D. Block, NOT SO FAST - SOME THOUGHTS ON THEORY CULLING, RELATIVISM, ACCEPTED FINDINGS AND THE HEART AND SOUL OF SLA, Applied linguistics, 17(1), 1996, pp. 63-83
This paper is meant to be a response to claims made by several promine
nt applied linguists in recent articles about second language acquisit
ion (SLA) research. These claims are as follows: (1) The existence of
multiple theories in SLA research is problematic (Beretta 1991), and t
he field should be united around a single theory or a few theories (Lo
ng 1993); (2) The alternative to such a concerted effort is a relativi
stic stance where 'anything goes' (Long 1990a, 1993; Beretta 1991); (3
) There is now an ample body of 'accepted findings' which a good theor
y of SLA will have to account for (Long 1990a; Larsen Freeman and Long
1991); (4) The existence of 'accepted findings' means that SLA resear
chers should get on with the task of putting the findings to the test,
attempting to falsify them through replication studies. I begin by di
sagreeing with each of these suggestions and then go on to elaborate m
y own view of SLA research. This view sees SLA as a process of explora
tion (Schumann 1993) and speculation (Davies 1991) rather than one of
discovery and proof. In addition, I suggest that SLA is multi-dimensio
nal in nature, including not only cognitive mechanisms (Long 1990a), b
ut also the social psychology of the classroom (Allwright 1989). I end
by considering how SLA research carried out according to the principl
es I outline might be evaluated.