- Fri Aug 26, 2016 2:03 pm
#28070
Hi MB - thanks for posting!
Your analysis of the stimulus seems to be spot on: two groups were taught to create "one of the types of stone tools" made by Neanderthals, and the two groups showed the same proficiency whether they learned through observation alone, or observation and language, which the author uses to conclude that language wasn't necessary for the Neanderthals to build "their sophisticated tools."
Perhaps my quotes above help make a crucial distinction clear.
Language may not have mattered for the tools the students were making, but (C) tells us that the student tools were much simpler and easier to make than most types made by Neanderthals. Meaning? Language may have been important after all when it comes to making more sophisticated tools. Put another way: the study here was flawed because the tools created weren't reflective of Neanderthal tools, and thus the conclusion cannot be known.
(D), if anything, strengthens: remember, the expectation is that students learning from the silent group should have been worse, but weren't, and then on top of that we're told in (D) that the silent group also had a worse instructor! And yet they still learned equally well. This doesn't greatly affect the language idea of course, so it's more irrelevant than helpful, but it does seem to suggest perhaps that the skills can be learned regardless of verbal instruction AND even instructor incompetence. Regardless, it certainly doesn't weaken by showing that language might matter.
Jon Denning
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