Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/54067
Title: Learner autonomy : the first language/ second language : some reflections on the nature and role of metalinguistic knowledge
Authors: Little, David
Keywords: Learner autonomy
Language and languages -- Study and teaching
Metalanguage
Issue Date: 1996
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Education
Citation: Little, D. (1996). Learner autonomy : the first language/ second language : some reflections on the nature and role of metalinguistic knowledge. Education, 5(4), 7-14.
Abstract: Learner autonomy is classically defined as "the ability to take charge of one's learning" (Holec 1981:3). Such an ability presupposes a positive attitude towards the process, content and goals of learning, and is sustained and strengthened by a developing capacity for "detachment, critical reflection, decision-making, and independent action" (little 1991:4). The freedom that characterizes the autonomous learner is not absolute, but conditional and constrained. Learning, whether developmental/ experiential or formal, is always embedded in an interactive, social process (self- instruction entails an internalization of this process, so that our capacity for learning on our own develops out of our experience of learning in interaction with others; cf. Uttle 1991:5). This explains the paradox that learner autonomy can be fully understood as a theoretical construct and effectively pursued as a pedagogical goal only when we take full account of the social context in which learning takes place. The argument in favour of fostering learner autonomy has been conducted in both social and psychological terms. In adult education, for example, there has been a tendency to stress "the need to develop the individual's freedom by developing those abilities which will enable him to act more responsibly in running the affairs of the society in which he lives" (Holec 1981:1.). The link between educational purpose and political ideal could scarcely be plainer. Other explorations of the theory and practice of learner autonomy, by contrast, have focussed on the psychological dimension of learning, emphasizing that we can only ever learn on the basis of what we already know, and that no two individuals have exactly the same store of knowledge.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/54067
Appears in Collections:Education, vol. 5, no. 4
Education, vol. 5, no. 4

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