Introduction to English Language Teaching
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Klausurvorbereitung
Kartei Details
Karten | 122 |
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Sprache | English |
Kategorie | Englisch |
Stufe | Universität |
Erstellt / Aktualisiert | 27.12.2017 / 16.01.2018 |
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How did the Volks- und Rassenkunde in the 1920s/1930s affect foreign language teaching in Germany?
Target culture taught in comparison to one’s own culture:
- enhancing awareness of national culture
- construction of stereotypes
Fascists elected English as first FL:
- learning about culture in order to prove superiority of German national culture
- traditional class discrimination in education
- majority of learners in Volksschule had no FL classes
What was the first FL in Germany after World War II?
- BRD: English as first FL in all secondary schools
- DDR: Russian as first FL
What was the predominant approach to foreign language teaching after World War II, especially in the 1970s and how did it differ from previous approaches?
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT, Kommunikativer Fremdsprachenunterricht (1970s)
--> Piepho: Kommunikative Kompetenz als übergeordnetes Lernziel im Englischunterricht (1974):
=> shifted priority from teaching knowledge about language (grammar and syntax) to performance in language (e.g. listening comprehension and speaking)
What was the most influential reference for foreign language teaching in the 21st century?
The Common European Framework (CEF):
- has changed educational standards from focus on content to testable output
- Native-speaker standard replaced by plurilingual speaker-norm
- Early foreign language teaching and learning (Fremdsprachenfrühbeginn)
- Bilingual or Content and Language Integrated Learning (bilingualer Unterricht)
- Digital revolution
- Policy of inclusion
--> demise of native-speaker model
--> learner as social agent
--> language as (inter-)action
How did the ‘Pisa-shock’ (2000) and CEF (2001) affect the current educational standards and curricula in foreign language teaching?
lead to a revision of language teaching and learning for the 21st century
What are the objectives of The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEF)?
- Communicative skills in foreign languages
- Intercultural communicative competence
- Individual education and emancipation
- Social skills and values
- Economic empowerment and mobility
- Political participation in a democratic and multicultural Europe
- Learner-centered methods of teaching
What are the general competences defined by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages?
- Declarative knowledge (savoir): knowing what, including socio- and intercultural knowledge
- Know-how and skills (savoir-faire): including socio- and intercultural know-how
- Existential competences (savoir-être): personality traits, points of view, attitudes
- The ability to learn (savoir apprendre): learner strategies, metacognitive awareness, media literacy
What are the communicative language competences defined by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages?
- Linguistic competence about language structures and how to use these: vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation and intonation, spelling
- Reception: listening and reading
- Production: speaking and writing
- Interaction
- Mediation
What are the common reference levels in the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages?
from A1 (basic user) to B2 (independent user)
What was the impact of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages on modern foreign language teaching?
Has shifted attention from input of teaching to output of learning + testing of functional competences
Enormous impact:
- on educational policy making (curricula)
- on test design (DESI, VERA)
- on teaching (educational objectives)
- on academic debates (teacher education)
Kultusministerkonferenz (KMK) used CEF as framework of national educational standards
e.g. Germany: new national educational standards and more testing
What was criticized about Germany's new educational standards and intensified testing in foreign language teaching in the 21st century?
- The Bildungsstandards ignore Bildung in the sense of personal growth, orientation, and reflection
- The narrow focus on functional communicative competences and testing is detrimental to intercultural and methodological goals
- Competence comes with little content as if content was less relevant
- The descriptors and scales of language proficiency are not always clear and distinct
- Average standards (Regelstandards) should be changed to minimum standards (Mindeststandards, for weaker learners) and maximum standards (Maximalstandards, encouraging best performance)
- Standardization jars with individualization and differentiation.
- Output orientation neglects standards of good teaching and the insight into processes of language acquisition and learning
- Output standards encourage teaching to the test (backwash)
What are the standards and content of teacher education in Germany? What are its problems?
- KMK: Educational Studies, Psychology, FL
Deutscher Anglistenverband, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Amerikastudien: English/American studies, TEFL
Problems:
-The education of language teachers within the two stages (university education + 1st state examination and traineeship + 2nd state examination) varies across German federal states:
- subjects of academic education
- link to practical teacher training
- education of teachers at primary schools often separated from that of teachers at secondary schools
-In-service teacher training (Lehrerfortbildungen) less systematically structured and implemented than first two stages
-Need to bridge the gap between English/American Studies as an academic subject and its teaching at school
What are factors to be kept in mind when it comes to improving the quality of FL education?
- quantitative conditions (money!)
- quality of schools
- quality of teaching
What does an effective teacher do?
- guides his instruction by a preplanned curriculum
- carefully orients students to lessons
- has high expectations for student learning
- provides clear and focussed instruction
- uses class time for learning
- establishes smooth and efficient classroom routines
- has high standards for classroom behaviour
- interacts positively with his or her students
- provides incentives and rewards to promote excellence
What is classroom management ? What are the means for an effective classroom management?
- "Klassenführung"
- Major problem for new teachers
- Aim: not (primarily) discipline, but increased learning time
- Means:
- Uniform school-wide regulations
- Withitness: teacher knows what is going on at all times
- Overlapping: teacher can handle several things at a time
- Momentum: teacher avoids both unnecessary interruptions and hectic atmosphere
- Smoothness: teacher maintains direction in the lesson without being diverted by irrelevant information or incidents
- Group Alerting: teacher keeps all students actively participating by creating interest or suspense
What are the differences between first language acquisition and second language acquisition? How do their learning 'strategies' differ?
- First language learners trace patterns in material that appears at first to be shapeless (segmentation) according to the principle of least effort --> acquisition of an extensive repertoire of collocations and colligations
- Second language learners have different needs -> different results: their needs lead them to break down L2 input into small, controllable chunks => a lexicon of smaller units (words instead of collocations)
- SLA: learners rely extensively on their native language (they transfer the forms and meanings and the distribution of forms and meanings of L1 to L2 – both productively and receptively)
- tendency to overgeneralize
What are the plausibility requirements for learning a language?
operational plausibility
developmental plausibility
neurological plausibility
How do children learn a first language?
- they use language as a world-manipulating tool
- for them, language serves as an identity-building tool
- matching phonological strings and meanings (tracing patterns in shapeless material), segmentation
- length of string undeterminable for the child (because they have no idea of written language yet)
What is Chomsky's view of linguistic knowledge?
- Linguistic knowledge is a store of individual words and morphemes as well as rules to assemble them
- Language is not dependent upon other cognitive processes
- speakers can produce an infinite number of sentences from a limited set of rules and words
- children have an innate predisposition to learn a language (universal grammar), they acquire the rules to produce grammatically correct sentences from the words in their language intuitively, according to the input
What is Wray and Peters' view of linguistic knowledge?
linguistic knowledge is a store of units of different sizes; the child learns language on the basis of SEGMENTATION —> tracing patterns in material that at first appears to be shapeless and identify differently sized chunks of language (matching phonological strings and meanings) and acquire a repertoire of collocations and colligations
What is segmentation?
The ability of children to identify recurring chunks of language / the boundaries between words, syllables, and phonemes in phonological strings
What is the principle of least effort in first language acquisition and what are its advantages (Wray)?
‘break down the larger units only when you need to and as much as you need to‘ --> children break down phonological strings only in as many segments as needed
Advantages:
avoids overgeneralization and overregularization (producing too many rules)
minimizes the amount of processing needed
What is typical of native and of non-native word combinations?
native speakers
- formulaic pairings which become loosened
non-native speakers
- words in L1 and L2 that become paired (Wray 2002)
What are important factors in second language acquisition?
- neural plasticity
- transfer (of collocation)
- memory of phonological sequences
- nature of student interaction and output
- frequency and nature of input
- perceived closeness of L2 to L1; type of collocations (phrases vs. two-word collocations)
Comparing first and second language acquisition, what conclusion can be drawn for optimal language teaching?
- The principle of least effort is developmentally and neurologically plausible (cf. first language acquisition)
- word-based teaching should be avoided (instead: collocations+colligations!--> words should be learnt in context)
What are collocations?
lexical constructions: a sequence of specific words or terms that frequently occur together in a language: Word A + Word B (+Word C)
ex.: conventional wisdom
What are colligations?
Combinations of a specific word and a grammatical placeholder, any grammatical pattern surrounding a word
What is valency?
a particular type of grammatical pattern that a word occurs in
ex.: infinitive-clause, that-clause, -ing-clause etc.
A language is not built in words, but in...
constructions (consists of pre-fabricated chunks of language)
Why is the teaching of collocations and colligations so important in language teaching?
- language is not built in words, but in constructions (recurring combinations of particular words, lexis and grammar)
- because at least 80 per cent of all text consists of collocations (same underlying structure and meaning components, pre-fabricated chunks of language, variation only on the surface)
- many of these are fully transparent ‘probabemes’ (esp. phrases, difficult to learn, normally not noticed)
--> words should be learnt with their respective collocations and colligations, teaching words in context
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