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 TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files

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TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Empty
Bài gửiTiêu đề: TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files   TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files EmptyWed Jan 06, 2010 5:42 am

The following is the file involved in Ms Chung's teaching files, hope you can take its advantage!
TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots
The
Grammar-Translation Approach

This approach was historically used in teaching Greek
and Latin. The approach was generalized to teaching modern languages.

Classes are taught in the students' mother tongue, with
little active use of the target language. Vocabulary
is taught in the form of isolated word lists.
Elaborate
explanations of grammar are always provided.
Grammar
instruction provides the rules for putting words together; instruction often focuses on
the form and inflection of words.
Reading of difficult
texts is begun early in the course of study.
Little
attention is paid to the content of texts, which are treated as exercises in grammatical
analysis.
Often the only drills are exercises in
translating disconnected sentences from the target language into the mother tongue, and
vice versa.
Little or no attention is given to
pronunciation.

For a review of elements of grammar teaching click here.






TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots
The Direct
Approach

This approach was developed initially as a reaction to
the grammar-translation approach in an attempt to integrate more use of the target
language in instruction.

Lessons begin with a dialogue using a modern
conversational style in the target language. Material
is first presented orally with actions or pictures.
The
mother tongue is NEVER, NEVER used. There is no translation.
The preferred type of exercise is a series of questions in the target
language based on the dialogue or an anecdotal narrative. Questions are answered in the
target language.
Grammar is taught inductively--rules
are generalized from the practice and experience with the target language.
Verbs are used first and systematically conjugated only much later
after some oral mastery of the target language.
Advanced
students read literature for comprehension and pleasure. Literary texts are not analyzed
grammatically.
The culture associated with the target
language is also taught inductively. Culture is considered an important aspect of learning
the language.







TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots
The Reading
Approach

This approach is selected for practical and academic
reasons. For specific uses of the language in graduate or scientific studies. The approach
is for people who do not travel abroad for whom reading is the one usable skill in a
foreign language.




The priority in studying the target language is first,
reading ability and second, current and/or historical knowledge of the country where the
target language is spoken. Only the grammar necessary
for reading comprehension and fluency is taught.
Minimal
attention is paid to pronunciation or gaining conversational skills in the target
language.
From the beginning, a great amount of
reading is done in L2, both in and out of class.
The
vocabulary of the early reading passages and texts is strictly controlled for difficulty.

Vocabulary is expanded as quickly as possible, since the
acquisition of vocabulary is considered more important that grammatical skill.
Translation reappears in this approach as a respectable classroom
procedure related to comprehension of the written text.







TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots
The Audiolingual
Method

This method is based on the principles of behavior
psychology. It adapted many of the principles and procedures of the Direct Method, in part
as a reaction to the lack of speaking skills of the Reading Approach.




New material is presented in the form of a dialogue.
Based on the principle that language learning is habit
formation, the method fosters dependence on mimicry, memorization of set phrases and
over-learning.
Structures are sequenced and taught one
at a time.
Structural patterns are taught using
repetitive drills.
Little or no grammatical
explanations are provided; grammar is taught inductively.
Skills are sequenced: Listening, speaking, reading and writing are developed
in order.
Vocabulary is strictly limited and learned
in context.
Teaching points are determined by
contrastive analysis between L1 and L2.
There is
abundant use of language laboratories, tapes and visual aids.
There is an extended pre-reading period at the beginning of the course.
Great importance is given to precise native-like
pronunciation.
Use of the mother tongue by the teacher
is permitted, but discouraged among and by the students.
Successful responses are reinforced; great care is taken to prevent learner
errors.
There is a tendency to focus on manipulation
of the target language and to disregard content and meaning.

Hints for Using Audio-lingual Drills in L2 Teaching
1. The teacher must be careful to insure that all
of the utterances which students will make are actually within the practiced pattern. For
example, the use of the AUX verb have should not suddenly switch to have as a main
verb.

2. Drills should be conducted as rapidly as possibly so as to insure automaticity and
to establish a system.

3. Ignore all but gross errors of pronunciation when drilling for grammar practice.
4. Use of shortcuts to keep the pace o drills at a maximum. Use hand motions, signal
cards, notes, etc. to cue response. You are a choir director.

5. Use normal English stress, intonation, and juncture patterns conscientiously.
6. Drill material should always be meaningful. If the content words are not known,
teach their meanings.

7. Intersperse short periods of drill (about 10 minutes) with very brief alternative
activities to avoid fatigue and boredom.

8. Introduce the drill in this way:
a. Focus (by writing on the board, for example)
b. Exemplify (by speaking model sentences)
c. Explain (if a simple grammatical explanation is needed)
d. Drill
9. Don’t stand in one place; move about the room standing next to as many
different students as possible to spot check their production. Thus you will know who to
give more practice to during individual drilling.

10. Use the "backward buildup" technique for long and/or difficult patterns.
--tomorrow
--in the cafeteria tomorrow
--will be eating in the cafeteria tomorrow
--Those boys will be eating in the cafeteria tomorrow.
11. Arrange to present drills in the order of increasing complexity of student
response. The question is: How much internal organization or decision making must the
student do in order to make a response in this drill. Thus: imitation first, single-slot
substitution next, then free response last.



TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots

Community Language Learning
Curran, Charles A. Counseling-Learning
in Second Languages
. Apple River, Illinois: Apple River Press, 1976.

This methodology is not based on the usual methods by
which languages are taught. Rather the approach is patterned upon counseling techniques
and adapted to the peculiar anxiety and threat as well as the personal and language
problems a person encounters in the learning of foreign languages. Consequently, the
learner is not thought of as a student but as a client. The native instructors of the
language are not considered teachers but, rather are trained in counseling skills adapted
to their roles as language counselors.

The language-counseling relationship begins with the
client's linguistic confusion and conflict. The aim of the language counselor's skill is
first to communicate an empathy for the client's threatened inadequate state and to aid
him linguistically. Then slowly the teacher-counselor strives to enable him to arrive at
his own increasingly independent language adequacy. This process is furthered by the
language counselor's ability to establish a warm, understanding, and accepting
relationship, thus becoming an "other-language self" for the client. The process
involves five stages of adaptation:

STAGE 1
The client is completely dependent on the language
counselor.

1. First, he expresses only to the counselor and in
English
what he wishes to say to the group. Each group member overhears this English
exchange but no other members of the group are involved in the interaction.

2. The counselor then reflects these ideas back to the
client in the foreign language in a warm, accepting tone, in simple language in
phrases of five or six words.

3. The client turns to the group and presents his ideas in
the foreign language
. He has the counselor's aid if he mispronounces or hesitates on a
word or phrase. This is the client's maximum security stage.

STAGE 2
1. Same as above.
2. The client turns and begins to speak the foreign
language
directly to the group.

3. The counselor aids only as the client hesitates or
turns for help. These small independent steps are signs of positive confidence and hope.


STAGE 3
1. The client speaks directly to the group in the foreign
language. This presumes that the group has now acquired the ability to understand his
simple phrases.

2. Same as 3 above. This presumes the client's greater
confidence, independence, and proportionate insight into the relationship of phrases,
grammar, and ideas. Translation is given only when a group member desires it.

STAGE 4
1. The client is now speaking freely and complexly in the
foreign language. Presumes group's understanding.

2. The counselor directly intervenes in grammatical error,
mispronunciation, or where aid in complex expression is needed. The client is sufficiently
secure to take correction.

STAGE 5
1. Same as stage 4.
2. The counselor intervenes not only to offer correction
but to add idioms and more elegant constructions.


3. At this stage the client can become
counselor to the group in stages 1, 2, and 3.




TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots

The Silent Way
Caleb Gattegno, Teaching Foreign
Languages
in Schools: The Silent Way. New York City: Educational Solutions,
1972.

Procedures
This method begins by using a set of colored rods and
verbal commands in order to achieve the following:



To avoid the use of the vernacular. To create simple linguistic situations that remain under the complete control
of the teacher
To pass on to the learners the
responsibility for the utterances of the descriptions of the objects shown or the actions
performed.
To let the teacher concentrate on what the
students say and how they are saying it, drawing their attention to the differences in
pronunciation and the flow of words.
To generate a
serious game-like situation in which the rules are implicitly agreed upon by giving
meaning to the gestures of the teacher and his mime.
To
permit almost from the start a switch from the lone voice of the teacher using the foreign
language to a number of voices using it. This introduces components of pitch, timbre and
intensity that will constantly reduce the impact of one voice and hence reduce imitation
and encourage personal production of one's own brand of the sounds.

To provide the support of perception and action to the
intellectual guess of what the noises mean, thus bring in the arsenal of the usual
criteria of experience already developed and automatic in one's use of the mother tongue.
To provide a duration of spontaneous speech upon which the
teacher and the students can work to obtain a similarity of melody to the one heard, thus
providing melodic integrative schemata from the start.






Materials
The complete set of materials utilized as the language
learning progresses include:



A set of colored wooden rods A set of wall charts containing words of a "functional" vocabulary
and some additional ones; a pointer for use with the charts in Visual Dictation
A color coded phonic chart(s) Tapes
or discs, as required; films
Drawings and pictures,
and a set of accompanying worksheets
Transparencies,
three texts, a Book of Stories, worksheets







TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots


Functional-notional Approach
Finocchiaro, M. & Brumfit, C. (1983). The
Functional-Notional Approach
. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

This method of language teaching is categorized along
with others under the rubric of a communicative approach. The method stresses a means of
organizing a language syllabus. The emphasis is on breaking down the global concept of
language into units of analysis in terms of communicative situations in which they are
used.

Notions are meaning elements
that may be expressed through nouns, pronouns, verbs, prepositions, conjunctions,
adjectives or adverbs. The use of particular notions depends on three major factors: a.
the functions b. the elements in the situation, and c. the topic being discussed.

A situation may affect variations of language such as the use of dialects, the formality
or informality
of the language and the mode of
expression
. Situation includes the following elements:

A. The persons taking part in the speech act
B. The place where the conversation occurs
C. The time the speech act is taking place
D. The topic or activity that is being discussed
Exponents are the language
utterances or statements that stem from the function, the situation and the topic.

Code is the shared language
of a community of speakers.

Code-switching is a change or
switch in code during the speech act, which many theorists believe is purposeful behavior
to convey bonding, language prestige or other elements of interpersonal relations between
the speakers.


Functional Categories of Language

Mary Finocchiaro (1983, p. 65-66) has placed the functional categories under five
headings as noted below: personal, interpersonal, directive, referential, and imaginative.

Personal = Clarifying or arranging one’s
ideas; expressing one’s thoughts or feelings: love, joy, pleasure, happiness,
surprise, likes, satisfaction, dislikes, disappointment, distress, pain, anger, anguish,
fear, anxiety, sorrow, frustration, annoyance at missed opportunities, moral, intellectual
and social concerns; and the everyday feelings of hunger, thirst, fatigue, sleepiness,
cold, or warmth

Interpersonal = Enabling us to establish and
maintain desirable social and working relationships: Enabling us to establish and
maintain desirable social and working relationships:



  • greetings and leave takings
  • introducing people to others
  • identifying oneself to others
  • expressing joy at another’s success
  • expressing concern for other people’s welfare
  • extending and accepting invitations
  • refusing invitations politely or making alternative arrangements
  • making appointments for meetings
  • breaking appointments politely and arranging another mutually convenient time
  • apologizing
  • excusing oneself and accepting excuses for not meeting commitments
  • indicating agreement or disagreement
  • interrupting another speaker politely
  • changing an embarrassing subject
  • receiving visitors and paying visits to others
  • offering food or drinks and accepting or declining politely
  • sharing wishes, hopes, desires, problems
  • making promises and committing oneself to some action
  • complimenting someone
  • making excuses
  • expressing and acknowledging gratitude

Directive = Attempting to influence the
actions of others; accepting or refusing direction:



  • making suggestions in which the speaker is included
  • making requests; making suggestions
  • refusing to accept a suggestion or a request but offering an alternative
  • persuading someone to change his point of view
  • requesting and granting permission
  • asking for help and responding to a plea for help
  • forbidding someone to do something; issuing a command
  • giving and responding to instructions
  • warning someone
  • discouraging someone from pursuing a course of action
  • establishing guidelines and deadlines for the completion of actions
  • asking for directions or instructions

Referential = talking or reporting about
things, actions, events, or people in the environment in the past or in the future;
talking about language (what is termed the metalinguistic function: = talking or reporting about
things, actions, events, or people in the environment in the past or in the future;
talking about language (what is termed the metalinguistic function:



  • identifying items or people in the classroom, the school the home, the community
  • asking for a description of someone or something
  • defining something or a language item or asking for a definition
  • paraphrasing, summarizing, or translating (L1 to L2 or vice versa)
  • explaining or asking for explanations of how something works
  • comparing or contrasting things
  • discussing possibilities, probabilities, or capabilities of doing something
  • requesting or reporting facts about events or actions
  • evaluating the results of an action or event

Imaginative = Discussions involving elements
of creativity and artistic expression



  • discussing a poem, a story, a piece of music, a play, a painting, a film, a TV
    program, etc.
  • expanding ideas suggested by other or by a piece of literature or reading material
  • creating rhymes, poetry, stories or plays
  • recombining familiar dialogs or passages creatively
  • suggesting original beginnings or endings to dialogs or stories
  • solving problems or mysteries




TEACHING METHODOLOGY + file Mr Sa's power point files Colordots



Total
Physical Response

James J. Asher, Learning Another
Language Through Actions
. San Jose, California: AccuPrint, 1979.

James J. Asher defines the Total Physical Response (TPR)
method as one that combines information and skills through the use of the kinesthetic
sensory system. This combination of skills allows the student to assimilate information
and skills at a rapid rate. As a result, this success leads to a high degree of
motivation. The basic tenets are:

Understanding the spoken language before developing the
skills of speaking. Imperatives are the main
structures to transfer or communicate information.
The
student is not forced to speak, but is allowed an individual readiness period and allowed
to spontaneously begin to speak when the student feels comfortable and confident in
understanding and producing the utterances.

TECHNIQUE
Step I The teacher says the commands as he himself
performs the action.

Step 2 The teacher says the command as both the
teacher and the students then perform the action.

Step 3 The teacher says the command but only
students perform the action

Step 4 The teacher tells one student at a time to
do commands

Step 5 The roles of teacher and student are
reversed. Students give commands to teacher and to other students.


Step 6 The teacher and student allow
for command expansion or produces new sentences.



________________________________________________________________

File thầy Sa cung cấp
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