There is an undercurrent of opinion that there are talented language learners and then there are the rest, who struggle to get to proficiency. So the question, “Is talent needed for language learning?” is one that many language learners think about and I daresay want to be answered! Or is it just a convenient belief to fall back on when the language learning/teaching seems to get tough and the progress seems to be slow.
One thing to start with is that we all demonstrated talent when we learnt our first language, as the vast majority of infants learn their spoken mother tongue to the level of their peers. So the theory needs to be adjusted some already – maybe to that the talent we all amply demonstrated in our early years disappears for one reason or the other as we get older. Is this really the case? Can we actually lose talent? Or is it the case that it becomes covered up with ways of thinking, beliefs, attitudes and strategies that lead us away from our talent.
There are many tacks we could take here to explore this. The one that I would like to explore here for now is looking at people in diverse fields who many would say have great talent in their own fields. The interesting issue being, are they born with talent or do they somehow gain it. The case of language learning is a bit different because we all had it… However I think that the discussion here will help shed a few onion layers!
Creative geniuses we could say are geniuses because they know “how” to think, instead of “what” to think. Sociologist Harriet Zuckerman published an interesting study of the Nobel Prize winners in the science area who were living in the United States in 1977. She discovered that:
- six of Enrico Fermi’s students won the prize.
- Ernst Lawrence and Niels Bohr each had four students who won prizes.
- J. J. Thompson and Ernest Rutherford between them trained seventeen Nobel laureates.
Is it possible that the people with the necessary genes or talent all happened to be taught by the same people and that there were no talented people elsewhere? Well, we all know the answer to that! Looking in another field, sport, similar observations can also be made.
- In table tennis, for example, in the era of a UK Olympic table tennis Champion, Mathew Syed, one street, where he happened to live, produced more top players than the rest of the UK combined.
- Or that a poor tennis club in Moscow, Spartak, for a period produced more great female tennis players than the whole of the US.
- Or in the case of a Hungarian father, László Polgár, who set out to coach, successfully, his 2 daughters to Grand Master level, going against what previously was thought women were capable of.
The argument that talent or genes are a key factor in learning is an over rated reason separating the ones that can from the ones that struggle. There is no reason to suggest that it is not a factor. However, from the myriad of examples that one can find about the people who did excel in any field, there are many other factors that appear to be far more important.
We have discussed in previous posts that the quality and the amount of “practice” that successful people devote to their craft is critical. There are certainly other elements to what successful people do to become standout examples in their fields. It is more helpful to look at those and wonder why, than to think ” I am not as talented” as that person and hence close the door, in one way or the other, on working towards improvement
So a conclusion we can reach from all this is that the way we learn something is critically important. It is not to do with how flash the tools appears to be, not to do with the adverting hype around it, not to do with how much you pay for it. Pure and simply it’s is to do with how you learn. The more attention you pay to the how and the factors which impact that, the better off you will be in the long run.