Teaching English
Technical Terms
Technical Terms
Kartei Details
Karten | 77 |
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Sprache | English |
Kategorie | Englisch |
Stufe | Universität |
Erstellt / Aktualisiert | 05.01.2018 / 12.01.2018 |
Weblink |
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fluency
vocab ready for fluent use. 1. use language that students already know. 2 involve large quanitities of language use. 3. focus on communicating meaning. 4. push students to perform faster than usual.
(speed reading, repeated reading extensive reading ten minute writing
listening to text several times
listening to waht they0ve already read.
432 students give talk to learners with decreasing time to do
recording text and rerecording...
language focus
raise students awareness about the target language
ex: chosose two or three sentences from your text which include the grammar "used to"
students should understand the meaning of sentence.
explain rules. (used to + infinitive)
Students check text for more examples. point out: used to: talk about states and habis that continued for a period of time in the past.
focus on language and focus on form
Both focus
on form and focus on language are concerned with the correct use of the language but they differ in
that the first occurs in the context of a meaning-focused activity, while focus on form implies that
learners work on pre-selected forms outside the context of a communicative activity. This is the kind of
activity you would find in a grammar practice book for example.
In TBL focus on form is embedded in a context. Once learners have processed language for its meaning,
they analyse it, find out meanings of specific forms, regularities, similarities and differences.
Learners become active explorers of language by working out rules and principles for themselves. The
idea here is that information will be more deeply processed and stored if learners are given an opportunity
to work things out for themselves. Rather than simply being given the principle or rule
grammar interpretation
filling in the correct form of of the verb, filling in name in a sentence so they realize the significace of the verbs
choose the correct form
choose between two answers, don't have to thinkt about correct form and spelling but can focus on meaning
correct and explain
help finding out whether learners have understood the meaning or form of a new structure.
grammaticalization: (holistic exercise types)
take a string of words from a familiar text, remove many of the grammatical markers and ask learnes to restore them
progressive deletion (holistic exercise types)
write sentence, delete some words and then more words and students read text from memory.
gap-filing (holistic exercise types)
take familiar text from coursebook which contains useful chunks, phrases, words, verb forms... delet words. "cloze marker".
holistic exercises
recall activity. students focus on grammatical words and phrases by recalling a text.
dictogloss
learnes are required to reconstruct a short text by listening and noting down key words, which are then used as a base for reconstruction. 1. read text students do nothing. 2 read text students take notes of keywords. 3. in groups reconstruct.
practise listening, reading and writing. and use vocab.
ICC
Intercultural communicative competece
- motivate and involve learners, making them curious about the other culture(s) and helping them to engage with other cultural practices;
- help learners to become aware of and reflect their own cultural practices;
- allow learners to discover and understand other cultural practices, changing perspectives in the process. During this process the integration of cultural knowledge can become necessary, either through other learners or the teacher;
- make learners compare cultural practices, realizing similarities and differences. Learners evaluate their own and other cultural practices (critical cultural awareness), possibly developing their own (new) positions and creating (new) discourses/ products (coordinating perspectives, transforming practice).’
grammaring up tasks
Speaking: Give learners the opportunity to repeat a speaking task. While repeating the task,
learners have more processing capabilities available. They are no longer concerned with what
they want to say and can focus more easily on how they say it. Their language might become
more complex.
You’ll get a similar effect if you give your learners preparation time for the speaking. They’ll
think about what and how they might want to say something and will then have more processing
capabilities when doing the task.
• Writing: Writing itself allows for more processing time. At the same time, writing often pushes
learners to use more accurate language because they don’t just talk about the here and now.
They need to use more precise language to ensure their readers can follow.
route map for teaching grammar
form focus
analysis: guided discovery (C)
learnesr uncover grammar. meaning 7 use and then form final round up.
Practise (R)
checking answers (Are the rules clear?) if not back to analysis
practise activities: - first receptive, include holistic exercises types, meaningful practise, personalised and information gap.
Form-based approach
Focus on grammar and form. take grat care of producing accurately -> effective
PPP (presentation-practise-production)
meaning-based approach
1. focus on meaning / -> language even if inaccurate -> effective
2. students ask teacher or look up how to express themselves
3. -> form focus
Task
always A (acr) (authentic)
focus on meaning, free use of language, engages learners interest, has a gap, has an outcome, relates to real world activities,
r Does the activity engage learners' interest?
z ls there a primary focus on meaning?
3 ls there an outcome?
4 ls success judged in terms of outcome?
5 ls completion a priority?
6 Does the activity relate to real world activities?
task outcome
product or result of a task sequence (text, mindmap, example list...)
route map for listening
pre-listening (activate top-down process)
while-listening (top-down not always)
post listening (form focus, task repetition, follow-on task
top-process
content schema = based on real life experience
textual schema = knowledge of situational routines
bottom-up process
knowledge of vocabulary, grammar, sounds
listening for specific information
catch names, places, dates,
gist reading
understanding the text in a general way
inference
listen between the lines, listening for meaning that is implied
contextual guessing
guess the meaning of a word by listening at the surrounding words
Route map for reading
pre-reading (introd., prestasks, minitasks...) top down process activation
while-reading (tasks to focus on fast reading, specific info...)to p down
post-reading( form focus, task repetition, follow on task.)
reading for specific information
reading text quickly to find apecific inf. names numbers, addreses
gist reading
go through a text quickly... understand it in a general way...
inference
reading between the lines, reader understands what is mes meant but it‘s it not stated in a passage
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