Teaching Grammar
Grammar is central to the teaching and learning of languages. It is also one of the more difficult aspects of language to teach well.
Many people, including language teachers, hear the word
"grammar" and think of a fixed set of word forms and rules of usage.
They associate "good" grammar with the prestige forms of the language,
such as those used in writing and in formal oral presentations, and
"bad" or "no" grammar with the language used in everyday conversation or
used by speakers of nonprestige forms.
Language teachers who adopt this definition focus
on grammar as a set of forms and rules. They teach grammar by explaining
the forms and rules and then drilling students on them. This results in
bored, disaffected students who can produce correct forms on exercises
and tests, but consistently make errors when they try to use the
language in context.
Other language teachers, influenced
by recent theoretical work on the difference between language learning and language acquisition,
tend not to teach grammar at all. Believing that children acquire their
first language without overt grammar instruction, they expect
students to learn their second language the same way. They assume that
students will absorb grammar rules as they hear, read, and use the
language in communication activities. This approach does not allow
students to use one of the major tools they have as learners: their
active understanding of what grammar is and how it works in the language
they already know.
The communicative competence model balances these
extremes. The model recognizes that overt grammar instruction helps
students acquire the language more efficiently, but it incorporates
grammar teaching and learning into the larger context of teaching
students to use the language. Instructors using this model teach
students the grammar they need to know to accomplish defined
communication tasks.
Material for this section was drawn from “Grammar
in the foreign language classroom: Making principled
Section Contents
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Grammar
Strategies for Learning Grammar
Developing Grammar Activities
Using Textbook Grammar Activities
Assessing Grammar Proficiency
Resources
Teaching Listening
Listening is the language modality that is used most
frequently. It has been estimated that adults spend almost half their
communication time listening, and students may receive as much as 90% of
their in-school information
through listening to instructors and to one another. Often, however,
language learners do not recognize the level of effort that goes into
developing listening ability.
Far from passively receiving and recording aural input,
listeners actively involve themselves in the interpretation of what they
hear, bringing their own background knowledge and linguistic
knowledge to bear on the information contained in the aural text. Not
all listening is the same; casual greetings, for example, require a
different sort of listening capability than do academic lectures.
Language learning requires intentional listening that employs strategies
for identifying sounds and making meaning from them.
Listening involves a sender (a person, radio, television), a
message, and a receiver (the listener). Listeners often must process
messages as they come, even if they are still processing what they have
just heard, without backtracking or looking ahead. In addition,
listeners must cope with the sender's choice of vocabulary, structure,
and rate of delivery. The complexity of the listening process is
magnified in second language contexts, where the receiver also has
incomplete control of the language.
Given the importance of listening in language learning and
teaching, it is essential for language teachers to help their students
become effective listeners. In the communicative approach to language teaching,
this means modeling listening strategies and providing listening
practice in authentic situations: those that learners are likely to
encounter when they use the language outside the classroom.
Section Contents
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Listening
Strategies for Developing Listening Skills
Developing Listening Activities
Using Textbook Listening Activities
Assessing Listening Proficiency
Resources
Teaching Speaking
Many language learners regard speaking ability as
the measure of knowing a language. These learners define fluency as the
ability to converse with others, much more than the ability to read,
write, or comprehend oral language. They regard speaking as the most
important skill they can acquire, and they assess their progress in
terms of their accomplishments in spoken communication.
Language learners need to recognize that speaking involves three areas of knowledge:
- Mechanics (pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary): Using the right words in the right order with the correct pronunciation
- Functions (transaction and interaction): Knowing when clarity of message is essential (transaction/information exchange) and when precise understanding is not required (interaction/relationship building)
- Social and cultural rules and norms (turn-taking, rate of speech, length of pauses between speakers, relative roles of participants): Understanding how to take into account who is speaking to whom, in what circumstances, about what, and for what reason.
In the communicative model of language teaching,
instructors help their students develop this body of knowledge by
providing authentic practice that prepares students for real-life
communication situations. They help their students develop the ability
to produce grammatically correct, logically connected sentences that are
appropriate to specific contexts, and to do so using acceptable (that
is, comprehensible) pronunciation.
Section Contents
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Speaking
Strategies for Developing Speaking Skills
Developing Speaking Activities
Using Textbook Speaking Activities
Assessing Speaking Proficiency
Resources
Material for this section was drawn from “Spoken language: What it is and how to teach it” by Grace Stovall Burkart, in Modules for the professional preparation of teaching assistants in foreign languages (Grace Stovall Burkart, ed.; Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics, 1998)
Teaching Reading
Traditionally, the purpose of learning to read in a language
has been to have access to the literature written in that language. In
language instruction, reading materials have traditionally been chosen
from literary texts that represent "higher" forms of culture.
This approach assumes that students learn to read a language by
studying its vocabulary, grammar, and sentence structure, not by
actually reading it. In this approach, lower level learners read only
sentences and paragraphs generated by textbook writers and instructors.
The reading of authentic materials is limited to the works of great
authors and reserved for upper level students who have developed the
language skills needed to read them.
The communicative approach to language teaching
has given instructors a different understanding of the role of reading
in the language classroom and the types of texts that can be used in
instruction. When the goal of instruction is communicative competence,
everyday materials such as train schedules, newspaper articles, and
travel and tourism Web sites become appropriate classroom materials,
because reading them is one way communicative competence is developed.
Instruction in reading and reading practice thus become essential parts
of language teaching at every level.
Reading Purpose and Reading Comprehension
Reading is an activity with a purpose. A person may read in
order to gain information or verify existing knowledge, or in order to
critique a writer's ideas or writing style. A person may also read for
enjoyment, or to enhance knowledge of the language being read. The
purpose(s) for reading guide the reader's selection of texts.
The purpose for reading also determines the appropriate
approach to reading comprehension. A person who needs to know whether
she can afford to eat at a particular restaurant needs to comprehend the
pricing information provided on the menu, but does not need to
recognize the name of every appetizer listed. A person reading poetry
for enjoyment needs to recognize the words the poet uses and the ways
they are put together, but does not need to identify main idea and
supporting details. However, a person using a scientific article to
support an opinion needs to know the vocabulary that is used, understand
the facts and cause-effect sequences that are presented, and recognize
ideas that are presented as hypotheses and givens.
Reading research shows that good readers
- Read extensively
- Integrate information in the text with existing knowledge
- Have a flexible reading style, depending on what they are reading
- Are motivated
- Rely on different skills interacting: perceptual processing, phonemic processing, recall
- Read for a purpose; reading serves a function
Reading as a Process
Reading is an interactive process that goes on between the
reader and the text, resulting in comprehension. The text presents
letters, words, sentences, and paragraphs that encode meaning. The
reader uses knowledge, skills, and strategies to determine what that
meaning is.
Reader knowledge, skills, and strategies include
- Linguistic competence: the ability to recognize the elements of the writing system; knowledge of vocabulary; knowledge of how words are structured into sentences
- Discourse competence: knowledge of discourse markers and how they connect parts of the text to one another
- Sociolinguistic competence: knowledge about different types of texts and their usual structure and content
- Strategic competence: the ability to use top-down strategies (see Strategies for Developing Reading Skills for descriptions), as well as knowledge of the language (a bottom-up strategy)
The purpose(s) for reading and the type of text determine the
specific knowledge, skills, and strategies that readers need to apply to
achieve comprehension. Reading comprehension is thus much more than
decoding. Reading comprehension results when the reader knows which
skills and strategies are appropriate for the type of text, and
understands how to apply them to accomplish the reading purpose.
Section Contents
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Reading
Strategies for Developing Reading Skills
Developing Reading Activities
Using Textbook Reading Activities
Assessing Reading Proficiency
Resources
Teaching Writing
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Section Contents (will be available soon)
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Writing
Strategies for Developing Writing Skills
Developing Writing Activities
Using Textbook Writing Activities
Assessing Writing Proficiency
Resources
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