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INTRODUCTION This module is focused on the details teaching any one or a combination of the four skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing. It is crucial to recognize that by; attending to the four skills in four separate chapters we are riot advocating the teaching of skills in separate classes or even lessons. We rather quickly discovered that in most contexts of human communication we do not separate those skills. We also discovered that the activation of one skill (listening, for example) can be readily reinforced by the use of another skill (speaking, reading, and / or writing). So, the first chapter that emphasizes the importance of the integration of skills, lest you be misled into thinking that the subsequent four chapters are an argument for separation. We have chosen to illustrate the concept of integration by examining a number of approaches to language teaching that model integration. Chapter 1 describes as well some of those well-known approaches, all of which celebrate the integration of at least two, if not all four, skills. Chapters 2, 3, 4, and 5 systematically analyze the unique factors and guidelines involved in teaching each of the four skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing, respectively. A somewhat uniform outline is followed for each chapter so that you can easily compare characteristics of each skill. Chapter 6 examines the teaching or grammar and vocabulary. Because all four skills inherently involve structure (grammar) and lexical items (vocabulary), this is a separate chapter devoted specifically to issues, problems, and guidelines for helping students to focus on form (the organizational components of language). Those issues and guidelines apply, of course, to whatever specific skill, or combination of skills, students are performing at a given time. Most of the materials are largely adopted from the book written by Douglas H. Brown entitled: Teaching by Principles published in 2008.
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OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: appreciate the importance of integrating skills for more authenticity and better reinforcement analyze a lesson from the point of view of its integration of skills understand the characteristics of several different approaches that illustrate the integration of skills apply concepts of skills integration to the next four chapters, which deal with the separate skills For more than six decades now, research and practice in English language teaching has identified the "four skills" listening, speaking, reading, and writing as of paramount importance. ESL curricula and textbooks around the world tend to focus, all too often, on just one of the four skills , sometimes to the exclusion of the others. Books, articles, anthologies, research surveys, and conferences typically index or organize their contents according to each of the four skills. It is perfectly appropriate to thus identify language performance. The human race has fashioned two forms of productive performance, oral and written, and two forms of receptive performance, aural (or auditory) and reading. There are, of course, offshoots of each mode. Lumped together under nonverbal communication are various visually perceived messages delivered through gestures, facial expressions, proximity, and so forth. Graphic art (drawings, paintings, and diagrams) is also a powerful form of communication. But attention to the four different skills does indeed pay off as learners of a second language discover the differences and interrelationships among these four primary modes of performance. Despite our history of treating the four skills in separate segments, of a curriculum, there is a recent trend toward skill (integration). That I, rather than designing a curriculum to teach the many aspects of one skill, say, reading, curriculum designers are taking more of a whole language approach whereby reading is treated as one of two or more interrelated skills. A course that deals "with reading skills, then, will more often than not also deal with related listening, speaking, and writing skills. A lesson in a so-called reading class, under this new paradigm, might include a prereading discussion of the topic to activate schemata;
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This reading class, then, models for the students the real-life integration of language skills, gets them to perceive the relationship among several skills, provides the teacher with a great deal of flexibility in creating interesting, motivating lessons. A. WHY INTEGRATED SKILLS? Some may argue that the integration of the four skills diminishes the importance of the rules of listening, speaking, reading, and writing that are unique to each separate skill. Such an argument rarely holds up under careful scrutiny of integrated-skills courses. If anything, the added richness of the latter gives students greater motivation that converts to better retention of principles of effective speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Rather than being forced to plod along through a course that limits itself to one mode of performance, students are given a chance to diversify their efforts in more meaningful tasks. Such integration can, of course, still utilize a strong, principled approach to the separate, unique characteristics of each skill. So you may be wondering why courses weren't always integrated in the first place. There are several reasons: 1. In the pre-Communicative Language Teaching (CUT) days of language teaching, the focus on the forms of language almost predisposed curriculum designers to segment courses into the separate language skills. It seemed logical to fashion a syllabus that dealt with, say, pronunciation of the phonemes of English, stress and intonation, oral structural patterns (carefully sequenced according to presumed grammatical difficulty), and variations on those patterns. These language-based classes tended to be courses in "baby linguistics" where a preoccupation with rules and paradigms taught students a lot about language but sometimes at the expense of teaching language itself. 2. Administrative considerations still make it easier to program separate courses in reading and speaking, and so on, as a glance at current intensive and university English courses reveals. Such divisions can indeed be justified when one considers the practicalities of coordinating three-hour-per-week courses, hiring teachers for each, ordering textbooks, and placing students into the courses. It should be noted, however, that a proficient
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And the list could continue. Evident in this variety of source material is the necessity of attending to more than just one of the four skills. Course goals in TBLT are not linguistic in the traditional sense of just focusing on grammar or phonology; by maintaining the centrality of functions like exchanging opinions, reading newspapers and menus, writing letters and e-mails, etc., the course goals center on learners' pragmatic language competence. So we have in task-based teaching a well-integrated approach to language teaching that asks you to organize your classroom around those practical tasks that language users
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This conversation uses a familiar setting and ordinary characters to whet the curiosity of the reader. Because the outcome is not clear, learners are motivated to continue reading and to become more involved in the content than in the language, therefore increasing its episodic flavor. Oiler notes that the interaction of cognition and language enables learners to form "expectancies" as they encounter either logically or episodically linked sentences. Moreover, "stories" are universal, and therefore students from many different cultures can understand their organizational structure and identify with the characters. You may be wondering how the episode hypothesis contributes or relates to integrated-skills teaching. Here are some possible ways: Stories or episodes challenge the teacher and textbook writer to present interesting, natural language, whether the language is viewed as written discourse or oral discourse. Episodes can be presented in either written or spoken form, thus requiring reading and/or writing skills on the students' part. Episodes can provide the stimulus for spoken or written questions that students respond to, in turn, by speaking or writing. Students can be encouraged to write their own episodes, or to complete an episode whose resolution or climax is not presented (such as the above conversation). Those written episodes might then be dramatized in the classroom by the students. Now, it must be noted that the reality of the language classroom is such that not every aspect of language can be embedded in gripping dramatic episodes that have students yearning for the next day's events, as they might with a favorite soap opera! Linguistic samples like the conversation between Jack and Tony are quite respectable and pedagogically useful. Drills, writing practice, grammar explanations, essays on the world economy, and many other nonepisodic activities have a viable place in the classroom. But to the extent that a curriculum allows it, episodic teaching and testing may offer a rewarding alternative to sprinkle into your daily diet of teaching techniques.
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This article by Eli Hinkel appeared in the TESOL Quarterly's 40th anniversary issue, which was devoted to survey articles in a number of fields, as experts capsulized the state of the an in their specialties. The article is an excellent summary not only of why skills are integrated, but also of where we stand with respect to each of the four skills.
Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000). Techniques and principles in language teaching (2nd ed.).Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Richards, J., & Rodgers.T. (2001). Approaches and methods in language teaching(2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
These two books were recommended earlier (Chapter 2) since they so aptly summarize a number of methods and approaches. It would be useful, in relation to the topic of this chapter, to look at their chapters on content-based, task-based, and participatory approaches, and on cooperative learning, as well as chapters on Multiple Intelligences, learner strategy training (Larsen-Freeman only), and the Lexical Approach (Richards & Rodgers only). View their descriptions with an eye for how each approach incorporates integration of skills.
Sarosy, P., & Sherak, K. (2006). Lecture ready: Strategies for academic listening, note-
taking, and discussion. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Peg Sarosy and Kathy Sherak's textbook series is a superb example of skills integration. All four skills are interwoven in a book whose primary focus is on academic listening.
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OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: understand issues and concepts in pedagogical research that are related to teaching listening related to teaching listening appreciate factors that might make listening difficult for students analyze types of spoken language, micro-and macroskills, and types of classroom listening performance apply principles of designing listening techniques to your own lesson designs and to your observation of others' lessons recognize some basic principles and formats for assessing listening comprehension
Three people were on a train in England. As they approached what appeared to be Wemberly Station, one of the travelers said,"Is this Wemberly?" "No," replied a second passenger,"it's Thursday." Whereupon the third person remarked, "Oh, I am too; let's have a drink!" The importance of listening in language learning can hardly be overestimated. Through reception, we internalize linguistic information without which we could not produce language. In classrooms, students always do more listening than speaking. Listening competence is universally "larger" than speaking competence. Is it any wonder, then, that in recent years the language-teaching profession has placed a concerted emphasis on listening comprehension? Listening comprehension has not always drawn the attention of educators to the extent that it now has. Perhaps human beings have a natural tendency to look at speaking as the major index of language proficiency. Consider, for example, our commonly used query, "Do you speak Japanese?" Of course we don't mean to exclude comprehension when we say that, but when we think of foreign language learning, we first think of speaking. In the decades of the 1950s and 1960s, language-teaching methodology was preoccupied with the spoken language, and classrooms full of students could be heard performing their oral drills. It was not uncommon for students to practice phrases orally they didn't even understand!
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One could also have subdivided dialogues between those in which the hearer is a participant and those in which the hearer is an "eavesdropper." In both cases, the above conversational descriptions apply, but the majorand highly significant-difference is that in the latter the hearer is, as in monologues, unable to interrupt or otherwise participate vocally in the negotiation of meaning. Remember that in all cases these categories are really not discrete, mutually exclusive domains; rather, each dichotomy, as usual, represents a continuum of possibilities. For example, everyday social conversations can easily contain elements of transactional dialogues, and vice versa. Similarly, "familiar" participants may yShare very little common knowledge on a particular topic. If each category, then, is viewed as an end point, you can aim your teaching at appropriate ranges in between. D. WHAT MAKES LISTENING DIFFICULT? As you contemplate designing lessons and techniques for teaching listening skills, or that have listening components in them, a number of special characteristics of spoken language need to be taken into consideration. Second language learners need to pay special attention to such factors because they strongly influence the processing of speech, and can even block comprehension if they are not attended to. In other words, they can make the listening process difficult. The following eight characteristics of spoken language are adapted from several sources (Dunkel, 1991; Flowerdew & Miller, 2005; Richards, 1983; Ur, 1984).
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Not to let a word get in the way of its sentence, Nor to let a sentence get in the way of its intention, But to send your mind out to meet the intention as a guest; THAT is understanding.
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Missing Words. Compare Your Predictions to What You Actually Heard Read some
telephone messages with missing words. Decide what kinds of information are missing so you know what to listen for. Listen to the information and fill in the blanks. Finally, discuss with the class what strategies you used for your predictions. 28. Coal: Use Incomplete Sensory Data and Cultural Background Information to
for Note-Taking
Listen to a number of sentences and extract the content words, which are read with greater stress. Write the content words as notes. 30. Goal: Become Aware of Sentence-bevel Features in Lecture Text Listen to a segment of a lecture while reading a transcript of the material. Notice the incomplete sentences, pauses, and verbal fillers. 31. Goal: Become Aware of Organizational Cues in Lecture Text Look at a lecture transcript and circle all the cue words used to enumerate the main points. Then listen to the lecture segment and note the organizational cues. 32. Goal: Become Aware of Lexical and Suprasegmental Markers for Definitions Read a list of lexical cues that signal a definition; listen to signals of the speaker's intent, such as rhetorical questions; listen to special intonation patterns and pause patterns used with appositives. Listen to short lecture segments that contain new terms and their definitions in context. Use knowledge of lexical and intonational cues to identify the definition of the word. 33. Goal: Identify Specific Points of Information Read a skeleton outline of a lecture in which the main categories are given but the specific examples are left blank. Listen to the lecture and find the information that belongs in the blanks. Top-Down Exercises 34. Goal: Use the Introduction to the Lecture to Predict Its Focus and Direction Listen to the introductory section of a lecture. Then read a number of topics on your answer sheet and choose the topic that best expresses what the lecture will discuss. 35. Goal: Use the Lecture Transcript to Predict the Content of the Next Section Read a section of a lecture transcript. Stop reading at a juncture point and predict what will come next. Then read on to confirm your prediction. 36. Goal: Find the Main Idea of a Lecture Segment Listen to a section of a lecture that describes a statistical trend. While you listen, look at three graphs that show a change over time and select the graph that best illustrates the lecture.
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That Section Listen to a section of a lecture and take notes on the important details.
Then relate the details to form an understanding of the main point of that section. Choose from a list of possible controlling ideas. 39. Goal: Make Inferences by Identifying Ideas on the Sentence Level That Lead to
Evaluative Statements Listen to a statement and take notes on the important words.
Indicate what further meaning can be inferred from the statement. Indicate the words in the original statement that serve to cue the inference. 40. Goal: Use Knowledge of the Text and the Lecture Content to Fill In Missing
Information Listen to a lecture segment for its gist. Then listen to a statement from
which words have been omitted. Using your knowledge of the text and of the general content, fill in the missing information. Check your understanding by listening to the entire segment. 41. Goal: Use Knowledge of the Text and the Lecture Content to Discover the Lecturer's
Misstatements and to Supply the Ideas That He or She Meant to Say Listen to a
lecture segment that contains an incorrect term. Write the incorrect term and the term that the lecturer should have used. Finally, indicate what clues helped you find the misstatement. I. ASSESSING LISTENING IN THE CLASSROOM Every classroom lesson involves some form of assessment, whether it's in the form of informal, unplanned, and intuitive teacher processing and feedback, or in formal, prepared, scored tests. In order to appropriately call some attention to this very important role that teachers must assume, I offerin this and the next three chapters on the four skillsa few principles and practical guidelines for assessing those skills in the classroom. For a much more comprehensive treatment of the assessment of the four skills, as well as background research and theory, I refer you to my companion textbook, Language Assessment:
Principles and Classroom Practices (Brown, 2004). For a detailed look at the assessment of
listening, Buck's (2001) textbook is also very useful.
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2. Responsive listening tasks question (What time is it?multiple choice [MC] response) question (What time is it?open-ended response) simple discourse sequences (Hello. Nice weather. Tough test.) 3- Selective listening tasks listening cloze (Ss fill in blanks) verbal information transfer (Ss give MC verbal response) picture-cued information transfer (Ss choose a picture) chart completion (Ss fill in a grid) sentence repetition (Ss repeat stimulus sentence) 4. Extensive listening tasks dictation (Ss listen [usually 3 times] and write a paragraph) dialogue (Ss hear dialogueMC comprehension questions) dialogue (Ss hear dialogueopen-ended response) lecture (Ss take notes, summarize, list main points, etc.) interpretive tasks (Ss hear a poeminterpret meaning) stories, narratives (Ss retell a story)
The fifth category of listening, interactive tasks, is deliberately omitted from this list since such interaction involves speaking and will be covered in the next chapter. With this
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teaching and learning (pp. 503-527). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Vandergrift, L. (2004). Listening to learn or learning to listen? Annual Review of Applied
Linguistics, 24, 3-25. Both of these survey articles review research on listening comprehension. Between the two articles, there is almost no stone unturned as they cover a broad range of research. Both have extensive bibliographies that are useful for searching for references.
Flowerdew, J., & Miller, L. (2005). Second language listening: Theory and practice. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Rost, M. (2001). Teaching and researching
listening. London: Longman. These two books offer in-depth coverage of research on listening comprehension, as well as practical classroom implications. The authors are well-known experts in the field ofL2 aural comprehension.
Helgesen, M., & Brown, S. (2007). Practical English language teaching: Listening. New York: McGraw-Hill. Ur, P. (1984). Teaching listening comprehension. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
You may think it's a bit unusual to recommend two books that were published 23 years apart! Both are highly practically oriented, with many suggested classroom
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My own book gives a survey of language assessment in general, with separate chapters devoted to each of the four skills. The material is classroom-based, written for nonspecialist teachers, and does not require technical knowledge in the field of assessment to comprehend. Gary Buck gives you a detailed look at the assessment of listening; some of the material is a bit technical, but other parts of the book are practical and useful for classroom teachers.
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OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: understand issues and concepts in pedagogical research that are related to teaching speaking appreciate factors that might make speaking difficult for students analyze types of spoken language, micro-and macroskills, and types of classroom speaking performance From a communicative, pragmatic view of the language classroom, listening and speaking skills are closely intertwined. More often than not, ESL curricula that treat oral communication skills will simply be labeled as "Listening/Speaking" courses. The interaction between these two modes of performance applies especially strongly to conversation, the most popular discourse category in the profession. And, in the classroom, even relatively unidirectional types of spoken language input (speeches, lectures, etc.) are often followed or preceded by various forms of oral production on the part of students. Some of the components of teaching spoken language were covered in the previous chapter as we looked closely at teaching listening comprehension: types of spoken language, idiosyncrasies of spoken language that make listening difficult, and listening microskills that are a factor of the oral code. This chapter will build on those considerations as we investigate the teaching of oral communication skills. A. ORAL COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN PEDAGOGICAL RESEARCH A review of some of the current issues in teaching oral communication will help to provide some perspective to the more practical considerations that follow in this chapter. 1. Conversational discourse When someone asks you "Do you speak English?," they usually mean: Can you carry on a conversation reasonably competently? The benchmark of successful language
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apply principles of designing speaking techniques to your own lesson designs and to your observation of others lessons
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um, well, you know, I mean, like, etc. One of the most salient differences between native
and nonnative speakers of a language is in their hesitation phenomena. 5. Colloquial language Make sure your students are reasonably well acquainted with the "words, idioms, and phrases of colloquial language and that they get practice in producing these forms. 6. Rate of delivery Another salient characteristic of fluency is rate of delivery. One of your tasks in teaching spoken English is to help learners achieve an acceptable speed along with other attributes of fluency. 7. Stress, rhythm, and intonation This is -the most important characteristic of English pronunciation, as will be explained below. The stress-timed rhythm of spoken English and its intonation patterns convey important messages. 8. Interaction As noted in the previous section, learning to produce waves of language in a vacuumwithout interlocutorswould rob speaking skill of its richest component: the creativity of conversational negotiation. D. MICRO- AND MACROSKILLS OF ORAL COMMUNICATION In the previous chapter, 17 micro- and macroskills for listening comprehension (adapted from Richards, 1983) were presented. Here, many of the same skills apply, but because of major cognitive and physical differences between listening and speaking, some noticeable alterations have been made. One implication of such a list is the importance of focusing on both the forms of language and the functions of language. In teaching oral communication, we don't limit students' attention to the whole picture, even though that whole picture is important. We also help students to see the piecesright down to the small partsof language that make up the whole. Just as you would instruct a novice artist in composition, the effect of color hues, shading, and brush stroke techniques, so language students need to be shown the details of how to convey and negotiate the ever-elusive meanings of language.
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4. Transactional (dialogue) Transactional language, carried out for the purpose of conveying or exchanging specific information, is an extended form of responsive language. Conversations, for example, may have more of a negotiative nature to them than does responsive speech: T S T S T S T S : What is the main idea in this essay? : The United Nations should have more authority. : More authority than what? : Than it does right now. : What do you mean? : Well, for example, the UN should have the power to force certain countries to destroy its nuclear weapons. : You don't think the UN has that power now? : Obviously not. Several countries are currently manufacturing nuclear bombs. Such conversations could readily be part of group work activity as well. 5. Interpersonal (dialogue) The other form of conversation mentioned in the previous chapter was interpersonal dialogue, carried out more for the purpose of maintaining social relationships than for the transmission of facts and information. These conversations are a little trickier for learners because they can involve some or all of the following factors: a casual register colloquial language emotionally charged language slang ellipsis sarcasm a covert "agenda" Amy: Hi, Bob, how's it going? Bob : Oh, so-so.
For example:
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Amy: Oh, that ... How come you get so bent out of shape over
Amy: Oh, wow, this is great. Wonderful. Back to square one. For
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G. TEACHING SPEAKING Research on teaching conversational skills (McCarthy & O'Keefe, 2004;Tarone, 2005) historically describes two major approaches for teaching conversation. The first is an indirect approach in which learners are more or less set loose to engage in interaction. The second is a direct approach that "involves planning a conversation program around the specific microskills, strategies, and processes that are involved in fluent conversation"(Richards, 1990,pp.76-77). The indirect approach implies that Miedoes not actually teach conversation, but rather that students acquire conversational competence, peripherally, by engaging in meaningful tasks. A direct approach explicitly calls students to conversational rules, conventions, and strategies. While both approaches can be found in language-teaching institutions around the world, recent developments in such models as task-based language instruction have taken the learner well beyond simply using language. Nunan (2004), Ellis (2003), and Willis (1996), in their descriptions of task-based instruction, for example, included focus on form, including analysis and practice, as an integral part of every task. Likewise, Skehan (1998a, p. 131) recommended that communicative tasks "maximize the chances of a focus on form through attentional manipulation." It is clear, upon scanning current English language textbooks, that the prevailing approach to teaching conversation includes the learner's inductive involvement in meaningful tasks as well as consciousness-raising elements of focus on form. Richards (1990, pp. 79-80) offered the following list of features of conversation that can receive specific focus in classroom instruction: how to use conversation for both transactional and interactional purposes
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Evaluating and Scoring Speaking Tasks The evaluation of oral production performance can get quite complicated. First, you need to be clear in specifying the level of language you are targeting. One or more of at least six possible criteria may be your target: pronunciation fluency vocabulary grammar discourse features (cohesion, sociolinguistic appropriateness, etc.) task (accomplishing the objective of the task)
Some scales add "comprehension" to account for the extent to which a student has comprehended directions or elicitation. This category can be subsumed in the last two criteria above. Within each of these categories you can judge a student's response(s) to be at one of several possible levels of performance. Typically, we think of beginning, intermediate, and advanced as potential levels. But as we saw in Chapter 7, those categories are quite slippery. Moreover, three levels may not be sufficient for your classroom purposes, and you may wish to score performance on five or six levels, ranging from "novice" or "true beginner" to "superior" or "completely acceptable." Whatever those categories are, it is important to describe them as clearly as possible in order to make reliable evaluations. For more on the issue of specifying scoring criteria, I suggest you consult my Language Assessment book (Brown, 2004) and/or Underbill's (1987) manual of oral testing techniques. Listening and speaking are the two skills that are most widely used for classroom interaction. By now, having covered the last two chapters, you have at least encountered many different parameters of these two skills, what they are. types of each, issues, some idea of the kinds of techniques that help to focus on either one or both of them; and you may have a few guidelines for assessment. We now move on to the next set of skills, reading and writing.
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in second language teaching and learning (pp. 485-502). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
These two survey articles summarize the state of the art in pedagogical research on the teaching of speaking. They both cover a range of topics and extensive bibliographies.
Bailey, K.(2005). Practical English language teaching: Speaking. New York: McGrawHill. Hughes, R. (2002). Teaching and researching speaking. London: Pearson Education.
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If you wish to consult a volume completely devoted to the exploration of research and practice in teaching speaking, one or both of these two should be very useful. Bailey gives background research but is also very practically oriented, teacherfriendly, and organizes chapters by proficiency level. She includes comments on assessing speaking at each of the levels as well. Hughes offers historical and contextual background and suggestions for action research.
Celce-Murcia, M., Brinton, D., & Goodwin, J. (1996). Teaching pronunciation: A reference for
Still the best and most comprehensive teacher reference book on teaching pronunciation, this "classic" book combines the expertise and talent of all three authors. It is a
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Setter, J.,&Jenkins,J. (2005). Pronunciation. Language Teaching, 38, 1-17. Levis, J. (2005). Changing contexts and shifting paradigms in pronunciation teaching. TESOL
Quarterly, 39, 369-377. For a good picture of research in the area of pronunciation teaching, these two articles summarize the state of the art. If you are able to secure a print copy of the issue of the TESOL Quarterly (Number 3, September, 2005), you will see that the whole issue is devoted to issues of intelligibility, accent, world Englishness, and other related topics.
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Continuing to "clutch" the permit means he did not give it to the teacher.
The teacher did indeed notice his entry. The teacher's question referred to location, not a musical part. The widespread acceptance of schema theory by reading researchers has not gone unchallenged. Nassaji (2002) provided an alternative view of the role of background knowledge, appealing to connectionist models of memory. In Nassaji's view; background knowledge is not "pre-stored," but "rather it emerges in the context of the task, and is relatively unstructured as opposed to the highly structured knowledge representations suggested by ... schema theory" (p. 453) In this "construction-integration" model, the learner is seen to play a more active role in constructing meaning, while reading, than is proposed by schema theory. 3. Teaching strategic reading One of the questions that has been asked about teaching reading has been the extent to which learners will learn to read better in a laissez-faire atmosphere of enriched surroundings than in an instructed sequence of direct attention to the strategies of efficient reading. Most experts in reading research side with the latter . (Anderson, 1999, 2004; Eskey, 2005; Grabe, 2004), and cite research in support of their conclusion. A viable theory of instructed second language acquisition can hardly be sustainable without a solid component of strategic competence. One of the ongoing themes among researchers and teachers of foreign languages is the tension between what in the last chapter we referred to as direct and indirect approaches to teaching language skills. This continuum of possibilities is highlighted in debates over conscious and subconscious acquisition, explicit and implicit learning, focal and peripheral processing, and Krashen's (1985) learning versus acquisition. Instruction should of course provide an optimal mix of each, but Neil Anderson (1999, 2004) advocated a healthy dose of strategy-based instruction, including metacognitive strategies of self-planning, monitoring, and evaluating one's own reading processes. William Grabe (2004) stressed the coordinated use of multiple strategies while students are reading. David Eskey (2005) reminds us of research on prereading, while reading, postreading, and follow-up strategies for reading, will be discussed later in this chapter.
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nonfiction: reports, editorials, essays, articles, reference (dictionaries, etc.) fiction: novels, short stories, jokes, drama, poetry letters: personal, business greeting cards diaries, journals memos (e.g., interoffice memos) messages (e.g., phone messages) announcements newspaper" journalese" forms, applications questionnaires directions labels signs recipes bills (and other financial statements maps manuals menus schedules (e.g., transportation tables) advertisements: commercial, personal invitations directories (e.g., telephone, yellow pages) comic strips, cartoons And I'm sure you could name a few more! It's interesting that every literate adult ' academic writing: short-answer test responses, reports, papers, theses, books
knows the distinctive features of each of these genres. You can immediately distinguish a menu from a map, an interoffice memo from a telephone message, and a bill from an invitationwell, okay, some bills are invitations to pay! When you encounter one of the above, you usually know what your purpose is in reading it, and therefore you know what to select and what not to select for short- and long-term memoryin other words, you bring various schemata to bear on the message that you have chosen to retain. What would happen if you didn't know some of these differences? That is what your students may encounter when they read English, so part of your job as a teacher is to enlighten your
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b. pointing your techniques toward specific objectives, and c. reminding students of some of the advantages of written language over
spoken. 1. Permanence Spoken language is fleeting. Once you speak a sentence, it vanishes (unless there is a tape recorder around). The hearer, therefore, is called upon to make immediate perceptions and immediate storage. Written language is permanent (or as permanent as paper and computer disks are!), and therefore the reader has an opportunity to return again and again, if necessary, to a word or phrase or sentence, or even a whole text. 2. Processing time A corollary to the above is the processing time that the reader gains. Most reading contexts allow readers to read at their own rate. They aren't forced into following the rate of delivery, as in spoken language. A good deal of emphasis is placed on reading speed in our fast-paced, time-conscious society, which is good news and bad news. The good news is that readers can indeed capitalize on the nature of the printed word and develop very rapid reading rates. The bad news is that many people who are "slow" readers are made to feel inferior. In practice, except for the time factor itself, fast readers do not necessarily have an advantage over slow readers. 3. Distance The written word allows messages to be sent across two dimensions: physical distance and temporal distance. The pedagogical significance of this centers on interpretation. The task of the reader is to interpret language that was written in some other
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done, was, etc.), and once those words are in place, the rest of the system can usually be
mastered without special instruction. 5. Complexity You might be tempted to say that writing is more complex than speech, but in reality, that would be difficult to demonstrate. Writing and speech represent different modes of complexity, and the most salient difference is in the nature of clauses. Spoken language tends to have shorter clauses connected by more coordinate conjunctions, while writing has longer clauses and more subordination. The shorter clauses are often a factor of the redundancy we build into speech (repeating subjects and verbs for clarity). Look at the following pair: 1. Because of the frequent ambiguity that therefore is present in a good deal of writing, readers must do their best to infer, to interpret, and to "read between the lines." 2. There's frequent ambiguity in a lot of writing. And so, readers have to infer a
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that one-to-one grapheme-phoneme correspondences will be acquired with ease, other relationships might prove difficult. Consider how you might provide hints and pointers on such patterns as these: "short" vowel sound in VC patterns (bat, him, leg, wish, etc.) "long" vowel sound in VCe (final silent e) patterns (late, time, bite, etc.) "long" vowel sound in W patterns (seat, coat, etc.) distinguishing "hard" c and ^ from "soft" c and g (caf vs. city, game -vs. gem, etc.)
Micro- and macroskills for listening comprehension Microskills 1. Discriminate among the distinctive graphemes and orthographic patterns of English. 2. Retain chunks of language of different lengths in short-term memory.
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Unless a word is absolutely crucial to global understanding, skip over it and try to infer its meaning from its context. Aside from these fundamental guidelines, which if followed can help learners to be
efficient readers, reading speed is usually not much of an issue for all but the most advanced learners. Academic reading, for example, is something most learners manage to accomplish by allocating whatever time they personally need in order to complete the material. If your students can read 250 to 300 words per minute, further concern over speed may not be necessary. 4. Skim the text for main ideas. -
Perhaps the two most valuable reading strategies for learners (as well as native speakers) are skimming and scanning. Skimming consists of quickly running one's eyes across a whole text (such as an essay, article, or chapter) for its gist. Skimming gives readers the advantage of being able to predict the purpose of the passage, the main topic, or message, and possibly some of the developing or supporting ideas. This gives them a head start as they embark on more focused reading. You can train I students to skim passages by giving them, say, 30 seconds to look through a few pages of material, close their books, and then tell you what they learned. 5. Scan the text for specific information. The second in the most valuable category is scanning, or quickly searching for some particular piece or pieces of information in a text. Scanning exercises may ask students to look for names or dates, to find a definition of a key concept, or to list a certain number of supporting details. The purpose of scanning is to extract specific information without reading through the whole text. For academic English, scanning is absolutely essential. In vocational or general English, scanning is important in dealing with genres like schedules, manuals, forms, etc. 6. Use semantic mapping or clustering. Readers can easily be overwhelmed by a long string of ideas or events. The strategy of semantic mapping, or grouping ideas into meaningful clusters, helps , the reader to provide some order to the chaos. Making such semantic maps can be done individually, but they make for a productive group work technique as students collectively induce order and hierarchy to a passage. Early drafts of these maps can be quite messywhich is perfectly acceptable.
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disadvantages of too much oral reading can easily come into play:
a. Oral reading is not a very authentic language activity. b. While one student is reading, others can easily lose attention (or be silently rehearsing the next paragraph!), c. c. It may have the outward appearance of student participation when in reality it is mere recitation. 2. Intensive and extensive reading Silent reading may be subcategorized into intensive and extensive reading. Intensive reading, analogous to intensive listening (described in Chapter 18), is Table 1Types of discourse markers (Mackay, 1987, p. 254)
Notional category/Meaning 1. Enumerative. Introduce in order in which points are to be made or the time sequence in which actions or processes took place. 2. Additive 2.1 Reinforcing. Introduces a reinforcement or confirmation of what has preceded 2.2 Similarity. Introduces a statement of similarity with what has preceded 2.3 Transition. Introduces a new stage in the sequence of presentation of information. 3. Logical sequences 3.1 Summative. Introduces a summary of what has preceded. 3.2 Resultative. Introduces an expression of the result or
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Marker first(ly), second(ly), third(ly), one, two, three/a, b, c, next, then, finally, last(ly), in the first / second place, for one thing / for another thing, to begin with, subsequently, eventually, finally, in the end, to conclude again, then again, also, moreover, furthermore, in addition, above all, what is more equally, likewise, similarly, correspondingly, in the same way now, well, incidentally, by the way, O.K., fine
so far, altogether, overall, then, thus, therefore, in short, to sum up, to conclude, to summarize so, as a result, consequently, hence, now, therefore, thus, as a consequence, in consequence
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namely, in other words, that is to say, better, rather, by (this) we mean for example, for instance
alternatively, (or) again, (or) rather, (but) then, on the other hand conversely, instead, then, on the contrary, by contrast, on the other hand
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readability: a text with lexical and structural difficulty that will challenge students without
overwhelming them. 4. Encourage the development of reading strategies. Already in this chapter, 10 different reading strategies have been discussed. To .what extent are you getting your students to use all these strategies? 5. Include both bottom-up and top-down techniques. In our craze for communicative, authentic language activity in the classroom, we sometimes forget that learners can indeed benefit from studying the fundamentals. Make sure that you give enough classroom time to focusing on the building blocks of written language, geared appropriately for each level.
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Before you read: Spend some time introducing a topic, encouraging skimming,
scanning, predicting, and activating schemata. Students can bring the best of their knowledge and skills to a text when they have been given a chance to "ease into" the passage.
2. While you read: Not all reading is simply extensive or global reading. There may be certain facts or rhetorical devices that students should take note of while they read. Give students a sense of purpose for reading rather than just reading because you ordered it. 3. After you read: Comprehension questions are just one form of activity appropriate for postreading. Also consider vocabulary study, identifying the author's purpose., discussing the author's line of reasoning, examining grammatical structures, or steering students toward a follow-up writing exercise. 8. Build an assessment aspect into your techniques. Because reading, like listening comprehension, is totally unobservable (we have to infer comprehension from other behavior), it is as important in reading as it is in listening to be able to accurately assess students' comprehension and development of skills. Consider some of the following overt responses that indicate comprehension:
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Indicate if each of the statements below is true (T) or false (F) based on "Gene Mapping May Foster Discrimination" or inferences that can be drawn from the article.
1. T / F 2. T / F 3. T / F 4. T / F As a result of research on the human genome, doctors will be able to make better Genome mapping could help you make lifestyle decisions. Businesses could use genetic information to make decisions about employees. According to a Time/CNN poll conducted around the time of the publication of the decisions about their patients.
article, the majority of Americans do not want insurance companies or the government to know their genetic code. 5. T / F 6. T / F The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission supports widespread genetic A mutation on a chromosome may be a cause of injured or sore wrists.
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Examine the illustration describing the human genome. Answer the following questions. True/False questions are indicated by a T/ F preceding the item.
1. T/F 2. T / F 3. T / F 4. T/F The human genome contains the information that determines your physical Each human cell contains a nucleus with 23 pairs of chromosomes. Each chromosome contains thousands of genes. Genes are sections of DNA that contain instructions for how you look and act.
5. T/F There are four chemical components of DNA. 6. How many genes are contained in the human genome? 7. Where might you go for more information about the Human Genome Project? H. ASSESSING READING The classic principles of classroom assessment apply to your attempts to assess reading comprehension: Be specific about which micro- or macroskill(s) you are assessing; identify the genre of written communication that is being evaluated; and choose carefully among the range of possibilities from simply perceiving letters or words all the way to extensive reading. In addition, for assessing reading, some attention should be given to the highly strategic nature of reading comprehension by accounting for which of the many strategies for reading are being examined. Finally, reading assessment implies differentiating bottom-up from top-down tasks, as well as focus on form versus focus on meaning. In your efforts to design tests at any one or a combination of these levels and categories, consider the following taxonomy of tasks. These are not meant to be exhaustive, but rather to provide an overview of some possibilities. 1. Perceptive reading (recognition of symbols, letters, words) reading aloud copying (reproduce in writing) multiple-choice recognition (including true-false and fill-in-the-blank) picture-cued identification
2. Selective reading (focus on morphology, grammar, lexicon) multiple choice grammar/vocabulary tasks contextualized multiple choice (within a short paragraph) sentence-level cloze tasks
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summarizing
responding to reading through short essays note taking, marginal notes, highlighting outlining This chapter has only begun to scratch the surface of information on the teaching of reading, but you should now have a grasp of some issues surrounding this challenging task, and a sense of how to go about designing effective tasks and activities. Of further importance is the reading-writing connection, the second half of which we turn to in the next chapter. I. TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION, ACTION, AND RESEARCH [Note: (I) Individual work; (G) group or pair work; (C) whole-class discussion.] 1. (G/C) Bring to class a number of different samples of types (genres) of written language, such as a memo, a newspaper article, a questionnaire, a telephone directory, and give one each to small groups. The group's task is to review the meaning of bottom-up and top-down processing of written material, then offer examples of each for its assigned genre. Ask groups to then report back to the whole class. 2. (G/C) Tell small groups to think of an anecdote or joke that one could tell classmates. Then, after reviewing the meaning of content and formal schemata, identify examples of each type of schemata in the anecdote. They will then report back to the class.
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J. FOR YOUR FURTHER READING Anderson, N. (1999). Exploring second language reading: Issues and strategies. Boston: Heinle & Heinle. Nuttall, C. (1996). Teaching reading skills in a foreign language. (2nd ed.). Oxford,
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Neil Anderson's and Christine Nuttall's teacher reference books offer comprehensive treatments of research issues and classroom practice in teaching reading skills. The material is useful for teachers in training, but they give excellent reviews of issues and techniques for experienced teachers as well.
Eskey, D. (2005). Reading in a second language. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of
Review of Applied Linguistics, 24, 44-69. Anderson, N. (2003). Reading. In D. Nunan (Ed.), Practical English language teaching (pp. 67-86). New York: McGraw-Hill Contemporary. David Eskey, William Grabe, and Neil Anderson are recognized experts in the field of second language reading. These three survey articles provide , synopses of research and practice in the teaching of reading to second language learners. The first two articles have extensive bibliographies which can serve as a set of references for further research and exploration. Anderson's article is more practically oriented.
Nation, I. S. P. (2003). Vocabulary. In D. Nunan (Ed.), Practical English language teaching (pp. 129-152). New York: McGraw-Hill Contemporary. Nation, I. S. E (2005). Teaching and learning vocabulary. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of
These three articles, also by leading experts in the field, Paul Nation and John Read, like Eskey's, Grabe's, and Anderson's above, survey issues in vocabulary acquisition and teaching. They, too, provide useful bibliographic references.
Nassaji, H. (2002). Schema theory and knowledge-based processes in second language reading comprehension: A need for alternative perspectives. Language Learning, 52, 439-481.
For a real professional challenge, try reading Nassaji's article about an alternative approach to schema theory. It's highly technical material, so be forewarned, this is not for the faint-hearted! . ,
Silberstein, S., Dobson, B., & Clarke, M. (2002). Reader's choice (4th ed.). Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
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These two volumes are pan of a series on language assessment. They both contain research background, issues, theoretical foundations, and practical applications in their respective areas.
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3. Contrastive rhetoric Robert Kaplan's (1966) article on contrastive rhetoric has been the subject of much discussion and debate ever since. Kaplan's thesis was that different languages (and their cultures) have different patterns of written discourse. English discourse, > according to Kaplan (p. 14), was schematically described as proceeding in a straight line, Semitic writing in a zigzag formation, Oriental [sic] written discourse in a spiraling line, and so forth. The point of Kaplan's conclusions about how we write was, of course, that learners of English bring with them certain predispositions, which come from their native languages, about how to organize their writing. If English writers get, "straight" to the point, and Chinese writers "spiral" around the point, then a Chinese speaker who is learning English will encounter some difficulty in learning to write English discourse. There were problems with Kaplan's study (Casanave, 2004; Connor, 2002), some of which Kaplan has recently responded to (Kaplan, 2005). His diagrams and conclusions were simplistic and overgeneralized. Simplistic, because he based his conclusions about English discourse on style manuals rather than using data from actual writing in English. Overgeneralized, because one cannot conclude that English writers consistently use a "straight-line" attack on a thesis and certainly cannot make any generalization that applies, for example, to all Oriental languages. Furthermore, without a native-speaking English control group, one cannot determine if the "difficulty" of his sample data is simply the difficulty any inexperienced writer might encounter in learning to write. Nevertheless, there was and still is a ring of truth to Kaplan's claims, as both Kaplan (2005) himself and Connor (2002) have noted. In fact, Connor has done much "to move contrastive rhetoric out of the quagmire in which it had been lodged for so long" (Casanave, 2004, p. 41). No one can deny the effect of one's native culture, or one's predispositions that
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Yesterday at about eight o-'clock I was sitting in front of my table holding a fork and eating tasteless noodles which I usually really like to eat but I lost my taste yesterday because 1 didnt feel well. I had a headaches and a fever.
My head seemed to be broken/. I
sometimes felt cold, sometimes hot. I didnt feel comfortable standing-up and I didn't feel comfortable sitting down'. I hated everything around me. It seemed to me that I got a great pressure from the atmosphere and I could not breath. Iwas so sleepy since 1 had taken some medicine which functioned as antibiotic. The room was quiet. I was there by myself and felt very solitary. This dinner reminded me of my mother. Whenever I was sick in China, my mother always took care of me and cooked rice gruel, which has to cook more than three hours and is very delicious, I think. I would be better very soon under the care of my mother. But yesterday, I had to cook by myself even though 1 was sick, The more I thought, the less I wanted to eat, Half an hour passed. The noodles were cold, but I was still sitting there and thinking about my mother, finally I threw out the noodles went to bed. Ming Ling, PKC
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This Is a powerful piece of writing because you really communicate what you were feeling. You used vivid details, like ". . . eating tasteless noodles . ..", "my head seemed to be broken .. ." and ". . . rice gruel, which has to cook more than three hours and Is very delicious." These make It easy for the reader to picture exactly what you were going through. The other strong point about this piece Is that you bring the reader full circle by beginning and ending with "the noodles" Being alone when you are sick Is difficult. Now, I know why you were so quiet in class. If you want to do another entry related to this one, you could have a dialogue with your "sick" self. What would your "healthy" self say to the "sick" self? Is there some advice that could be exchanged about how to prevent Illness or how to take care of yourself better when you do get sick? Start the dialogue with your "sick" self speaking first.
4. Display writing It was noted earlier that writing within the school curricular context is a way of life. For all language students, short-answer exercises, essay examinations, and even research reports will involve an element of display. For academically bound ESL students, one of the academic skills that they need to master is a whole array of display writing techniques. 5. Real writing While virtually every classroom writing task will have an element of display writing in it, some classroom writing aims at the genuine communication of messages to an audience in need of those messages. The two categories of real and display writing are actually two ends of a continuum, and in between the two extremes lies some combination of display and real writing. Three subcategories illustrate how reality can be injected: a. Academic. The Language Experience Approach gives groups of students opportunities to convey genuine information to each other. Content-based instruction encourages the exchange of useful information, and some of this learning uses the written word. Group problem-solving tasks, especially those that relate to current issues and other personally relevant topics, may have a writing component in which information is genuinely sought and conveyed. Peer-editing work adds to what would otherwise be an audience of one (the instructor) and provides real writing opportunity. In certain ESP and EAP courses, students may exchange new information with each other and with the instructor. b. Vocational/technical. Quite a variety of real writing can take place in classes of students studying English for advancement in their occupation. Real letters can be
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2. Balance process and product. Because writing is a composing process and usually requires multiple drafts before an effective product is created, make sure that students are carefully led through appropriate stages in the process of composing. This includes careful attention to your own role as a guide and as a responder (see #8). At the same time, don't get so caught up in the stages leading up to the final product that you lose sight of the ultimate attainment: a clear, articulate, well-organized, effective piece of writing. Make sure students see that everything leading up to this final creation was worth the effort.
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7. Strive to offer techniques that are as interactive as possible. It is no doubt already apparent that a process-oriented approach to writing instruction is, by definition, interactive (as students -work in pairs and groups to generate ideas and to peer-edit), as well as learner-centered (with ample opportunities for students to initiate activity and exchange ideas). Writing techniques that focus on purposes other than compositions (such as letters, forms, memos, directions, short reports) are also subject to the principles of interactive classrooms. Group collaboration, brainstorming, and critiquing are as easily and successfully a part of many writing-focused techniques. Don't buy into the myth that writing is a solitary activity! Some of it is, to be sure, but a good deal of what makes a good writer can be most effectively learned within a community of learners. 8. Sensitively apply methods of responding to and correcting your students' writing. Some principles of error correction were suggested for dealing with learners' speech errors. Error correction in writing must be approached in a different manner. Because writing, unlike speaking, often includes an extensive planning stage, error treatment can begin in the drafting and revising stages, during which time it is more appropriate to consider errors among several features of the whole process of responding to student writing. As a student receives responses to written work, errorsjust one of several possible
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ASSESSING WRITING The assessment of writing, especially in a process-oriented classroom, is a thorny issue (see Ferris & Hedgcock, 2005, for an overview). If you are a guide and facilitator of students' performance in the ongoing process of developing a piece of written work, how can you also be the judge? What do you judge? The answer to the first questionhow can you be a judge and a guide at the same timeis one of the primary dilemmas of all teachers. Juggling this dual role requires wisdom and sensitivity. The key to being a judge is fairness and explicitness (reliability) in what you take into account in your evaluation. Evaluation Checklists One way to view writing assessment is through various rating checklists or grids that can indicate to students their areas of strength and weakness, and in many cases such taxonomies are scoring rubrics. Table 2 is a typical list of general categories that are often the basis for the evaluation of student writing. Table 4. Categories for evaluating writing (adapted from J. D. Brown, 1991, pp. 42-46) Content thesis statement related ideas development of ideas through personal experience, illustration, facts, opinions use of description, cause/effect, comparison/contrast consistent focus
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Organization effectiveness of introduction ^ logical sequence of ideas conclusion appropriate length Discourse topic sentences paragraph unity transitions discourse markers cohesion rhetorical conventions reference fluency economy variation Syntax Vocabulary Mechanics spelling punctuation citation of references (if applicable) neatness and appearance
Writing specialists disagree somewhat on the system of weighting each of the above categories, that is, which of the six is most important, next, and so on. Nevertheless, the order in which the six are listed here at the very least emphasizes the importance of content over syntax and vocabulary, which traditionally might have had high priority. In your evaluation of student writing, the most instructive evaluative feedback you can give is your comments, both specific and summative, regarding the student's work. If numerical scores are either pedagogically or administratively important to you, then you can establish a point scale (say, 0 to 5) for each of the categories and return papers with six different scores on them. By avoiding a single overall score, you can help students to focus on aspects of writing to which they need to give special attention. If you still need to assign a single "grade" or score to each paper, then consider weighting the first few categories
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Language Assessment textbook (Brown, 2004), in the chapter on assessing writing, I have
described a number of possible writing tasks according to their level of linguistic complexity, and list them here just to stimulate your own creativity. 1. Imitative writing exercises in handwriting letters, words, and punctuation keyboarding (typing) exercises copying listening cloze selection tasks (listen and write) picture-cued writing exercises completing forms and questionnaires converting numbers and abbreviations to words and phrases spelling tasks one-word dictation tasks
2. Intensive (controlled) writing dictation of phrases and simple sentences dicto-comp (rewrite a story just heard)
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3. Responsive writing paraphrasing guided writing, e.g., question and answer paragraph construction tasks (topic sentence, main idea, etc.) responding to a reading or lecture
4. Extensive writing essay writing tasks tasks in types of writing (narrative, description, argument, etc.) tasks in genres of writing (lab report, opinion essay, research paper) It is of course of paramount importance to be absolutely clear, in your designing of assessment tasks in writing, about what you are trying to test and why you are testing written performance. The concept of formative assessment is prominent in a course that uses a process approach to writing: Our assessments should serve the purpose of facilitating improvement in a student's written work, and judgment of the final product should occur only when such summative evaluation is warranted. Ferris and Hedgcock (2005), Sokolik (2003), and Weigle (2002) all stress the need for teachers to act responsibly in evaluating writing: Respect the time-tested principles of validity, reliability, and washback in writing assessment. Writing instruction in a communicative, interactive language course should be deeply rooted in the 12 principles of language learning and teaching that have formed a train of thought throughout this book. As you think about each principle, you can make the connections. Automaticity, for example, is gained as students develop fluency in writing, which can best be pronu ted through the multiple stages of a process writing approach. Meaningful learning and intrinsic motivation are paramount as you try to get your students involved in topics of interest and significance to them and in authentic writing tasks. Strategic investment is clearly at the center of the composing process. Perhaps you can continue down the list yourself.
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In this excellent teacher reference book, now in its second edition, Dana Ferris and John Hedgcock have provided many references to research and a practical orientation to second language writing courses.
Casanave, C. (2004). Controversies in second language writing. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Christine Casanave offers a unique perspective in this survey of writing pedagogy by describing a number of issues and controversies over the last few decades. She provides a balanced perspective to each.
Hedgcock, J. (2005). Taking stock of research and pedagogy in L2 writing. In E. Hinkel (Ed.),
37, 1-28.
Silva, T, & Brice, C. (2004). Research in teaching writing. Annual Review of Applied
Linguistics, 24, 70-106. These three survey articles offer overviews of the state of the art in second language writing pedagogy. Extensive lists of references are included in each article.
Hedge, T. (2005). Writing. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Tricia Hedge describes over 50 different writing activities, categorized into sections on communication, composing, crofting, and improving. It is highly practical and teacher friendly. A bibliography is included.
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OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: appreciate the value of focus on form in a communicative language curriculum understand issues surrounding form-focused instruction, in terms of both grammar focus and vocabulary focus A glance through the last century of language-teaching practices reveals mixed opinions about the place of teaching language forms, depending on the method or era. In the Grammar Translation Method and in cognitive code learning (see Chapter 2), formal aspects of language received central attention. In the Direct Method and the Natural Approach, overt focus on form was almost forbidden. Some manifestations of CLT, especially indirect approaches, advocated only a passing attention to form, while other proponents of CLT injected healthy doses of form-focused techniques into a communicative curriculum. A decade ago, perhaps, our profession was inundated with a swarm of mixed messages about the place of grammar and vocabulary in the communicative language classroom, with strong advocates on both sides. Today, only a handful of language-teaching experts advocate no focus on form ("zero option") at all, a prime proponent of which is Krashen (1997) with his input hypothesis. Current views of second language classroom methodology are almost universally in agreement on the importance of some form-focused instruction within the communicative framework, ranging from explicit treatment of rules to noticing and consciousness-raising (Ellis, 2001, 2006; Williams, 2005) techniques for structuring input to learners. This of course still leaves open a wide range of options from which you must choose, depending on your students, their purposes, and the context. The forms of language include the organizational components of language and the systematic rules that govern their structure. Phonological, grammatical, and lexical forms occupy the three principal formal categories that typically appear in a language curriculum. examine guidelines for grammar sequencing in textbooks and curricula identify techniques for teaching both grammar and vocabulary
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[writes synonyms on the board] Is that clear now? Ss: [most Ss nod in agreement]
Sometimes, such impromptu moments may be extended: The teacher gives several examples and/or encourages students to use the word in other sentences. Make sure that such unplanned teaching, however, does not detract from the central focus of the activity by drifting into a long and possibly irrelevant tangent. G. TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION, ACTION, AND RESEARCH [Note: (I) Individual work; (G) group or pair work; (C) whole-class discussion.] 1. (I) It might be useful to review the section on form-focused instruction and error treatment in PLLT, Chapter 9, where background research and terminology are explained. 2. (G) Sometimes grammatical knowledge isn't sufficient to understand "hidden" or implied meanings of what people say or write. Tell pairs to look at the following: a. "Oh! That's just great!" [falling intonation] b. "Good to see you again, Helen. You've lost some weight, haven't you?" c. "Brrrr! It's sure cold in this house!" The "surface" grammatical meaning differs from potential "deep" structure meanings. Ask the pairs to identify those meanings, and, if possible, to think of other examples. Then have them devise a few techniques that could be used to teach such pragmatic aspects of English, and share their ideas with the rest of the class. 3. (I/O Observe a class in which the teacher uses some form-focused instruction. Evaluate the effectiveness of the class using the five grammar focusing techniques on page 173. Share your observations with the whole class. 4. (G) Assign a separate, different grammar "point" to every two pairs and have them do the following: One pair figures out how to teach that point with a deductive approach and describes students for which such an approach is justified; the other pair is directed to do the same with an inductive approach. Pairs then present their suggestions to the whole class for comparison. 5. (C) On page 177, an example of a teacher's intervention is given. Discuss the following as a whole class: Was the teacher's interruption warranted? What are some rules for interruption? (See the section on error treatment in Chapter 19.)
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research in second language teaching and learning (pp. 581-595). Mahwah, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. New York: McGraw-Hill. Ur, P. (1984). Teaching listening comprehension. University Press. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge O'Brien,T. (2004). Writing in a foreign language: Teaching and learning. Language Teaching,
37, 1-28.
Read, J. (2004). Research in teaching vocabulary. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 24, 146-161. Richards, J., & Rodgers.T. (2001). Approaches and methods in language teaching(2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Rost, M. (2005). L2 listening. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of research in second language
teaching and learning (pp. 503-527). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Setter, J.,&Jenkins,J. (2005). Pronunciation. Language Teaching, 38, 1-17. Levis, J. (2005). Changing contexts and shifting paradigms in pronunciation teaching. TESOL
in second language teaching and learning (pp. 485-502). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
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