Selecting Language Teaching Methods According To The Age Characteristics Of The Learner
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37547/pedagogics-crjp-06-10-10Keywords:
Age-appropriate pedagogy, language teaching methods, second-language acquisitionAbstract
Age is one of the most powerful moderators of how learners perceive input, process form–meaning connections, and convert classroom experience into durable second-language competence. Yet “age-appropriate” language pedagogy is often treated as a loose intuition rather than a principled design variable. This article systematizes how maturational, cognitive, socio-emotional and motivational characteristics across early childhood, primary, lower secondary, upper secondary and adult cohorts should shape the choice and orchestration of language-teaching methods. Grounding the analysis in developmental psychology (Piaget, Vygotsky, Bruner), second-language acquisition (Krashen, Long, Ellis), and educational psychology, the study formulates a coherent alignment between age profiles and pedagogical moves, including input design, task complexity, feedback focus, classroom discourse patterns and assessment. Methodologically, it is a conceptual-analytic synthesis drawing on peer-reviewed literature and practice-based evidence; its contribution is a practical, age-sensitive framework that reconciles communicative, task-based, content-based and form-focused approaches without reducing them to one-size-fits-all recipes. Results indicate that the effectiveness of any method depends on how it resonates with learners’ dominant psychological operations (enactive, iconic, symbolic), attentional span and emerging self-regulation, peer affiliation needs, identity work and goal orientation. The article concludes with design implications for curriculum mapping, sequencing of tasks and feedback, and assessment that genuinely captures age-bound developmental trajectories.
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