Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Approaches and Methods in English Language Teaching
- Grammar-Translation
method.
- It is used to helping students to read
foreing language literature
- Students need to learn grammar rules
and vocabulary related to the target
language.
- Students translate from one language into
another.
- Students study in a deductively activity. (They memorize the grammar rules, then
They apply them using different examples)
- Students learn grammar paradigms.
- Students memorize native language equivalents for target
language words.
- Students use their native language most of the
time in each lesson.
- Students develop vocabulary and
grammar most of the time.
- Students work on their Reading and Writing skills.
- Students do not often work on their
Speaking, Listening and
Pronunciation skill in class.
- Students can be evaluated by using Written test (They translate from their native
language into the target language) or making some Questions (They apply
grammar rules).
- Some techniques to teaching and evaluating the Students' performance can be: "Translation of a Literary Passage,
Reading Comprehension Questions, Antonyms and Synonyms, Cognates, Fill - in - the - Blanks Exercises, Memorization,
Use Words Sentences and Compositions".
- Teacher is who teaches the grammar rules,
gives examples and checks the activities, in
other words, the teacher is the authority.
- If students make errors or do not know an answer, the teacher
supplies them with the correct answer.
- Direct method.
- It intented that students learn
how to communicate in the
target language
- The teacher uses realia,
pictures, is say, use of
demostration and visual
aids.
- But HE NEVER TRANSLATE It into
the students´ native language.
- PRINCIPLES
- The reading skill will be developed through
practice with speaking.
- Using realia or pictures in the classroom environment
should be used to help Ss understand the meahing
- The native language should not be used in the classroom
- The teacher should demostrate because the Ss should make a
direct association between target language form and meaning.
- Use language in real context because they should be
encouraged to speak as much as possible.
- Grammar should be taught inductively
- TECHNIQUES
- Reading aloud
- Question and answer exercises
- Conversation practice
- Fill- in the blanks exercise
- Dictation
- Map drawing
- Paragraph writing
- It believes that students to associate
meaning with the target language directly
when the teacher intruduces a new target
word or phrase.
- Audiolingual
method.
- Focused on teaching listening and speaking before reading and writing. It uses dialogues as the main
form of language presentation and drills as the main training techniques. Mother tongue is discouraged
in the classroom
- History
- A) Before world war II there were 3 methods "A modified direct method" "A reading approach" "A
reading/oral approach" B) Origins and was developed in USA during the world war II (The army method).
C) the term “Audiolingualism” was coined by Professor Nelson Brooks
- This method was born because methods like "direct method" and "reading/oral
approach" lacked standardization of vocabulary and grammar so teachers
couldn't agree what was important to teach for beginning, intermediate or
advanced learners and this other methods lacked “STRUCTURE”
- This method is based on the approach the theory of language: Structuralism
Structural linguistics influenced Audiolingualism. this means that teachers first
teach sentences, then phrases, next morphology and finally phonology
- As well based on approach of the theory of learning: Behaviorism psychology
influenced Audiolingualism. Behaviorists believe that humans are organisms
capable of learning many behaviors.
- 1. Stimulus: Bring out behaviors. 2. Response: Triggered by stimulus. 3.
Reinforcement: Marks the response as being appropriate or not and
encourages repetition which is vital in the learning process.
- Procedure
- Extensive oral instruction is required where the target language is used. Typical procedures: 1. Model dialogue. Repeat. Correction of
mistakes. Memorize. 2. Dialogues are adapted and then acted out. 3. Key structures are selected and used for pattern drills. 4. Textbooks.
Follow-up reading, writing activities may be introduced. 5. Follow-up activities in a language laboratory.
- Characteristics of the Teaching/Learning Process: A) New vocabulary and structural patterns are presented through dialogs. B)
Dialogs– learning through imitation and repetition C) Positively reinforced Grammar is induced from the examples.
- The Emphasis of Language Areas and Language Skills 1. The emphasis is placed on the acquisition of the patterns of the language 2. The
natural order of skills presentation is adhered to: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. 3. The oral/aural skills receive most of the
attention. 4. The students are taught pronunciation
- Types of learning and teaching activities
- Dialogues
- Contextualize key structures
- Illustrate situations
- Used for repetition and memorization
- Drills
- 1. Repetition 2.
Inflection 3.
Replacement 4.
Restatement 5.
Completion 6.
Transposition 7.
Expansion 8.
Contraction 9.
Transformation 10.
Rejoinder 11.
Restoration
- Roles
- Teacher: is the central an active Model of the target language, that controls the
process of learning Monitors and controls the learner’s performance
- Students: are imitators, they can be directed by skilled training techniques, external displays,
reactive role. They do not initiate interaction
- The role of instructional materials Teacher - oriented Tape recorders, a language laboratory and audiovisual equipment are
important
- Situational
method
- Theory of the
languaje
- Speech was seen as the foundation of
language and structure was seen as
the heart of the ability to speak.
- Theory of the learning
- Learning theory it is a
type of behavioral theory
of learning by habits.
- As palmer points out, there are three
processes in learning a language:
- 1.Receive the knowledge or materials
- 2. Fix it in memory by repeat
- 3. And use it in practice until it
becomes a personal skill
- Characteristics
- The teaching of the
language begins with the
spoken language, the
material is taught orally,
before it has been
presented in written form.
- The language that is learned is the
language that is used in the
classroom.
- Reading and writing are introduced
once a lexical and grammatical base is
established
- New topics are introduced and
practiced in situations.
- The objectives of the situational language
teaching method are to teach a practical
command of the four basic language skills
- Teaching and learning activities
- Elicitation: The teacher uses mimicry,
gestures to say words, makes the
student ask questions, make sentences,
or give examples of new patterns.
- Repetition practices: The teacher gets
the student's attention and slowly
repeats a word or pattern clearly, eg
Where the pen?
- Question answer exercises: A
student asks and another answers
until everyone participates asking
and answering the new way of ask.
- Rol of material
- This method relies on textbooks
and visual aids. The textbook
contains organized lessons
planned around different
grammatical structures. Visual
aids can be prepared by the
teacher these can be; posters,
polished cards, figures.
- Rol of teacher
- Time control in activities.
Oral practice, to support
the structures of the book.
Adjust to special needs of
students. Evaluate.
Develop extra activities
from those presented in
the textbook.
- Rol of student
- The student listens and repeats
what the teacher says and responds
to questions and commands.
Participation is encouraged, it
includes initial responses by
students and then they ask each
other, although the teacher controls
the introduction and practice of new
structures.
- Audiovisual
method
- All kinds of material are used, for the student
learning, such as, maps, murals, drawings, photos,
songs, or even with modern media that reproduced
the human voice (gramophone, record player), to
provide the student accurate sound reproduction
Foreign
- Audiovisual is all course with sound
recordings and images projected in the
form of slides that accompany the
dialogues.
- Audiovisual methods completely modify
the chronological development of
activities done in class, this with the help
of phases, to get the results expected.
- 1. Presentation of the
dialogue: images are
projected with a
explanation using an Audio.
- 2. Explanation: each
sequence (sound
image-text) projected
again for a better
understanding.
- 3. Repetition: the student
must memorize all the
dialogue, being able to emit
the text that accompanies
each image. Phonetic
correction should be done at
this stage.
- 4. Exploitation and re-employment: the
teacher can lead a little talk about the
topic of the dialogue or ask that the
student carry out transformations and /
or transpositions
- 5. Transpose and free
employment: work on the
mechanisms grammatical
should contextualize,
applying them to themes
and different situations.
- Silent
way
- Teacher is silent as much as posible in the class,
and the students use the second language as
much as posible.
- Students find out, create
and use what is to be
learned.
- Physical objects and
visuals facilitate the
learning.
- Approach
- Theory of language
- Language is seen as groups of
sounds associated with specific
meanings and organized into
sentences or grammar units.
- Language is taught through
unreal situations.
- Vocabulary is the main area in
the language.
- Stages of the Silent Way:
- 1. Initial encounter
with the
unknowning.
- Teacher creates awareness
about the language.
- 2. Practice of skills.
- Students can guide their own practice.
- 3. Mastery of skills.
- Students challenge themselves by
developing their skills.
- 4. Application of
skills.
- Skills allow to meet further challenges.
- Theory of learning
- Retaining system
- It allows to remind the
linguistic elements and
makes possible the
communication.
- Teacher's role
- Teachers model, help, and
guide desired student
responses
- Teacher is responsible for creating an
environment that facilitates student's
learning, using the correct materials.
- Learning system
- Silence is the best way for
learning so that students can
concentrate on the task to do and
the means to achievment it.
- Learner's role
- Students should work in
autonomy and responsible
way.
- And they have to carry out the interlanguage to get
the target language.
- The general goal is to give is oral and aural
facility near-native fluency in the target
language, and correct pronunciation.
- Desuggestopedia
- It is developed to help students eliminate the feeling that they are not
able to be successful and the negative association they may have toward
studying and thus to help them overcome the barriers to learning.
- Roles
- Teachers
- Teachers is the authority in
the classroom.
- Teachers initiate the interaction with the whole group
at the beginning of the course.
- Teachers should accelerate the process by students learn to use
another language for everyday communication.
- Teachers present the dialogues through two "concerts"
(receptive phase and active phase).
- Teachers can use the native language in class when
it is necessary.
- Teachers evaluate the students' perfomance every lesson.
- Students
- Students learn by dialogues in the
target language
- Students can use the native language so that they
can make the meaning of the dialogue clear.
- Students practice grammar and vocabulary
- Students develop their speaking skill, reading
skill and writing skill.
- Students are evaluated through their
performance during the lessons.
- Course
- The course is conducted in a classroom that is birght and
cheerful (posters are hung around the classroom)
- Total Physical
Response
- It is a language teaching method built around
the cordination of speeach and action.
- It attempts to teach language through physical
(motor) activity, a memory connection is traced,
the stronger the memoru association.
- It is a Natural method
- Asher sees three process as central.
- Children develop listening competences before they develop the ability to speak
- Children ability in listening comprehension is acquired because children are
required to respond physically to spoken language.
- Listening comprehension has been stablished, speech evolves naturally and effortlessly out f it..
- TPR as diredted toringht-brain learning, whereas most second language
teaching methods are directed to left brain learning.
- The general objective is to teach oral
proficiency at a beginning level.
- TYPES OF LEARNING AND TEACHING ACTIVITIES
- Imperative drills. They are typically used to elicit
physical actions and activity. (conversational dialogues)
- Role plays center on everdyday situations such as at the restaurant, supermarket or gas station.
- The slides presentations are used to provides visual center for teacher narration, which follwing commands and for
questions to Ss.
- Reading and writing activities
- ROLES
- Learner roles is to be listener and performer.
- The teacher plays an active and direct role in TPR.
- He is the instructor. The reacher who dicides what to
teach, who models and presents the new material and
who selects it, He controls the language input the
learnersreceie.
- Materials. Materials and realia play an increasing role.
>Teacher´s voice, actions, gestures. > Common classroom
objects, such as books, pens, cups and furniture. >Include
pictures, realia, slides and word charts.
- PRINCIPLES
- The memory is activated through
learner response
- Ss understand the targer language
before Speaking .
- Ss should not made memorize fixed
routines.
- Tne target language shoould be
presented in chunks not just word by
word.
- Ss can learn through observing actions
- Ss must develop flexibility in
understanding novel combinations of
target language
- Spoken language should be emphasized
over written language.
- TECHNIQUES
- Using commands to direct behavior
- Role reversal: Students speak
- Action sequence
- REAS OF THE LANGUAGE
- Vocabulary and grammatical structures
- Imperactives
- Writing language
- Community Language
Learning
- Students work together to develop what aspects
of a language they would like to learn
- Roles
- Teacher
- Teacher: Recognizes how threatening a new learnign situation
and suppors his student in their struggle to master the target
language they are responsible for providing a safe environment
in which students can learn
- Students
- Learners: Depend uppon the teacher. However the learners continue to study, so
that they become increasingly independent
- Materials
- The role of instructional materials Materials: may be developed by the teacher: little more than summaries on the
blackboard or overhead projector of some of the linguistic features of conversations generated by students,
conversations may also be transcribed and distributed for study and analysis Learners may work in groups to
produce their own materials, such as scripts for dialogues and mini-dramas
- Procedure
- Changes within the lesson, sometimes students are assertive as when they are having
a conversation, but students typically have a conversation using their native language,
and the teacher hels them to express what they want to say
- Types of learning and teaching activities
- 1. Translation. A learner whispers a message or meaning he or she wants to express, the teacher
translates it into the target language. 2. Croup Work. Preparing a story that will be presented to the
teacher and the rest of the class. 3. Recording. Students record conversations in the target language. 4.
Transcription. Students transcribe utterances and conversations they have recorded for practice and
analysis. 5, Analysis. Students analyze and study transcriptions of target language sentences in order to
focus on particular lexical. 6. Reflection and observation. Learners reflect and report on their
experience of the class. 7. Listening. Students listen to a monologue. 8. Free conversation. Students
engage in free conversation with the teacher or with other learners.
- History
- Method developed by Charles A. Curran and his associates
- Theory of Language: Social process which is caracterized by 6 different processes 1. The whole-person
process 2. The educational process 3. The interpersonal process 4. The developmental process 5. The
communicative process 6. The cultural process
- Theory of learning: "The human learning" "the whole person
learning" and "non-defensive learning"
- Content Based
Learning.
- Richards and Rodgers (2001) says that “content-based
instruction refers to an approach to teaching a second language
in which instruction is organized around the content or
information that students will acquire, rather than around a
language or another type of study plan ”(Richards & Rodgers,
2001, p. 204).
- According to Richards and Rodgers
(2001), CBI is based on two relevant
principles:
- CBI better reflects the needs of students
to learn a second language. Daily
necessities in a real life situation might be
easier to acquire and use the target
language as a tool with real purpose, for
example getting food, studying, getting a
job and others.
- People learn a second language more
successfully when they use language as
a means of acquiring information,
rather than as an end in itself.
- Brinton (2003) offers some additional principles for CBI
that complement those offered by Richards and Rodgers
(2001). These principles are important for language
teachers who intend to use and promote the CBI in their
lessons:
- (1) Base instructional decisions on content rather than language
criteria. (2) Integrate skills. (3) Involve students actively in all
phases of the learning process.
- (4) Choose content for its relevance to the life, interests, and
academic goals of students. (5) Select authentic texts and
assignments.
- Role of teacher and role of
studentt
- The role of students is to actively participate
with both content and language. using each
to learn the other.
- Student-student
interaction
- Students often work collaboratively to
understand content while actively using
the language they are learning.
- The teacher must set clear learning objectives
for both the content and the language. Then,
the teacher creates activities to teach both,
supporting the language necessary for the
study of the content.
- The goals of teachers who
use CBl
- Teachers want students to master both the language
and the content. The content can be topics of general
interest to students, such as current affairs or their
hobbies, or it can be an academic subject, which
provides natural content for the study of the language.
- Teacher-student
interaction
- The teacher guides the students' learning. The teacher supports
them by making students pay attention to how language is used to
deliver content and by supporting their language development.
- Communicative
approach
- Does not eliminate, but readapts pedagogical
principles of previous methodological
methods or approaches and rather collects
those that have so far been applied
optimizing them in an eclectic way
- Students will be the
protagonists of their learning
and will have the ability to
learn to learn, through
comunication and learning
strategies
- With the aim of organizing classes in
a way that facilitates sociability,
creating a teaching learning climate
that enables motivation and
comunication between students and
between teachers and students
- Lexical approach
- It is a way of teaching and understand language as a composition of lexical
units rather than grammatical structures.
- The units are words, chunks formed by collocations, and fixed phrases.
- Theory of learning
- The language is acquired by a process of
observation, hypothesis and experiment so the
target language store in the mind and it could be
used it .
- Acquisition is accelerated by contact with people with a higher
level of competence in the target language.
- The main
objective
- Helping students to find out for themselves how language is apply it
so that they will note the opportunity areas and achieve the
outcome learning.
- Procedure
- 1. Experiential procedures: Involve the students in
affective interaction with an engaging and creative
text.
- Students read a text, and say their own opinions before
studying the language in the text or answering comprehension
questions.
- 2. Students are focused on a special
point of the text.
- Students identify instances of the
point, find out and match its use.
- Roles
- Teacher
- Teacher guides the students' attention
to lexical features thought to be useful.
- teacher reformulates the student's texts.
- Teachers should employ extensive,
comprehensible language for receptive purposes.
- Student
- Students choose features they believe will be
useful for them to carry out the language.
- Language
Awareness
- Tomlinson (2003) says that 'Paying attention to features of language
in use can help learners to notice the channel between their own
performances in the target language'.
- Materials and teachers are important elements to carry out
the understand and use of lexical chunks.
- It is important to combine a Language Awareness
approach to learning with a Lexical Approach to
describing language.
- It involves an increased role for word grammar
(collocation and cognates) and text grammar
(suprasentential features).