,
namely in the presence of a developmental transition (Van Dijk 2003: 129).
Intrinsic to this view is the idea that individual developmental paths, each
with all its variation, may be quite different from one another, even though
in a“grand sweep”view these developmental paths are quite similar. While
the statistics of the true score approach are well developed and offer
researchers the comfort of clear demarcations of what is“significant”and
what is not (or so it seems), methods to look at variation as a source of
information from a CDST perspective are only beginning to be developed
(see Van Dijk and Van Geert (2005) for several interesting techniques).
Larsen-Freeman (2006) reports on a study in which the oral and written
production offive Chinese learners of English is examined. The data show
“the mergence of complexity,fluency, and accuracy...not as the unfolding
of some prearranged plan, but rather as a system adapting to a changing
context, in which the language resources of each individual are uniquely
transformed through use”(590). These data support Larsen-Freeman’searlier
statement that a CDST perspective


rejects a view of language as something that is taken in–a static com-
modity that one acquires and therefore possesses forever. In its place, a
complex system view suggests that development is always happening and
there is nofinite state at which it ceases.
(2006: 585)

Spoelman and Verspoor (2010) studied the development of a learner of
Finnish as a foreign language using her written assignments over her period


98 Trends III

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