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The proprioceptive language learning method (proprioceptive method) is a language learning technique which emphasizes simultaneous development of cognitive, motor, neurological, and auditory functions as all being part of a comprehensive language learning process. Therefore, lesson development in this method is as concerned with the training of the motor and neurological functions of speech as it is with cognitive (memory) functions. It further emphasizes that training of each part of the speech process must be simultaneous. The proprioceptive method, therefore, emphasizes spoken language training, and is primarily used by those wanting to perfect their speaking ability in a target language.

An introduction to the proprioceptive method.[]

Proprioception is a distinct sensory attribute that provides feedback solely on the internal status of the body. It is the sense that indicates whether the body is moving as a result of expended effort, as well as the spatial orientation of various parts of the body in relation to each other.[1] Proprioceptivity as specifically used within speech therapy is the sense within the organism itself which detects or controls the movement and location of the muscles, tendons, and joints which are used to create speech. The mouth, vocal cords, diaphragm, and lungs incorporate thousands of nerve sensors which the brain uses to control the movement and position of these organs.[2]

The proprioceptive method is modeled after speech pathology practice.[]

The proprioceptive method stands virtually alone as a second language acquisition (SLA) method in that it bases its methodology on a speech pathology model.[3] By design, it attempts to simultaneously train motor, neurological, and hearing functions of human speech in conjunction with the cognitive functions of the mind. The proprioceptive method, therefore, is not merely a modified direct method which uses audio-lingual techniques. Rather, it is a spoken language education method which stresses the necessity of purposely training the neurological control and feedback of the mouth as an integral part of language instruction. (For the purpose of this discussion, the mouth includes the tongue, vocal cords, diaphragm, and lungs.) This language learning method recognizes the mind as being both the control center for the entire neurological process as well as the cognitive center for vocabulary and syntax memory.[4] Nonetheless, Wilfried Decoo reminds us that it is unlikely that any language learning method can ever be identified as being entirely new. The proprioceptive method may be a new application in Second Language Acquisition, but these same techniques have been used for decades in speech pathology to correct problems encountered by first language (L1) speakers.

The proprioceptive method stresses that mere knowledge of vocabulary and grammar is not the sole requirement for spoken language fluency, but that the mind receives real-time feedback from both hearing and neurological receptors of the mouth and related organs in order to constantly regulate the store of vocabulary and grammar memory in the mind during speech. In regard to feedback during speech, Denes and Pinson say, “In the simple speaker-listener situation . . . there are really two listeners, not one, because the speaker not only speaks, he also listens to his own voice. In listening, he continuously compares the quality of the sounds he produces with the sound qualities he intended to produce and makes the adjustments necessary to match the results with his intentions.” [5] In regard to the use of feedback to regulate speech, these same authors say, “But speech is much more than just a complex motor activity. It involves an acquired knowledge of the language code by which words are associated with objects and concepts. It involves a knowledge of syntax and grammar. It involves the continual interaction of stored information and voluntary conscious activity on the highest levels of the brain. In short, speech differs from most motor activities because it requires much greater efforts of the central nervous system. The final results of the speech process, so far as the central nervous system is concerned, are streams of nerve pulses sent to control the muscles of the organs used during speech.” [6]

Speech is a closed-loop system.[]

As the name proprioceptive method indicates, this method views the relationship between the mind and the mouth and related organs during speech as a closed-loop control system.[7] However, not all researchers share the view that speech is a closed-loop system. McNeil says, “Research aimed at determining how central nerve cells generate so-called motor programs was initiated. Two schools of motor control originated. The one emphasizes the importance of the central program and views afferent [proprioceptive] input as relatively unimportant (open-loop control), while the other school takes the position that afferent input is of great significance and that movements are under continuous control by feedback (closed-loop control).”[8] The proprioceptive method does not appear to take sides on this debate. Rather, it merely says that in order to effectively learn a Second Language, all proprioceptive and auditory feedback must occur simultaneously with cognitive learning.[9] Since the studies documenting both open- and closed-loop speech control is substantial, there is no difficulty in acknowledging that the human mind is capable of using both to produce speech.[10][11]

A simple illustration of open-loop and closed-loop control in the human mind is in order. If you are watching a distant train moving along its tracks on the opposite side of a river, you are using closed-loop controls as you watch the engine. Your eye and head movements are sending signals to your brain which, in turn, allow you to continue following the train by moving your eyes and head. However, if the engine enters a tunnel, you then switch to an open-loop control where—with no feedback from your eye and head movement, you could make a close approximation as to when the engine would exit the tunnel. The closed-loop control is dependent on proprioceptive feedback from your eye and muscle movement. The open-loop control is done entirely within your mind with no external feedback.[12]

Van Riper and Erickson say, “Respiration, phonation, resonation, and articulation—all these diverse processes that combine to produce speech are regulated by the nervous system. . . There are at least one hundred muscles that must work together with precise timing. . . and then the whole activity must be monitored as it occurs."[13] Speech pathology professionals are always mindful of the proprioceptive sense of first language acquisition when correcting defective speech.[14]

The proprioceptive method in use[]

Having postulated that spoken language requires the training of the neurological responses (including feedback) to an equal degree as memory, the proprioceptive method makes an important application to the development of spoken language instruction. For optimum effectiveness, it maintains that each of the components of second language acquisition must be experienced simultaneously. It therefore advocates that all memory functions, all motor functions and their neurological receptors, and all feedback from both the mouth and ears must occur at exactly the same moment in time of the instruction. Thus, according to the proprioceptive method, all student participation must be done at full speaking volume. Further, in order to train memory, after initial acquaintance with the sentences being repeated, all verbal language drills must be done as a response to the narrated sentences which the student must repeat (or answer) entirely apart from reading a text.[15]

Other names for the proprioceptive method[]

The proprioceptive method has also been identified as the proprio-kinesthetic method, and more commonly, as the feedback training method.[16]

Endnotes[]

  1. Somatosensory Pathways from the Body from the Washington University School of Medicine's Neuroscience Tutorial
  2. Van Riper, Charles, and Erickson, Robert L., 1996. Speech Correction: An Introduction to Speech Pathology and Audiology. Allyn and Bacon, page 249
  3. Under the heading Prerequisites for Speech Development, Van Riper and Erickson (Van Riper and Erickson, 1996, pages 77-78) identify six prerequisites for normal speech development in a child. They are: 1) Does the child have a normal vocal tract? 2) Does the child show normal neuromotor maturation? 3) Does the child have a normal auditory system? 4) Does the child have adequate physical and emotional health to support and foster the growth of oral language? 5) Does the child show normal intellectual capacity and cognitive development? 6) Does the child have a nurturing and stimulating environment? When these six prerequisites are satisfactorily met, a child should develop normal speech. However, if the child has not developed normal speech, then one or more of the prerequisites is faulty and must be corrected. For a student to successfully learn a Second Language Acquisition, the instruction method may assume that the same six prerequisites are necessary, though it would not deal with all of them in the applied method. It would not deal with anatomical abnormalities in the vocal tract in 1), or the health and social environment concerns in 4) and 6). However, the pedagogy must be designed to accommodate those prerequisites over which it has control. The language learning method must therefore purposely train the student’s neuromotor senses in 2), utilize the student’s auditory sense as he or she hears both the spoken model and his or her own response as feedback in the target language in 3), and supply the student with the cognitive content required for vocabulary and syntax development in 5). Further, the language learning method must also combine 2), 3), and 5) in such a manner that they are learned simultaneously as they are in First Language Acquisition.
  4. Van Riper and Erickson, 1996, page 44
  5. Denes and Pinson, 1973, page 6
  6. Denes and Pinson, 1973, page 134
  7. Lundquist, page 2-8
  8. McNeil, Malcom R. (ed.), 1997, Thieme, New York. Clinical Management of Sensorimotor Speech Disorders, Chapter 1, A Theoretical Framework for the Characterization of Pathological Speech Sensorimotor Control (by Anita Van der Merwe). page 3
  9. Lundquist, page 8-10
  10. There is ample evidence that the human brain uses both open-loop and closed-loop control. For example, see, Axonal Conduction Time and Human Cerebral Laterality: A Psychobiological Theory, Robert Miller, CRC Press, 1996, page 128 where the author says in regard to eye movement: “Examples of this distinction [between open- and closed-loop control] can be found for very many types of motor action. Rapid reaching or aiming for a target may be mainly open-loop control, especially if vision of the target is prevented once the movement has been initiated. On the other hand, visio-motor tracking of a target moving irregularly or unpredictably must involve closed-loop control.”
  11. Kornblum S. and Requin, J. (Eds.), Preparatory states and processes, pages 323-337, Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, Jeannerod, M. (1984). The Contribution of Open-Loop and Closed-Loop Control Modes in Prehension Movements
  12. Robert Miller, 1996, ‘’Axonal Conduction Time and Human Cerebral Laterality: A Psychobiological Theory,’’ page 128, CRC Press.
  13. Van Riper and Erickson, 1996, page 43
  14. Speech pathologists Herman and Associates state: “There are many reasons why a child may not be speaking as perfectly as he/she could. Proprioceptive difficulties may . . . affect speech production. Proprioceptive difficulties make it difficult for a child to receive enough sensory feedback regarding the appropriate placement of the articulators [tongue, teeth, jaw, etc.] for speech production.”
  15. Lundquist, page 12-13
  16. Lundquist, page 11

References[]

  • Axonal Conduction Time and Human Cerebral Laterality: A Psychobiological Theory, Robert Miller, CRC Press, 1996 [1].
  • Kornblum S. and Requin, J. (eds.), Preparatory states and processes, pages 323-337, Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, Jeannerod, M., 1984. The Contribution of Open-Loop and Closed-Loop Control Modes in Prehension Movements [2].
  • Lundquist, Lynn, Learning Spoken English, public domain [3].
  • McNeil, Malcom R. (ed.), 1997, Thieme, New York. Clinical Management of Sensorimotor Speech Disorders, Chapter 1, A Theoretical Framework for the Characterization of Pathological Speech Sensorimotor Control (by Anita Van der Merwe) [4].
  • On the Mortality of Language Learning Methods, given as the James L. Barker lecture on November 8 2001 at Brigham Young University, Wilfried Decoo [5].
  • Van Riper, Charles, and Erickson, Robert L., 1996. Speech Correction: An Introduction to Speech Pathology and Audiology. Allyn and Bacon.
  • The Speech Chain: The Physics and Biology of Spoken Language’’ by Peter B. Denes and Elliot N. Pinson, 1973, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Anchor Books.

External links[]

  • Somatosensory Pathways from the Body from the Washington University School of Medicine's Neuroscience Tutorial
  • [6] Other techniques used in speech therapy include the motor-kinesthetic approach and biofeedback, which help children know whether the sounds they are producing are faulty or correct
  • On the Mortality of Language Learning Methods, given as the James L. Barker lecture on November 8 2001 at Brigham Young University by Wilfried Decoo.

Further reading[]

  • Lass, N. J., McReynolds, L. V., and Northern, J. L. Handbook on Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology. Philadelphia: B. C. Decker, 1988.
  • The Speech Chain: Physics and Biology of Spoken Language by Peter B. Denes and Elliot N. Pinson, 1993, W H Freeman & Co, second edition.
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