TeachingEnglish
Silent period
The silent period hypothesis is the idea that when a language is learned, there should be a period in which the learner is not expected to actively produce any language. This is based on observations of a listening period in infants when they learn a first language.
Example
When learners begin to study a new language, they can go through a silent period where they are exposed to sufficient comprehensible input to allow them to begin to acquire language.
Common classroom techniques can address the needs of learners in a silent period, e.g. listening comprehension and vocabulary input. There are also methodologies which explicitly incorporate a silent period, such as Total Physical Response and the Natural Approach.


