Techniques and principles in language teaching
Szerző: Larsen-Freeman, DianeCím: Techniques and principles in language teaching
Megjelenési adatok: Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016. | ISBN: 978-0-19-442360-1
As a language teacher you must make decisions all of the time. Some of your decisions are relatively minor ones—should homework be assigned that particular day, for instance. Other decisions have more profound implications. What should be the goal oflanguage instruction? Which language teaching method will be the most effective in reaching it? What is the best means of evaluation to see if it has been reached? There is no single correct answer to questions like these. Each of you has to answer them for yourself. We believe, however, that a teacher informed about some of the possibilities will make better decisions. Making informed choices is, after all, what teaching is all about (Stevick 1982; Larsen-Freeman 1983a, 1983b). One purpose of this book, therefore, is to provide information to teachers and teacher trainees about eight methods of foreign language teaching. By reading this book you will gain an understanding of the principles on which these methods are based and of the techniques associated with each method. These eight were chosen because they are all currently practiced today. It is not our purpose to convince you of the superiority of any one of them; indeed, the inclusion of a method in this book should not be construed as an endorsement of that method. What is being recommended is that, in the interest of becoming informed about existing choices, you investigate each method. A second purpose for this book is to encourage you to examine your own beliefs about teaching and learning and about how you put these into practice. Even those of you with a great deal of teaching experience stand to benefit from considering the principles of these methods. Perhaps such consideration will help you to understand better why you do what you do. We do not expect that you will abandon the way you teach now in order to wholly adopt one of these methods. We do think, however, that there will be some new techniques here worthy of your attention. Although certain techniques are associated with particular methods and are derivable from particular principles, most techniques can be adapted to any teaching style and situation. It is not so much the technique itself as the way a teacher works with it that makes the difference. Therefore do not be quick to dismiss a technique because, at first glance, it appears to be at odds with your own beliefs or to be impossible to apply to your own situation. For instance, in one of the methods we will consider, teachers frequently make use of a tape recorder to record students speaking the language they are studying. If you reject this technique as impractical because you do not have a tape recorder, you may be missing out on something valuable. You should first ask what the purpose of the tape recorder is: Is there a principle behind its use in which you believe and which you can provide in another way, say, by writing down the students’ sentences on the blackboard rather than recording them? So try, then, as you read this book, to imagine how to adapt these techniques creatively to your own situation. You are limited only by your imagination.
Kategóriák: Neveléstudomány, Nyelvtudomány
Tárgyszavak: Módszertan, Tanulás, Nyelv, Language, Grammar, Módszer, Nyelvtan, Englis, Learning, Angol, Tanítás, Teaching, Method
Formátum: OCR szöveg
Típus: könyv
Tárgyszavak: Módszertan, Tanulás, Nyelv, Language, Grammar, Módszer, Nyelvtan, Englis, Learning, Angol, Tanítás, Teaching, Method
Formátum: OCR szöveg
Típus: könyv
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Title page
Contents
XV
Chapter one: Introduction
1-3
Extra reading
3
Chapter Two: The grammar-translation method
4-17
Introduction
4
Experience
4-8
Thinking abaout the experience
9-11
Reviewing the principles
11-12
Reviewing the techniques
13-14
Translation of a Literary Passage
13
Reading Comprehensions Questions
13
Antonyms/Synonyms
13-14
Cognates
14
Deductive Application of Rule
14
Fill-in-the-blanks
14
Memorization
14
Use Words in Sentences
14
Composition
14
Conclusion
15
Activities
16
Extra reading
17
Chapter three: The direct method
18-30
Introduction
18
Experience
18-21
Thinking abaout the experience
22-24
Reviewing the principles
24-26
Reviewing the techniques
26-28
Reading aloud
26
Question and answer exercise
26
Getting students to self-correct
26
Conversation practice
27
Fill-in-the-blank exercise
27
Dictation
27
Map drawing
27
Paragraph writing
28
Conclusion
28
Activities
29
Extra reading
30
Chapter four: The audio-lingual method
31-50
Introduction
31
Experience
32-39
Thinking about the experience
39-42
Reviewing the principles
43-45
Reviewing the techniques
45-47
Dialog memorization
45
Backward bulld-up (expansion) drill
45-46
Repetition drill
46
Chain drill
46
Single-slot substitution drill
46
Multiple-slot substitution drill
46
Transformation drill
47
Question-and-answer drill
47
Use of minimal pairs
47
Complete the dialog
47
Grammar game
47
Conclusion
47-48
Activities
49-50
Extra reading
50
Chapter five: The silent way
51-71
Introduction
51-52
Experience
52-58
Thinking about the experience
58-62
Reviewing the principles
62-65
Reviewing the techniqes and the materials
66-68
Sound-color chart
66
Teacher's silence
66
Peer correction
67
Rods
67
Slef-correction gestures
67
Word chart
67-68
Fidel charts
68
Structured feedback
68
Conclusion
68-69
Activities
70-71
Extra reading
71
Chapter six: Suggestopedia
72-88
Introduction
72
Experience
72-77
Thinking about the experience
77-80
Reviewing the principles
80-83
Reviewing the techniques and the classroom set-up
83-86
Classroom set-up
84
Peripheral learning
84
Positive suggestion
84
Visualization
84-85
Choose a new identity
85
Role-play
85
First concert
85
Second concert
85-86
Primary activation
86
Secondary activation
86
Conclusion
86
Activities
87
Extra reading
88
Chapter seven: Community language learning
89-108
Introduction
89-90
Experience
90-95
Thinking about the experience
95-99
Reviewing the principles
99-103
Reviewing the techniques
103-106
Tape-recording student conversation
104
Transcription
104
Reflection on experience
105
Reflective listening
105
Human computer
105
Small group tasks
105-106
Conclusion
106
Activities
107-108
Extra reading
108
Chapter eight: The total physical response method
109-122
Introduction
109-110
Experience
110-113
Thinking about the experience
114-115
Reviewing the principles
116-118
Reviewing the techniques
118-120
Using command to direct behavior
118-119
Role reversal
119
Action sequence
119-120
Conclusion
120
Activities
121
Extra reading
122
Chapter nine: The communicative approach
123-142
Introduction
123-124
Experience
124-128
Thinking about the experience
128-130
Reviewing the principles
131-135
Reviewing the techniques and the materials
135-138
Authentic materials
135-136
Scrambled sentences
136
Language games
136-137
Picture strip story
137
Role-play
137-138
Conclusion
138
Activities
139-140
Extra reading
140
Epilogue
141-142
Extra reading
142