AHISTORICITY REVISITED

Author:

Gass Susan,Fleck Catherine,Leder Nevin,Svetics Ildiko

Abstract

In our reply to Margaret Thomas's article “Programmatic ahistoricity in second language acquisition theory,” we first review pertinent literature, concluding that historical awareness is evident in SLA, though it is not as far-reaching as Thomas would like it to be. We then argue that the attitude of most scholars in SLA toward the past is reasonable given that no significant work in SLA from antiquity has been discovered—by Thomas or anyone else—and that if such work exists Thomas has the burden to bring it to light before declaring the field guilty of ahistoricity. We consider various ways to define the field of SLA, arguing that it should be defined theoretically first, and historically second. We claim that the point at which SLA separated itself from language teaching is a logical point from which to date the beginnings of SLA as a true discipline. We consider and reject Thomas's comparison of SLA and its history to various other scientific disciplines and their histories, arguing that these disciplines have true milestones to point to in the distant past, whereas SLA does not. Although we agree with Thomas that a general awareness of the history of philosophy and science is beneficial for scholars in all fields, we make a sharp division between that history and the history of SLA proper. We conclude by arguing that respect for the field of SLA can come only through sound scientific progress, not by appeals to history.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education

Cited by 12 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Study quality as an intellectual and ethical imperative: A proposed framework;Annual Review of Applied Linguistics;2024-04-12

2. SLA at 55: What Are the Key Issues?;Talking About Second Language Acquisition;2022

3. Coming of age: the past, present, and future of quantitative SLA research;Language Teaching;2020-01-24

4. Future Directions in Language Learning and Teaching;The Cambridge Handbook of Language Learning;2019-06-27

5. A methodological synthesis and meta-analysis of judgment tasks in second language research;Second Language Research;2019-03-07

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