The Role of Music in Second Language Acquisition: From Novice to Near‑Native
Music is one of the most underestimated tools in second language acquisition. It is not a gimmick, not a “fun extra,” and not merely a motivational hook. Music is a cognitive scaffold, a prosodic tutor, a cultural archive, and—at the highest levels—a precision instrument for tuning the learner’s internal linguistic compass. Its role changes dramatically across proficiency levels. What music does for a novice is not what it does for an ILR 3 learner, and certainly not what it does for someone pushing toward ILR 4. Here is how music functions across the arc of proficiency. Beginning Levels: Music as a Prosodic On‑Ramp At the novice stage, music provides structure before meaning. Learners don’t yet have enough vocabulary or grammar to “learn from lyrics,” but they can absorb: Prosody — rhythm, stress, intonation Phonotactics — what sound sequences feel natural Chunking — storing phrases as unanalyzed wholes Affective safety — music lowers the affective filter The goal here is no...