Grammar Explorer: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
 
Line 51:
Grammar Explorer is arranged in a modular way. The modules are arranged in alphabetical order rather than according to the structure of the grammar. In this respect Grammar Explorer is more like a dictionary. This is a clear indication that Grammar Explorer has adopted what the [[neurosciences]] have argued for some time, that our memory tends to store semantically, especially at the level of the Basic User.
 
Furthermore, the neurosciences clearly support [[Michael Lewis (applied linguistic)|Michael Lewis]]'s [[didactic]] approach to language acquisition/learning that has been in circulation for about two decades now: Language must be seen as 'grammaticalized lexis'. A learner must have sufficient semantic data at hand in order to be able to construct meaning. Initially, this is exclusively semantic meaning, which is then transferred into higher level thinking once sufficient semantic data is available to enable the learner to infer the underlying structures. Learners move progressively from semantic meaning intoto more abstract syntactic and morphological meaning.
 
==References==