LLS Typology

O'Malley & Chamot (1990)
* related to psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic aspects

Cognitive

Focuses on learning & manipulating learning materials continuously

E.g.:
i) Resourcing
ii) Grouping
iii) Note-taking
iv) Summarizing

Metacognitive

Involves planning, thinking, monitoring & evaluating learning

E.g.:
i) Advanced organization
ii) Advanced preparation
iii) Organizational planning
iv) Self-monitoring
v) Self-evaluation

Social Affective

Medium for social activities and interaction

E.g.:
i)Asking for clariification
ii) Cooperation
iii) Self talk

Oxford (1990)
* according to purpose and use
* based on research on cognitive & educational psychology

Direct
-Have direct impact with target language
-Require mental processing

Memory

Cognitive

Compensation

Indirect
-Provide indirect support to language learning

Metacognitive

Social

Affective

Mohamed Amin Embi (1996)
* based on influence of learning environment, setting and atmosphere
* based on second language acquisition model by Ellis (1994)

Classroom LLS

E.g.: Sitting near proficient students, asking for clarification, answer silently to oneself

Out-of-class LLS

Conversing with parents at home, discussing with friends after class, watch movies

Exam LLS

E.g.: Joining group discussion, doing exercises in workbooks, memorising essay format

Reference: Mohamed Amin Embi. Typology of Language Learning Strategies in http://issuu.com/profdramin/docs/llstypology