Didactica Especifica I Resumen
Didactica Especifica I Resumen
Didactica Especifica I Resumen
Adult advanced students: are highly motivated. They will find progress
more difficult to perceive. Much of the time they may not be learning
anything 'new' but learning better how to use what they already know.
Teachers must realise the important that success has on motivation.
Success should not be too easy or too difficult.
Intrinsic motivation in the classroom (Brown)
Motivation is the extent to which you make choices about goals to
pursue and the effort you will put in to that pursuit.
A behavioristic definition: Skinner or Watson stresses the role of rewards
in motivation. In Skinners operant conditional model, human beings will
pursue a goal because they perceive reward for doing it. This reward
serves to reinforce behavior. A behaviorist defines motivation as the
anticipation of reinforcement. Learners pursue goals in order to receive
rewards (gold stars, certificate, and financial independence).
Cognitive definitions: three different theories:
a) Drive theory: motivation stems from basic innate drives. There are six:
exploration (fulfill students needs to probe the unknown), manipulation
(to control our environment), activity (physical, mental, and emotional),
and stimulation (incentive them all the time), knowledge (is necessary
for the students, if it is easy, they get bored, to desire for answers and
questions) and ego enhancement (opinion of ourselves, to build our own
self-esteem).
b) Hierarchy of needs theory: Maslow describes a system of needs. It
goes from the satisfaction of physical needs up through safety and
communal needs, to needs of esteem, and finally to self-actualization.
c) Self-control theory: Hunt focus on the importance of people deciding
for themselves what to think, feel or do. We define ourselves by making
our own decisions. Motivation is highest when one can make ones own
choices. When learners have opportunities to make their own choices
about what to pursue or not, they are fulfilling this need for autonomy
(classroom).
Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
Jill
The students themselves: The most useful resources are the students.
Through their thoughts and experiences they bring the outside world
into the room. In multilingual classes, we can get them to share
information about their countries.
Objects, pictures and things: A range of objects, pictures and cards can
be used for presenting and manipulating language.
Realia: the use of real objects.
A general model for introducing new language: the model has five
components: lead-in, elicitation, explanation, accurate reproduction, and
immediate creativity.
Lead-in: the context is introduced and the meaning or use of the new
language is demonstrated. Some students may become aware of certain
key concepts. In the case of formulated information, students have to
understand those concepts. The teacher can demonstrate the course of
an interaction showing the new language in use.
Elicitation: the teacher tries to see if the students can produce the new
language. If they can, they will move to the explanation stage.
Explanation: teacher shows how the new language is formed.
Accurate reproduction: students repeat and practice models. They focus
on accuracy. Drill is important but not all the time.
When the students are confident they can move to immediate creativity.
They try to use what they have learned to make new sentences. The
teacher can see if the students have understood meaning, use and form.
If the students perform well during elicitation the teacher can move to
immediate creativity.
Explanation techniques: there are two procedures for explaining the form
of the new language. The intention is to demonstrate to the student
what the construction grammar is. Explaining statements Explaining
question forms. Using hands and gestures: teachers use their hands to
make grammatical form clearer.
Accurate reproduction: give students controlled practice in the form of
the new language.
a) Choral repetition: repeat the model together. It gives the students a
chance to say the new language.
b) Individual repetition: three stages; teacher nominates a student, the
student responds, and the teacher gives feedback.
c) Cue-response drills: the students are working with more than one
model. When we have presented the first model and organized choral
and individual repetition we will elicit the second model. Three stages: 1.
Instruct: Tell the students what you want them to do. 2. Cue: Indicate
which model you wish the student to say. 3. Nominate: Select the
student you wish to give the response.
Correction: 2 stages
a) Showing incorrectness: we will indicate to the student that a mistake
has been made. Techniques:
1-Repeating: to ask the student to repeat.
2- Echoing: to echo the complete student response, stressing the part of
the utterance that was incorrect.
3-Denial: to tell the student that the response was unsatisfactory and
ask for it to be repeated. It may be discouraging.
4- Questioning: to ask any student in the class if what the student has
said is correct.
5- Expression: to indicate that a response was incorrect by their
expression or by gesture.
b) Using correction techniques: techniques:
1- Student corrects student: we can ask if anyone can 'help' the student
who has made the mistake.
2 -Teacher corrects student(s): we should take charge of correction
because the students are mixed-up about what the correct response
should be.
The importance of meaning: understand the meaning of the new
language the students are learning. Checking meaning can be done in
three ways
a) Information checking: the teacher will need to find out if students
have understood the information in the lead-in. (To say sentences which
are incorrect)
b) Immediate creativity and different settings: to ask students to
produce sentences of their own.
False- beginners are those adult learners who had studied English at
school but have forgotten it. Many students bring some knowledge of
English into class. New grammar may not be completely new for them. It
is also useful for them giving the chances to be exposed or to use the
language.
Analyzing language: form: grammar is concerned with the form of the
language: the pattern, the regularities. Some common items have
names: reported speech and countable nouns, for ex.
Grammar: restricted use activities: are defined by their focus on limited
options for use of language, limited options for communication and
accuracy. Examples:
Drills: provide oral practice. They are based on the behaviorist believe
that through repetition students can be trained into automatic
responses. The aim is to improve accuracy.
Written exercises: give students concentrated practice of language
items.
Elicited dialogues: short dialogues with examples of specific items to be
practiced.
Grammar practiced activities and games: grammar activities; to focus
on the use or particular items of grammar. Games; to revise vocabulary
and grammar.
Analyzing language: meaning: if the teacher explains clearly, the
students understand the meaning.
Grammar: clarifying and focusing: different approaches
Presentation: we focus on the form and meaning by giving explanations
in different ways (using the board or coursebooks)
Self- directed discovery: the teacher needs to ensure that the learners
have sufficient information and experience to be able to work out their
own rules and explanations.
Guided discovery: teachers job; to create the condition in which the
information can be learned.
Reluctant students: they are reluctant to speak because they are shy
and are not predisposed to expressing in front of others. Things to help
them:
Preparation: students record presentations of what they are going to
make, transcribe, correct it and hand it over to the teacher. There will be
times when teachers want and expect spontaneous production from
students, but at others teachers will allow them to prepare for the
speaking.
The value of repetition: it allows students to improve on what they have
said before, think about how to re-word things. Repetition works even
better if students get a chance to analyze what they have already done.
Big groups, small groups: they find themselves having to talk in front
of a big group, making sure that they get chances to speak and interact
in smaller groups.
Mandatory participation: examples jigsaw reading activities and storycircle writing, when all the students take part.
The roles of the teacher
Prompter: teachers help the students when they get lost by offering
suggestions without forcing students out of role.
Participant: act as participants when they are in a dialogue with the
class, the teacher and students may talk together as near-equal
participants.
Feedback provider: when students are in the middle of a speaking task,
over-correction may inhibit them. Helpful and gentle correction may get
students out of difficult misunderstandings and hesitations.
Classroom speaking activities
Acting from a script: ask the students to act out scenes from plays,
their coursebooks, and dialogues written by themselves.
Playscripts: drama helps to build student confidence, contextualize
language, develop students' empathy, and involve students in problem-
Receptive skills:
a) Predictive skills: people predict what they are going to hear and read.
The process of understanding is achieved when the predictions match
with the content of the text.
b) Extracting specific information: we read or listen to sth because we
want to extract specific information: scanning.
c) Getting the general picture: we want to have an idea of the main
points: skimming.
d) Extracting detailed information: a reader or listener has to be able to
access texts for detailed information.
e) Recognising functions and discourse patters: understanding how a
text is constructed.
f) Deducting meaning from context: deduce the meaning of unfamiliar
words from the context.
Reading or listening in a foreign language creates barriers for the learner
which may make these more difficult to use. Teachers have to reactivate
them.
Methodological principles for teaching receptive skills:
Receptive and productive skills: receptive skill: students receive and
process the language to extract meaning. Productive: students produce
the language.
Authentic and non- authentic text: authentic texts: designed for native
speakers; they are real texts. A non-authentic text is written for
language students. Reasons for giving students reading and listening
material:
a) The more listening and reading teachers give them, the better they
will become at reading and listening.
b) Acquiring language: improves their general English level.
c) Success: when teachers choose the right kind of material, the
students are successful.
What we need are texts which students can understand the general
meaning of, whether they are authentic or not.
Purpose, desire and expectations: we read or listen because they have
the desire to do it, some purpose to achieve and have some
expectations.
Receiving and doing: expect students to use what they have heard or
read in order to perform a task, to do sth with the text; giving opinions,
following instructions or summarizing.
Teaching receptive skills: teacher has to train students in a number of
skills. We can divide these skills into type 1: the students have to get the
general picture, to perform a task or to confirm expectations and type 2:
the students have to look at the details in a text.
A basic methodological model for the teaching of receptive skills: five
stages:
Lead-in: the students and the teacher prepare for the task and
familiarize with the topic.
T directs comprehension task: the teacher explains and directs the
students purpose.
Ss listen/ read for the task: the students read or listen to a text to
perform the task the teacher has set.
T directs feedback: teacher gives a response.
T directs text-related task: organize some kind of follow-up task related
to the text.
Reading material: the brain has to work out the significance of the
messages. A reading text moves at the speed of the reader. Extracting
information can be performed even though students do not understand
the whole text. Reading is static. Students can read in order to confirm
their expectations, to extract specific information, foster a
communicative interaction of some kind, to skim to get the general
picture, to find detailed information or understand the way in which texts
are structured and to recognize the functions.
Listening material
An audio or video tape happens as its speed, not at listeners. In a
speech, we can find some phenomena, for ex; hesitation, reformulation,
redundancy and topic change. Most of this shows the speaker re-drafting
what they are going to say. Teachers have to train students to ignore
these phenomena and focus on the message. Listening material is
presented through cd or mp3 recorders, they are small and portable.
Difficulties:
a) Lead-in: give a clear explanation.
b) The use of visual material: give students a visual setting for the audio.
c) Listening tasks: designed to help students to listen effectively.
d) The equipment: make sure that the device and cd/mp3 are in good
condition.
There are a number of different types of listening material:
Listening with video: students can see people speaking. Exs:
Silent viewing: predictive exercise. Freeze frame. Sound only Jigsaw
viewing.
Listening to confirm expectations: teacher elicits information from the
students about what they know/dont know about sth. Then, the teacher
asks the students to listen to confirm expectations.
Listening to extract specific information: students listen to find particular
information.
Listening for communicative tasks: to listen in order to perform a real
communicative task.
Listening for general understanding: to listen to a conversation in order
to get a general idea.
Listening for details: information and discourse structure: to listen in
order to get specific information and a greater understanding of the
language used.
Making your own tapes: Some teachers find difficult that listening suits
the level or interests, so that they can produce their own tapes.
Dealing with listening problems: panic and difficulty because they are
faced with a challenging task. The individuals lack of success can be
demotivating. Some things to make tapes adaptable: Dont play all the
tape straight away. Give students the first third of the tapescript, they
can read it and then discuss how it is going to end. Give one group a
tape recorder and give other groups different sections of the tapescript.
Preview vocabulary: teach some key words. Cut the tapescript into
paragraphs and the students have to put in the right order. Give
students the interviewers questions.
Reading (Harmer)
Extensive and intensive reading: Students need to be involved in both,
extensive (to encourage students to choose what to read and to do it for
pleasure and language improvement) and intensive reading (teacher
chooses and directs the material). It is designed to enable students to
skim and scan.
Extensive reading
Extensive reading materials: students should read material which they
can understand. Teachers need to provide books specially written for the
students. To encourage students to read literature we need to act:
Setting up a library: build a library of suitable books.
The role of the teacher in extensive reading programmes: teachers
need to promote reading and persuade students of its benefits. Teacher
will act as an organizer and tutor.
Extensive reading tasks: students will choose their own reading texts.
Students can ask questions, tell their classmates about books, write
short book reviews, oral interviews.
Intensive reading: the roles of the teacher
Organiser: tell students what their reading purpose is and give them
clear instructions.
Intensive listening: 'live' listening: is when the visitors come to the class
and talk to the students. It allows students to practise listening in faceto-face interactions. Students can indicate if the speaker is going too
slowly or too fast. Live listening can take the following forms:
Reading aloud: allow the students to hear a clear spoken version of a
written text and it can be enjoyable.
Story-telling: teachers tell stories providing listening material.
Interviews: live interview, where students think up the questions.
Conversations: invite a colleague to hold conversations in English.
Students can watch the interaction.
Intensive listening: the roles of the teacher
Organiser: we need to tell students what their listening purpose is and
give them clear instructions.
Machine operator: teachers need to be efficient when they use the
audio player, for example: finding the segment they want to use.
Feedback organiser: when the students have completed the task, the
teacher should lead a feedback.
Prompter: when students have listened to a recording for
comprehension purposes, we can prompt them listen to it again in order
to notice a variety of language and spoken features
Film and video: there are many reasons for encouraging students to
watch while they listen. For example, how intonation matches facial
expression and what gestures accompany phrases.
Viewing techniques:
Fast forward: the teacher fast forwards the sequence silently so the
students have to guess what they were saying.
Silent viewing (for language): the teacher plays the film without the
sound.