🎓 Language Acquisition — Online English Teaching (lesson 2)

Input and Cognitive Mechanics

Learn how to design language input that actually sticks. We’ll cover what makes input comprehensible, why learner anxiety matters, and how to create conditions where noticing happens naturally.

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Input and Cognitive Mechanics 🧱📚

What Makes Input Work

Not all input leads to acquisition. You can talk at students for hours, but if the input doesn’t meet certain conditions, it won’t stick.

For input to actually lead to acquisition, it must be:

  • Comprehensible — slightly above the learner’s current level but understandable through context
  • Repeated across contexts — the same patterns showing up in different situations
  • Meaning-focused — communication first, form second
  • Emotionally low-stress — no anxiety blocking the cognitive processing

Think about how children acquire language. They hear thousands of hours of meaningful input before speaking. Adult learners are cognitively different, but the acquisition mechanism is still input-driven.

Quick Shift

Instead of starting with “Today we’ll study the present continuous,” try a short video clip, picture-based discussion, or live demonstration.

Lowering the Affective Filter 🌱📘➡️🗣️

Krashen’s affective filter is the emotional barrier that blocks input from being processed. When students feel embarrassed, overcorrected, rushed, or publicly exposed, their cognitive processing decreases. Online environments can either lower or raise this filter. Here’s how to keep it low:

What role do predictable routines play?How should you handle camera use?What's the best approach to mistakes?When should you give feedback?
Predictable class routines create a safe, familiar learning context. Students know what to expect, which reduces anxiety and frees up cognitive resources for language processing.
Encourage cameras but never shame students who keep them off. Forcing participation raises the affective filter and blocks acquisition.
Normalize mistakes as part of learning. Instead of interrupting with corrections, respond naturally: ‘Oh, you went to the store? What did you buy?’ The student hears the correct form without emotional disruption.
Use delayed, pattern-based feedback. Try chat box recasts, end-of-activity summaries, or pattern correction reviews. Immediate correction raises anxiety and shifts focus from meaning to form.

Understanding Interlanguage 👩‍🎓💬❌

When your student says “I goed to the store,” they’re not being careless. They’re showing you their interlanguage — a dynamic, rule-based system that’s always evolving.

Interlanguage is:

  • Rule-based — learners apply internal rules, even if incorrect
  • Systematic — errors follow patterns
  • Dynamic — constantly changing with exposure
  • Incomplete — still developing

The mistake “goed” is actually evidence of development. The learner has internalized the past tense rule and is overapplying it.

What This Means for You

If you punish or shame errors, you raise the affective filter and slow progress. If you provide repeated meaningful exposure, the interlanguage system adjusts over time.

Developmental Sequences Matter 📝⚙️

Research shows learners acquire grammatical features in predictable sequences, regardless of teaching order or explicit explanation. You can’t force mastery by explaining earlier. Your role is exposure and reinforcement — not acceleration beyond cognitive readiness.

1. Prog. -ing 2. Plural -s 3. Copula 'be' 4. Articles 5. 3rd-person -s 6. Aux. Inversion
Progessive -ing: Learners typically acquire the -ing form first. ‘She is walking’ becomes stable before other morphemes.
The plural marker comes next. ‘Two cats’ stabilizes relatively early in the acquisition sequence.
The linking verb ‘be’ (She is happy) develops after plurals are established.
Articles (a, an, the) are notoriously difficult and come later in the sequence for most learners.
Third-person -s : Despite being taught early, ‘She walks’ often stabilizes late. Teaching order doesn’t override developmental readiness.
Auxiliary Inversion: Question formation with auxiliaries (‘Does she walk?’) typically comes last in this sequence.
Noticing: The Bridge to Acquisition

Richard Schmidt proposed that learners must notice features in input for acquisition to occur. Hearing isn’t enough — awareness matters.

Teachers facilitate noticing by:

  • Highlighting patterns visually
  • Using contrastive examples
  • Asking guided discovery questions

Instead of explaining grammar directly, try asking: “What’s the difference between ‘I’ve worked here for five years’ and ‘I’ve been working here since 8 a.m.’?” Now noticing activates cognitive processing.

To prevent fossilization (errors becoming permanent), recycle structures within two weeks and provide repeated exposure in varied contexts.

What’s the most effective way to help learners notice a grammar pattern? 

Correct every error immediately during conversation
INCORRECT: Immediate correction raises the affective filter and shifts focus from meaning to form, disrupting acquisition.
Ask guided discovery questions after exposure
CORRECT: Guided discovery questions activate noticing after learners have encountered the pattern in context, building awareness without raising anxiety.
Explain the rule thoroughly before any exposure
INCORRECT: Explanation before exposure reverses the natural acquisition order. Learners need meaningful input first.
Assign grammar worksheets for homework
INCORRECT: Worksheets build explicit knowledge but don’t facilitate the noticing that leads to automatic use.

Testing Your Understanding 🧠✅❓

Let’s check your grasp of these cognitive mechanics. Consider this common online teaching scenario:

When a student makes the same grammar error repeatedly, the most effective response is to correct them immediately each time to prevent the error from becoming permanent. TRUE or FALSE

TRUE
INCORRECT!: TRUE EXPLANATION: This would suggest immediate correction prevents fossilization, but research shows excessive interruption raises anxiety, shifts focus to form over meaning, and actually slows progress.
FALSE
Correct!: FLASE EXPLANATION: Immediate correction raises the affective filter and can slow acquisition. Instead, provide repeated meaningful exposure, use delayed pattern-based feedback, and recycle structures across lessons. The interlanguage system adjusts over time with proper input.

Key Takeaway 💡🗝️

Building Cognitive Pathways

You’re not delivering grammar — you’re building cognitive pathways. Design input that’s comprehensible, meaning-focused, and emotionally safe. Respect developmental sequences instead of fighting them. Create conditions for noticing through guided discovery, not lectures. And remember: exposure before explanation, recycling within two weeks, and feedback that doesn’t raise anxiety. When you design for acquisition, fluency increases, accuracy stabilizes, anxiety decreases, and confidence grows.

About Joe

Joe Ehman — Founder, Inglés con Joe

Joe is the founder of Inglés con Joe and has spent years teaching English online to Spanish-speaking learners across Mexico and Latin America.

His approach blends second language acquisition research, structured grammar awareness, and practical fluency development. Rather than teaching rules in isolation, Joe focuses on how learners actually internalize language over time.

Through this certification, Joe trains teachers to move beyond worksheet-driven instruction and into acquisition-aligned methodology that produces measurable fluency growth.

His mission is simple: Better trained teachers create more confident English speakers.