Supporters of communicative language teaching have argued that language is not learned by the gradual accumulation of one item after another. They suggest that errors are a natural and valuable part of the language learning process. Furthermore, they believe that the motivation of learners in often stifled by an insistence on correctness in the earliest stages of second language learning. These opponents of the ‘Get it right from the beginning’ proposal argue that it is better to encourage learners to develop ‘fluency’ before ‘accuracy’