Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Methods Approaches Efl

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 29
At a glance
Powered by AI
The text discusses different levels of teaching methods and approaches including approaches, methods, procedures, techniques and models. It also discusses factors like learner age, background, preferences that influence suitable teaching methods.

The text describes four levels - approaches, methods, procedures and techniques. Approaches are theories about language learning, methods are practical realization of approaches, procedures are sequences of techniques and techniques are single activities.

The text mentions factors like learner age, character, cultural backgrounds, level of study, teacher beliefs and preferences as influencing the suitable teaching methods. It also emphasizes the importance of exposure to language, comprehensible input, lowering anxiety and allowing discovery.

METHODS AND APPROACHES

IN TEACHING ENGLISH AS A
FOREIGN LANGUAGE

October 6, 2008/ FIL ANG 311

Approaches, methods, procedures, and


techniques
Approach : this refers to theories about the nature of

language and language learning that serve as the source of


practices and principles in language teaching. It offers a model
of language competence. An approach describes how people
acquire their knowledge of the language and makes statements
about conditions which will promote successful language
learning.

Method : a method is the practical realization of an approach.

Methods include various procedures and techniques as part of


their standard fare.

Procedure : a procedure is an ordered sequence of

techniques. A procedure is a sequence which can be described


in terms such as first you do this, then you do that Smaller
than a method and bigger than technique.

Technique : a common technique when using video

material is called silent viewing. This is where the


teacher plays the video with no sound. Silent viewing
is a single activity rather than a sequence, and as
such is a technique rather than a whole procedure.
A term that is also used in discussions about teaching

is model used to describe typical procedures,


usually for teachers in training. Such models offer
abstractions of these procedures, designed to guide
teaching practice.

The Grammar Translation


Method
This is a method that has been used by

language teachers for many years.


At one time it was called Classical
Method,since it was first used in the teaching
of the classical languages,Latin and Greek.
Earlier in this century,it was used for the
purpose of helping students read and
appreciate foreign language literature.

The Grammar Translation Method


Classes are taught in the students mother

tongue,with little active use of the target language;


Vocabulary is taught in the form of isolated word
lists;
Elaborate explanations of grammar are always
provided;
Reading of difficult text is begun early in the course of
study;
Little attention is paid to the content of text,which are
treated as exercises in grammatical analysis.

Audio-lingualism
Audio-lingual methodology owes its existence to the

Behaviourist models of learning using the StimulusResponse-Reinforcement model, it attempted, through


a continuous process of such positive reinforcement, to
engender good habits in language learners.

Audio-lingualism relied heavily on drills like substitution

to form these habits.

Habit-forming drills have remained popular among

teachers and students, and teachers who feel confident


with the linguistic restriction of such procedures

Presentation, Practice, and Production


A variation on Audio-lingualism in British-

based teaching and elsewhere is the


procedure most often referred to as PPP,
which stands for Presentation, Practice,
and Production. In this procedure the
teacher introduces a situation which
contextualises the language to be taught. The
students now practice the language using
accurate reproduction techniques such as
choral repetition, individual repetition, and
cue-response drills

PPP and alternatives to PPP


The PPP procedure came under a sustained attack in the

1990s.

Michael Lewis suggested that PPP was inadequate

because it reflected neither the nature of language nor


the nature of learning.

Jim Scrivener advanced what is perhaps the most

worrying aspect of PPP,the fact that it only describes one


kind of lesson;it is inadequate as a general proposal
concerning approaches to language in the classroom.

In response to these criticism many people have offered

variations on PPP and alternative to it: ARC, OHE/III,


ESA.

ARC
put forward by Jim Scrivener
stands for Authentic use, Restricted use and

Clarification and focus


Communicative activity will demonstrate authentic use;

elicted dialogue or guided writing will provoke restricted


use of language by students; finally clarification
language is that which the teacher and students use to
explain grammar,give examples,analyse errors,elict or
repeat things.

OHE/III
Michael Lewis claims that students should be

allowed to Observe (read or listen to


language) which will then provoke them to
Hypothesise about how the language works
before going on to the Experiment on the
basis of that hypothesis.

ESA
In the ESA model three components will usually be

present in any teaching sequence,whether of five,fifty


or a hundred minutes
E stands for Engage - students have to be engaged

emotionally
S stands for Study
A stands for Activate - any stage at which students

are encouraged to use all and/or any of the language


they know

The Communicative Approach

The communicative approach or

Communicative Language Teaching


(CLT) is the name which was given to a set of
beliefs which included not only a reexamination of what aspects of language to
teach but also a shift in emphasis on how to
teach!

Non-communicative activities

Communicative activities

No communicative desire

A desire to communicate

No communicative purpose

A communicative purpose

Form not content

Content not form

One language item only

Variety of language

Teacher intervention

No teacher intervention

Materials control

No materials control

The communication continuum

Task-based learning (TBL)


Popularised by prof. Prabhu, who speculated

that students were likely to learn language if


they were thinking about a non-linguistic
problem.
Three basic stages of TBL according to Jane

Willis:
1. Pre task (introduction to topic and task)
2. Task cycle (task, planning and report)
3. Language focus (analysis, practice).

Four methods
These methods developed in the 1970s and

1980s as humanistic approaches to remove


psychological barrieis to learning.
1. Community Language Learning
- students sitting in a ciricle
- a counsellor or a knower
- making the utterance

2. The Silent Way


- the teacher says as little
as possible
- interacting with physical
objects, especially with
Cuisenaire rods

- pointing to a phonemic chart

3. Suggestopaedia
Georgi Lozanov
physical surroundings and atmosphere of the classroom are of

a vital importance;
the reason for our inefficiency is that we set up psychological
barriers to learning: we fear that we will be unable to perform,
that we will be limited in our ability to learn, that we will fail;
one result is that we do not use the full mental powers that we
have and according to Lozanov, we may be using only 5 10%
of our mental capacity
In order to make better use of our reserved capacity, the
limitations we think we have need to be desuggested
parent-children (teacher-student) relationship
three main parts: oral review, presentation and discussion,
concert session (listening to classic music)

Suggestopaedia
Desuggestopedia/suggestopedia, the application of

suggestion to pedagogy, has been developed to help


students eliminate the feeling that they cannot be
successful or the negative association they may have
toward studying and, thus, help them overcome the
barriers to learning.
One of the ways the students menatal capacities are
stimulated is through integration of the fine arts.

Techniques
CLASSROOM SET-UP the challenge for the teacher is to

create a classroom enivronment which is bright and cheerful.


(The teacher should try to provide as positive environment as
possible.)
PERIPHERAL LEARNING this technique is based upon that
we percieve much more in our environment than that to which
we consciously attend. It is claimed that, by putting poster
containing grammatical information about the target language
on the classroom walls, students will absorb the necessary facts
effortlessly.
POSITIVE SUGGESTION its the teacher resposibility to
orchestrate the suggestive factors in a learning situation,
thereby helping students break down the barriers to learning
that they bring with them. Teachers can do this through direct
and indirect means.

Techiques
BAROQUE MUSIC it has a specific rhythm and a

pattern of 60 beats per minute, and Lozanov believed


it created a level of relaxed concentration that
facilitated the intake and retention of huge quantities
of material.

4. Total Physical Response (TPR)

The originator of TPR, James Asher, worked from the


premise that adult second language learning could
have similar developmental patterns to that of child
acquisition.

Chlidren learn language from their speech through the


forms of commands, then adults will learn best in that
way too.

In responding to commands students get a lot of


comprehensible input, and in performing physical
actions they seem to echo the claims of Neurolinguistic programming that certain people benefit
greatly from kinaesthetic activity.

Total Physical Response (TPR)


This method is developed to reduce stress people feel while

studying foreign languages. Learners are allowed to speak


when they are ready.
1. Using commands to direct behaviour
2. Role reversal
3. Action sequence

PRINCIPLES
1. The students' understanding of the target language should be
developed before speaking.
2. Students can initially learn one part of the language rapidly by
moving their bodies.
3. Feelings of success and low anxiety facilitate learning.
4. Language learning is more effective when it is fun.
5. Students are expected to make errors when they first begin
speaking. Teachers should be tolerant of them. Work on the fine
details of the language should be postponed until students have
become somewhat proficient.

HUMANISTIC TEACHING

Humanistic teaching has found a greater acceptance at the level of

procedures and activities, in which students are encouraged to make


use of their own lives and feelings in the classroom.

Such exercises have a long history and owe much to a work from

1970s called Caring and Sharing in the Foreign Language


Classroom by Gertrude Moscowitz in which many activities are
designed to make students feel good and remember happy times
while, at the same time, they practise grammar items.

When I was a child my favourite food was hamburger, or When I was

a child my favourite relative was my uncle. I was shown how to


crawl. I pushed out of my mothers womb.

THE LEXICAL APPROACH


The lexical approach, discussed by Dave Willis and

popularised by the writer Michael Lewis is based on


the assertion that language doesn't consist of
traditional grammar and vocabulary, but also of
phrases, collocations, and idioms.

A lexical approach would steer us towards the

teaching of phrases which show words in


combination. Thus, instead of teaching will for the
future, we might instead have students focus on its
use in a series of archetypical utterances such as I'll
give you a ring.

METHODS AND CULTURE


A mismatch between teacher intention and learner interpretation.

Our attitudes to the language, and to the way it is taught, reflect


cultural biases and beliefs about how we should communicate and
how we should educate each other.

Many of the approaches and teaching methods are based on a

very western idea of what constitues good learning. For example,


American teachers working in other countries sometimes complain
that their students have nothing to say when in fact it is not an
issue of the student's intelligence, knowledge, or creativity which
makes them reluctant to communicate, but their educational
culture. Teachers need to understand student wants and
expectations just as much as they are determined to push their own
methodological beliefs. DISCUSSION!

MAKING CHOICES
Exposure to language: students need constant exposure to

language since this is a key component of language acquisition

Input: students need comprehensible input but this is not enough

in itself, they need some opportunity for noticing or


consciousnessraising to help students remember language facts.

CLT: communicative activities and task-based teaching offer real

learning benefits,

The affective variable: anxiety needs to be lowered for learning

to take place.

Discovery: where culturally appropriate, students should be

encouraged to discover things for themselves.

Grammar and lexis: showing how words combine together and

behave both semantically and grammatically is an important part


of any language learning programme.

Methodology and culture: teaching methodology is rooted in

popular culture. Therefore, compromise may be necessary.

Pragmatic eclecticism does not just mean that anything goes. On

the contrary, students have a right to expect that they are being
asked to do things for a reason, and that their teacher has some
aim in mind which he or she can, if asked, articulate clearly.
Teaching plans should always be designed to meet an aim or
aims.

PAIR WORK- CLOSURE


What seems to work in English classes will

depend upon the age and character-type of


learners, their cultural backgrounds, and the
level they are studying at not to mention the
teacher's own beliefs and preferences!

You might also like