英语教学法复习完整版

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英语教学法复习完整版

英语教学法复习完整版

Revision Contents:Unit 1 Language and Learning1. What are the major views of language? What are their implications to language teaching or learning?Structural View: It sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystem: from phonological, morphological, lexical, etc. to sentence. Each language has a finite number of such structural items.To learn a language means to learn these structural items so as to be able to understand and produce language.Teaching methods based on this view:the Audio-lingual methodTotal Physical Responsethe Oral ApproachSituational Language Teaching.Audiolingual approach: The teaching of a second language through imitation, repetition, and reinforcement. It emphasizes the teaching of speaking and listening before reading and writing and the use of mother tongue in the classroom is not allowed.The principal features of audiolingualism are an emphasis on structures in the language which can be learned as regular patterns of verbal behavior and the belief that learning is a process of habit formation.Functional View: It sees language as a linguistic system but also as a means for doing things. Most of our day-to- day language use involves functional activities: offering , suggesting , advising, apologizing, etc. Therefore, learners learn a language in order to do things with it. To perform functions, learners need to know how to combine the grammatical rules and the vocabulary to express notions that perform the functions.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: communicative approachesInteractional View: It considers language as a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary of the language, but also need to know the rules for using them in a whole range of communicative context.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: Strategic interaction; communicative approaches.to know how to combine the grammatical rules and the vocabulary to express notions that perform the functions.a linguisticsystem ,means fordoing things Functional not only to know thegrammar and vocabulary ofthe language , but also toknow the rules for using themin a whole range ofcommunicative context. a communicati ve toolInteractional to learn these structural items a linguistic system StructuralLanguage learning Language Views2. What are the major Views on language learning ? What are their implications tolanguage teaching?Behaviouralist theoryBased on the theory of conditioning, Skinner suggested language is also a formof behaviour. It can be learned the same way as an animal is trained to respond tostimuli. This theory of language learning is referred to as behaviouralism, which wasadopted for some time by the language teaching profession, particularly in America.One influential result is the audio-lingual method, which involves endless“listen and repeat ” drilling activities. The idea of this method is that language islearned by constant repetition and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakes wereimmediately corrected, and correct utterances were immediately praised. This methodis still used in many parts of the world today .Cognitive theoryIt seems to be largely the result of Noam Chomsky ‟s reaction to Skinner ‟sbehavioural theory , which led to the revival of structural linguistics.The key point of Chomsky ‟s theory is reflected in his most famous question: iflanguage is a learned behaviour, how can a child produce a sentence that has neverbeen said by others before.One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their ownsentences based on their understanding of certain rules. This idea is clearly inopposition to the Audio-Lingual Method.According to the cognitive theory , learning is a process in which the learneractively tries to make sense of data. The basic technique associated with a cognitivetheory of language learning is the problem-solving task.Constructivist theory --- represented by John DeweyLearning is a complex cognitive process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his or her own experiences and what he /she already knows.Implications for classroom teachingTeaching should be built based on what learners already know and engage learners in learning activities.It is believed that education is used to develop the mind, not just to rotate or recall what is learned.Teachers need to design activities to interact with learners to foster inventive, creative, critical learners.Teachers must balance an understanding of the habits, characteristics as well as personalities of individual learners with an understanding of the means of arousing learners‟ interest and curiosity for learning.Socio-constructivist theory ----represented by VygotskyIt emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of ‘Zone of Proximal Development’(ZPD) and scaffolding.Learning is best achieved through the dynamic interaction between the teacher and the learner and between learners. With the teacher‟s scaffolding through questions and explanations, or with a more capable peers‟support, the learner can move to a higher level of understanding and extend his / her skills and knowledge to the fullest potential.3. Socio-constructivist theory of language learning emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context.4. The quality of a good language teacher includes ethic devotion, professional quality and personal styles.5.One influential idea of cognitive approach to language teaching is that students should be allowed to create their own sentence based on their own understanding of certain rules.Unit 2 Communicative Principles and Activities1. The goal of CLT is to develop students‟ communicative competence.2.What is communicative compentence? Try to list some of its components andtheir implication to teaching.Communicative compentence refers to both the knowledge about the language and the knowledge about how to use the language appropriately in communicative situations. According to Hedge, it includes five components.Linguistic competence --- knowledge of the language itself, its form and meaning Pragmatic competence --- the appropriate use of language in social context Discourse competence --- one‟s ability to create coherent written text or conversation and the ability to understand them (ability to express or to understand a topic logically and coherently by effectively employing or comprehending the cohesive markers used in the discourse /ability to initiate, develop, enter, interrupt, check, or confirm in a conversation)Strategic competence--- strategies one employs when there is communicationbreakdown due to lack of resourcesFluency---- one‟s ability to …link units of speech together with facility and without strain or inappropriate slowness or undue hesitationImplications for teaching and learning:Linguistic competenceTeachers need to help learners----achieve accuracy in the grammatical forms of the language;----pronounce the forms accurately;----use stress, rhythm, and intonation to express meaning;----build a range of vocabulary;----learn the script and spelling rules;----achieve accuracy in syntax and word formation.Pragmatic competenceTeachers need to help learners---learn the relationship between grammatical forms and functions;---use stress and intonation to express attitude and emotion;---learn the scale of formality;---understand and use emotive tone;---use the grammatical rules of language;---select language forms appropriate to topic, listener, or setting, etc.Discourse competenceTeachers need to help learners----take longer turns, use discourse markers and open and close conversations;----appreciate and be able to produce contextualised written texts in a variety of genres;----be able to use cohesive devices in reading and writing texts;----be able to cope with authentic texts.Strategic competenceTeachers need to enable learners----to take risks in using the language;----to use a range of communicative strategies;----to learn the language needed to engage in some of these strategies, e.g. …What do you call a thing that/person who…‟FluencyTeachers need to help learners-----deal with the information gap of real discourse;-----process language and respond appropriately with a degree of ease;-----be able to respond with reasonable speed in …real time”.3.What is communicative language teaching?Communicative language teaching began in Britain in the 1960s as a replacement to Situational Language Teaching. This was partly in response to Chomsky's criticisms of structural theories of language and partly based on the theories of British functional linguistics, as well as American sociolinguists.The goal of communicative language approaches is to create a realistic context for language acquisition in the classroom. The focus is on functional language usage and the ability to learners to express their own ideas, feelings, attitudes, desires and needs.Open ended questioning and problem-solving activities and exchanges of personal information are utilized as the primary means of communication. Students usually work with authentic materials in small groups on communication activities, during which they receive practice in negotiating meaning.This method is learner-centered and emphasizes communication and real-life situations. The role of the instructor in CLT is quite different from traditional teaching methods. In the traditional classroom, the teacher is in charge and "controls" the learning. In CLT the teacher serves as more of a facilitator, allowing students to be in charge of their own learning.4.Principles in communicative language teachingCommunication principle: Activities that involve real communication promote learning.Task principle: Activities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning.Meaningfulness principle: Language that is meaningful to the learning supports the learning process.5.Strong version and week versionA weak version: Learners first acquire language as a structural system and then learn how to use it in communication.It regards overt teaching of language forms and functions as necessary means for helping learners to develop the ability to use them for communication.A strong version:Strong version: The strong version claims th at …la nguage is acquire through c ommunication‟. Learners discover the structural system in the process of learning how to communicate.It regards experiences of using the language as the main means or necessary conditions for learning a language as they provide the experience for learners to see how language is used in communication.5. List some of the communicative activities.1) Functional communicative activitiesIdentifying picturesDiscovering identical pairsDiscovering sequence or locationsDiscovering missing informationDiscovering missing featuresDiscovering “secrets”Communicating patterns and picturesCommunicative modelsDiscovering differencesFollowing directionsReconstructing story-sequencesPooling information to solve a problem2) Social interaction activitiesRole-playing through cued dialoguesRole-playing through cues and informationRole-playing through situation and goalsRole-playing through debate and discussionLarge-scale simulation activitiesimprovisation6. Main features communicative activities Some main features of communicativeactivities (Ellis 1990)Students make use of materials6. No materials control Students work by themselves.5. No teacher interventionStudents are free to use all kinds of language forms and skills, not just certain forms given by teacher.4. Variety of languageConcentrate on what to do and what to say in the activity, not how to say certain forms.3. Content, not form A need to do something 2. Communicative desireA need to know something.---‟an information gap ‟1. Communictive purposenotes The six criteria7. The Task-based ApproachA task-based approach sees the language process as one of learning through doing.It stresses the importance to combine form-focused teaching withcommunication-focused teaching.The task-based approach aims at providing opportunities for the learners toexperiment with and explore both spoken and written language through learningactivities which are designed to engage learners in the authentic, practical andfunctional use of language for meaningful purposes.Task -based Learning offers an alternative for language teachers. In a task-basedlesson the teacher doesn't pre-determine what language will be studied, the lesson isbased around the completion of a central task and the language studied is determinedby what happens as the students complete it.So it aims to provide learners with a natural context for language use .As learnerswork to complete a task ,they have abundant opportunity to interact .Such interactionis thought to facilitate language acquisition as learners have to work to understandeach other and to express their own meaning .By so doing ,they have to check to seeif they have comprehended correctly and,at times,they have to seek clarification.By interacting with others,they get to listen to language which may be beyond their present ability,but which may be assimilated into their knowledge of the target language for use at a later time.Task presented in the form of a problem-solving negotiation between knowledge that the learner holds and new knowledge7. What is a task?Any one of the following definitions is ok:A task is “a piece of work undertaken f or oneself or for others, freely or for some reward. Thus examples of tasks include painting a fence, dressing a child. In other words, by …task‟ is meant the hundred and one things people do in everyday life, at work, at play and in between”.-------- Long (1985)[A task is] an activity which require learners to arrive at an outcome from given information through some process of thought, and which allows teachers to control and regulate that process. ------ Prabhu (1987)… a piece of classroom work which involve learners in comprehending, manipulating, producing or interacting in the target language while their attention is principally focused on meaning rather than on form. ----Nunan (1989) Tasks are always activities where the target language is used by the learner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.”A task is an activity in which students use the target language to do something, usually with a non-linguistic purpose.8. A task is believed to have four components: a purpose, a context, a process, and a product.9. What is PPP model?In this model, a language classroom consists of three stages: Presentation of new language item in a context---controlled practice (drilling, repetition, dialogue reading, etc)---production of the language in a meaningful way (a role-play, a drama, an interview, etc.)10. A task-based language classroom consists of three stages. They are pre-task stage, the stage of task cycle, and the stage of language focus.Unit 31. The overall language ability required in the 2001 National English Curriculum includes the following aspects language knowledge, language skills, learning strategies, affects and cultural understanding.2. What is a syllabus?A syllabus is a specification of what takes place in the classroom, which usually contains the aims and contents of teaching and sometimes contains suggestions of methodology.3. What is curriculum?A curriculum, however, provides (1) general statements about the rationale aboutlanguage, language learning and language teaching, (2) detailed specification of aims, objectives and targets learning purpose, and (3) implementations of a program. In some sense, a syllabus is part of a curriculum.Syllabus is often used to refer to something similar to a language teaching approach, whereas curriculum refers to a specific document of a language program developed for a particular country or region.4. Designing principles for the National English Curriculum1) Aim for educating all students, and emphasize quality-oriented education.2) Promote learner-centeredness, and respect individual differences.3. Develop competence-based objectives, and allow flexibility and adaptability.4) Pay close attention to the learning process, and advocate experiential learning and participation.5. Attach particular importance to formative assessment, and give special attention to the development of competence.6. Optimize learning resources, and maximize opportunities for learning and using the language.Unit 4. Lesson Planning1. What is lesson planning?Lesson planning means making decisions in advance about what aims to be achieved, materials to be covered, activities to be organized, and techniques, resources to be used in order to achieve the aims of the lesson.2. Principles for good lesson planning include: Aim, V ariety, Flexibility, Learnability and Linkage3. Lesson planning at two levels:Macro planning: planning over a longer period of time (programme planning / whole course planning---one semester planning---half a semester planning) Micro planning: planning for a specific unit or a lesson (40 or 50 minutes)4. Components of a lesson planBackground information: number of students/ ages/ grade/ genders/ the time and the date of the lesson/ the time duration of the lessonTeaching objectives: What do you want students to know and be able to do? Language contents and skills: structures, vocabulary, functions, topics and so on; listening, speaking, reading and writing.Teaching stages and procedure: the major chunks of activities that teachers go through in a lesson. Procedures are the detailed steps in each teaching stage.1) Five-step teaching model(1) warm-up/ a tarter/revision;(2) presentation(3) drilling(4) consolidation(5) summary and homework2) The three P‟s model: presentation, practice, and productionTeaching aids: real objects/ flashcards/ wordcards/ worksheets/ wallcharts/ cassette tapes/ magazine pictures/ video, Multi-media, etc.End of lesson summary:Purposes of making a summary is to take learning further and deeper by helping the students to refer back to the learning objectives; To create a sense of achievement and completion of tasks for the students. To develop with students a habit of reflection on learning; stimulate interest, curiosity and anticipation about the next phase of learning; help students draw out applications of what has been learned and highlight the important conceptions which have developed.Homework assignmentOptional activitiesAfter class reflection:Teachers are encouraged to keep a brief account of what happened in the lesson: feelings about the lesson, students‟performances, unexpected incidents, surprises, things that went well, things that went wrong and things to be improved and things to be given more attention in the next lesson.Unit 5 Classroom Management1.What is classroom management?Classroom Management refers to the way teachers organize what goes on in the classroom.2. Types of student grouping and their advantages and disadvantagesIn language classroom can be grouped in four different ways. They are whole-class work (lockstep), pair work, group work and individual study.1) whole-class work (lockstep)Lockstep refers to the time when all the students are under the control of the teacher. They are all doing the same activity at the same rhythm and pace. Lockstep is adopted when presenting new language, give explanations, check answers, do accuracy-based reproduction, or summarize learning.Advantages:It reinforces a sense of belonging among a group of members. When students are doing the same activity together, everyone feels being together with others.It is good for teachers to give instruction and explanation together and it is an ideal way to show materials and do presentations together.Disadvantages:Everyone is forced to do the same thing at the same time and at the same pace. Individuality is not favored in this sense.Not everyone has the opportunity to express what they want.Some students feel nervous and anxious when they are asked to present in front of the class.It favors the transmission of knowledge from teacher to students rather than students discovering things by themselves.It is not a good way to enhance real communication. Students cannot communicate with each other in this sense.2) pair work: the time when students work in pairs on an exercise or task. Itcould be a dialogue reading, a game or an information-gap task between two students.Advantages:It dramatically increases students’speaking time in each class.It allows students to work together rather than under the teacher’s guidance.It allows teacher’s time to work with the week pair while others are working on their own.It can promote cooperation between students.It can create a more relaxed and friendly context for students to learn.It is relatively quick and easy to organize.DisadvantagesIt is often very noisy and teachers are afraid of losing control of the class.Some students may talk in native language or something not related to the topic. It is not very easy for teachers to monitor every pair.Some students may not like to work with the peers, and they think they can only learn from the teacher. So they refuse to participate in the activities.The choice of a pair is also a problem. Some students don’t like to work with particular partner while someone may dominate all the time.3) group workGroup work refers to the time when students work in small groups.Advantages:Like pair work, it dramatically increases the amount of talk of individual students.There is always a great chance of different opinions and contributions to the work.It also encourages cooperation and negotiation skills among students.It promotes learner autonomy by allowing students to make their own decision rather than follow the teachers.DisadvantagesLike pair work, it is likely to make the classroom very noisy and some teachers feel very uncomfortable with the noise.Not everyone enjoys the work since many of them prefer to work with teachers rather than peers.Some students may dominate the talk while others may be very passive or even quiet all the time.It is difficult for teacher to organize. It may take a longer time for teachers to group students and there may be not enough space for students to move around in classroom.Some groups may finish the task fast while some may be very slow. So teachers need to prepare the optional activities for the quick group and be ready to help the slower ones all the time.4) individual studyIndividual study is the stage where the students are left to work on their own and at their own speed.Advantages:It allows students free time, style and pace to study on their own.It is less stressful compared with whole class work.It can develop learner autonomy and form good learning habits.It can create some peaceful and quiet time in class.DisadvantagesIt does not help a class to develop a sense of belonging. Students learn bythemselves and it does not promote team spirit.It may not be very motivating for students.It does not benefit communication between students. Students cannot developspeaking ability in this sense. Ac tivity 5: Group dis c us s ionThe advantages and disadvantages of the above groupingLess dynamic classroom;No co-operation;No outside pressure;Study at own speed;Individual studyThe same as those in pair work;plays some students might dominate;Difficult to group;Communication in its real sense;More dynamic than pair work;promoting self-reliance;Group work Students stray away from the task;Using native language;Noise and indiscipline.More chance for practice;Encouraging co-operation;Relaxing atmosphere;Pair work Students have little chance to speak;Same speed for different students;Nervous in front of the whole class;Not enough communication;All the class are concentrating; good modeling from teacher;comfortable in choral practiceWhole-class work Disadvantages Advantages Grouping3. The role of the teacher ---- contoller, assessor, organizer, prompter, participant, resource provider4. The new curriculum requires the teacher to put on the following new roles: facilitator, guides, and researchers.5. What are the functions or purposes of questions?To focus students‟ attentionsTo invite thinking or imaginationsTo check understandingTo stimulate recall of informationTo challenge studentsTo assess learning6. Classification of questionsQuestions have been classified using different criteria, mainly based on the level of thinking involved in answering the questions.Closed v.s open--- Closed questions refer to those with only one single correct answer while open questions may invite many different answers.Display v.s genuine--- Display questions are those that the answers are already known to the teacher and they are used in checking if students know the answers, too. Genuine questions are those which are used to find out new information and more communicative.Lower-ordered v.s high-ordered--- Lower-ordered questions refer to those that simply require recalling of information or memorisation of facts while higher-ordered questions require more reasoning, analysis, and evaluation.7. How to deal with errors?The distinction between mistakes and errors:A mistake: a performance error that is either a random guess or a “slip of tongue/pen”, it is a failure performance to a known system. A mi stake has nothing to do with the language competence.An error has direct relation with the learners‟ language competence. Errors do not result from carelessness nor hesitation, but lack of knowledge in the target language. Language errors cannot be self-corrected.When to correct:accuracy-based activities;fluency-based activitiesHow to correct:Direct teacher correctionIndirect teacher correctionSelf correctionPeer correctionWhole class correctionSelf-correction is encouraged before teacher correction or peer correction because if it is a mistake, the student himself/herself will be able to correct it.Indirect teacher correction is encouraged rather than direct teacher correction to avoid damaging students‟ Self esteem and confidence.Unit 6 Teaching Pronunciation1.True or false?2. Factors that determine whether students need focus on pronunciation(1) Similarities of sound system between the native language and the target language.(2) Learners‟ learning context --- Learners‟ exposure to English(3) Learners‟ age---- Adults are more likely to substitute English sounds with sounds from their native language.3. Critical Period HypothesisThis hypothesis states that if humans do not learn a foreign language before a certain age (perhaps around puberty), then due to changes such as maturation of the brain, it becomes impossible to learn the foreign language like a native speaker.4. The goal of teaching pronunciation should be: consistency, intelligibility, and communicative efficiency.(1) Consistency: The pronunciation should be smooth and natural.(2) Intelligibility: The pronunciation should be understandable to the listeners.(3) Communicative efficiency: The pronunciation should help to convey the meaning that is intended by the speaker.5. Imagine that you want to focus on a sound that your students are having difficulty with. Which of the following steps are necessary? In what order would you teach and practice the sound? On the line tick the steps that you think are necessary. In the brackets, write the order numbers.Focus only on those sounds which are causing difficulty to the students. The following steps may be helpful in teaching the difficult sounds:1) Say the sound alone, but this may be avoided wherever possible.2) Say the sound in a word.3) Contrast it with other sounds if necessary.4) Write words on the board only when it becomes necessary to make your point clearer.5) Explain how to make the sound when necessary.6) Have students repeat the sound in chorus.7) Have individual students repeat the sound.6. List some methods of practicing sounds.Minimal pairsWhich orderOdd one outCompletion。

王蔷《英语教学法》复习

王蔷《英语教学法》复习

Revision Contents:Unit 1 Language and Learning1. What are the major views of language? What are their implications to language teaching or learning?Structural View: It sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystem: from phonological, morphological, lexical, etc. to sentence. Each language has a finite number of such structural items.To learn a language means to learn these structural items so as to be able to understand and produce language.Audiolingual approach: The teaching of a second language through imitation, repetition, and reinforcement. It emphasizes the teaching of speaking and listening before reading and writing and the use of mother tongue in the classroom is not allowed. The principal features of audiolingualism are an emphasis on structures in the language which can be learned as regular patterns of verbal behavior and the belief that learning is a process of habit formation.Functional View: It sees language as a linguistic system but also as a means for doing things. Most of our day-to- day language use involves functional activities: offering, suggesting, advising, apologizing, etc. Therefore, learners learn a language in order to do things with it. To perform functions, learners need to know how to combine the grammatical rules and the vocabulary to express notions that perform the functions. Communicative approaches are based on this view of language.Interactional View: It considers language as a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary of the language, but also need to know the rules for using them in a whole range of communicative context.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: Strategic interaction; communicative approaches.2. What are the major Views on language learning? What are their implications to language teaching?Behaviouralist theoryBased on the theory of conditioning, Skinner suggested language is also a form of behaviour. It can be learned the same way as an animal is trained to respond to stimuli. This theory of language learning is referred to as behaviouralism, which was adopted for some time by the language teaching profession, particularly in America.One influential result is the audio-lingual method, which involves endless “listen and repeat” drilling activities. The idea of this method is that language is learned by constant repetition and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakeswere immediately corrected, and correct utterances were immediately praised. This method is still used in many parts of the world today.Cognitive theoryIt seems to be largely the result of Noam Chomsky’s reaction to Skinner’s behavioural theory, which led to the revival of structural linguistics.The key point of Chomsky’s theory is reflected in his most famous question: if language is a learned behaviour, how can a child produce a sentence that has never been said by others before.One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentences based on their understanding of certain rules. This idea is clearly in opposition to the Audio-Lingual Method.According to the cognitive theory, learning is a process in which the learner actively tries to make sense of data. The basic technique associated with a cognitive theory of language learning is the problem-solving task.Constructivist theory: Learning is a complex cognitive process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his or her own experiences and what he /she already knows. Implications for classroom teachingTeaching should be built based on what learners already know and engage learners in learning activities.It is believed that education is used to develop the mind, not just to rotate or recall what is learned.Teachers need to design activities to interact with learners to foster inventive, creative, critical learners.Teachers must balance an understanding of the habits, characteristics as well as personalities of individual learners with an understanding of the means of arousing learners’ interest and curiosity for learning.Socio-constructivist theory: It emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of ‘Zone of Proximal Development’(ZPD) and scaffolding.Learning is best achieved through the dynamic interaction between the teacher and the learner and between learners. With the teacher’s scaffolding through questions and explanations, or with a more capable peers’ support, the learner can move to a higher level of understanding and extend his / her skills and knowledge to the fullest potential.Unit 2 Communicative Principles and Activities1. The goal of CLT is to develop students’communicative competence.2.What is communicative compentence? Try to list some of its components and theirimplication to teaching.Communicative compentence refers to both the knowledge about the language and the knowledge about how to use the language appropriately in communicative situations. According to Hedge, it includes five components.Linguistic competence --- knowledge of the language itself, its form and meaning Pragmatic competence --- the appropriate use of language in social contextDiscourse competence--- one’s ability to create coherent written text or conversation and the ability to understand them (ability to express or to understand a topic logically and coherently by effectively employing or comprehending the cohesive markers used in the discourse /ability to initiate, develop, enter, interrupt, check, or confirm in a conversation)Strategic competence--- strategies one employs when there is communication breakdown due to lack of resourcesFluency---- one’s ability to ‘link units of speech together with facility and without strain or inappropriate slowness or undue hesitationImplications for teaching and learning:Linguistic competenceTeachers need to help learners----achieve accuracy in the grammatical forms of the language;----pronounce the forms accurately;----use stress, rhythm, and intonation to express meaning;----build a range of vocabulary;----learn the script and spelling rules;----achieve accuracy in syntax and word formation.Pragmatic competenceTeachers need to help learners---learn the relationship between grammatical forms and functions;---use stress and intonation to express attitude and emotion;---learn the scale of formality;---understand and use emotive tone;---use the grammatical rules of language;---select language forms appropriate to topic, listener, or setting, etc. Discourse competenceTeachers need to help learners----take longer turns, use discourse markers and open and close conversations; ----appreciate and be able to produce contextualised written texts in a variety of genres;----be able to use cohesive devices in reading and writing texts;----be able to cope with authentic texts.Strategic competenceTeachers need to enable learners----to take risks in using the language;----to use a range of communicative strategies;----to learn the language needed to engage in some of these strategies, e.g. ‘What do you call a thing that/person who…’FluencyTeachers need to help learners-----deal with the information gap of real discourse;-----process language and respond appropriately with a degree of ease;-----be able to respond with reasonable speed in ‘real time”.3.What is communicative language teaching?Communicative language teaching began in Britain in the 1960s as a replacement to Situational Language Teaching. This was partly in response to Chomsky's criticisms of structural theories of language and partly based on the theories of British functional linguistics, as well as American sociolinguists.The goal of communicative language approaches is to create a realistic context for language acquisition in the classroom. The focus is on functional language usage and the ability to learners to express their own ideas, feelings, attitudes, desires and needs.Open ended questioning and problem-solving activities and exchanges of personal information are utilized as the primary means of communication. Students usually work with authentic materials in small groups on communication activities, during which they receive practice in negotiating meaning.This method is learner-centered and emphasizes communication and real-life situations. The role of the instructor in CLT is quite different from traditional teaching methods. In the traditional classroom, the teacher is in charge and "controls" the learning. In CLT the teacher serves as more of a facilitator, allowing students to be in charge of their own learning.4.Principles in communicative language teachingCommunication principle: Activities that involve real communication promote learning.Task principle: Activities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning.Meaningfulness principle: Language that is meaningful to the learning supports the learning process.5.Strong version and week versionA weak version: Learners first acquire language as a structural system and then learn how to use it in communication.It regards overt teaching of language forms and functions as necessary means for helping learners to develop the ability to use them for communication.A strong version:Strong version: The strong version claims that ‘language is acquire through communication’. Learners discover the structural system in the process of learning how to communicate.It regards experiences of using the language as the main means or necessary conditions for learning a language as they provide the experience for learners to see how language is used in communication.5. List some of the communicative activities.1) Functional communicative activitiesIdentifying picturesDiscovering identical pairsDiscovering sequence or locationsDiscovering missing informationDiscovering missing featuresDiscovering “secrets ”Communicating patterns and picturesCommunicative modelsDiscovering differencesFollowing directionsReconstructing story-sequencesPooling information to solve a problem2) Social interaction activitiesRole-playing through cued dialoguesRole-playing through cues and informationRole-playing through situation and goalsRole-playing through debate and discussionLarge-scale simulation activitiesimprovisation 6. Main features communicative activities Some main features of communicativeactivities (Ellis 1990)Students make use of materials6. No materials control Students work by themselves.5. No teacher interventionStudents are free to use all kinds of language forms and skills, not just certain forms given by teacher.4. Variety of languageConcentrate on what to do and what to say in the activity, not how to say certain forms.3. Content, not formA need to do something 2. Communicative desireA need to know something.---’an information gap ’1. Communictive purposenotes The six criteria7. The Task-based ApproachA task-based approach sees the language process as one of learning through doing.It stresses the importance to combine form-focused teaching withcommunication-focused teaching.The task-based approach aims at providing opportunities for the learners toexperiment with and explore both spoken and written language through learningactivities which are designed to engage learners in the authentic, practical andfunctional use of language for meaningful purposes.Task -based Learning offers an alternative for language teachers. In a task-basedlesson the teacher doesn't pre-determine what language will be studied, the lessonis based around the completion of a central task and the language studied isdetermined by what happens as the students complete it.So it aims to provide learners with a natural context for language use.As learnerswork to complete a task,they have abundant opportunity to interact.Such interactionis thought to facilitate language acquisition as learners have to work to understandeach other and to express their own meaning.By so doing,they have to check to seeif they have comprehended correctly and,at times, they have to seek clarification.By interacting with others,they get to listen to language which may be beyondtheir present ability,but which may be assimilated into their knowledge of the targetlanguage for use at a later time.Task presented in the form of a problem-solving negotiation between knowledgethat the learner holds and new knowledge7. What is a task?Any one of the following definitions is ok:A task is “a piece of work undertaken for oneself or for others, freely or forsome reward. Thus examples of tasks include painting a fence, dressing a child. Inother words, by ‘task’is meant the hundred and one things people do in everyday life,at work, at play and in between”. -------- Long (1985) [A task is] an activity which require learners to arrive at an outcome from giveninformation through some process of thought, and which allows teachers to controland regulate that process. ------ Prabhu (1987)… a piece of classroom work which involve learners in comprehending,manipulating, producing or interacting in the target language while their attentionis principally focused on meaning rather than on form. ----Nunan (1989) Tasks are always activities where the target language is used by the learnerfor a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.”A task is an activity in which students use the target language to do something,usually with a non-linguistic purpose.8. A task is believed to have four components: a purpose, a context, a process, anda product.9. What is PPP model?In this model, a language classroom consists of three stages: Presentation ofnew language item in a context---controlled practice (drilling, repetition,dialogue reading, etc)---production of the language in a meaningful way (a role-play,a drama, an interview, etc.)10. A task-based language classroom consists of three stages. They are pre-task stage,the stage of task cycle, and the stage of language focus.Unit 31. The overall language ability required in the 2001 National English Curriculumincludes the following aspects language knowledge, language skills, learningstrategies, affects and cultural understanding.2. What is a syllabus?。

英语教学法复习提纲

英语教学法复习提纲

英语教学法复习提纲
一、背景概述
1.英语教学研究的历史背景
2.英语教学法的定义和意义
二、教学目标和教材分析
1.教学目标的分类和设定
2.教材的选择和分析
3.教学资源的利用与教材的补充
三、教学法的基本原则和分类
1.教学法的基本原则
2.传统教学法与现代教学法的比较
3.教学法的分类及其特点
四、课程设计的原则和步骤
1.课程设计的基本原则
2.课程设计的步骤和要点
3.教学设计的实例分析
五、教学方法与教学技巧
1.教学方法的选择和应用
2.意义互动教学方法的实施
3.教学技巧的训练与应用
六、评估与反馈
1.评估的概念和种类
2.教学评估的重要性和方法
3.反馈的意义和方法
七、多媒体技术在英语教学中的应用
1.多媒体技术的发展与应用
2.多媒体教学的优势和挑战
3.多媒体教学案例分析
八、教学评价和自我提升
1.教学评价的概念和目的
2.教师自我提升的途径和方法
3.教学反思和改进的实践
九、教学实践总结和启示
1.教学实践的经验总结
2.教学实践对教师职业发展的启示
3.未来英语教学的发展趋势
以上是针对英语教学法复习的提纲,可以根据自己的需要进行有针对性的复习和整理。

为了更好地掌握和应用英语教学法,建议在复习时结合实际案例和实践进行深入研究。

英语教学法复习

英语教学法复习

Revision contents:Unit 1 Language and LearningViews on languageViews on language learning1. What are the major views of language? What are their implications to language teaching or learning?2. Some language teachers argue that we should “teach the l anguage”rather than “teach about the language”. What are the major differences between these two approaches to language teaching?3. Audiolingual approach to language learning4.Socio-constructivist theory of language learning emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context.5. The quality of a good language teacher includes ethic devotion, professional quality and personal styles.6. One influential idea of cognitive approach to language teaching is that students should be allowed to create their own sentence based on their own understanding of certain rules.Unit 2 Communicative Principles and ActivitiesWhat is communicative compentence? Try to list some of its components.Principles in communicative language teaching/ strong version and week versionList some of the communicative activities.What is a task/its componentsUnit 3The overall language ability required in the 2001 National English Curriculum includes the following aspects language knowledge, language skills, learning strategies, affects and cultural understanding.4. Lesson PlanningWhat is lesson planning?Principles for good lesson planningComponents of a lesson planUnit 5 Classroom ManagementWhat is classroom management?Types of student grouping and their advantages and disadvantagesThe role of the teacher ---- contoller, assessor, organizer, prompter, participant, resource providerThe new curriculum requires the teacher to put on the following new roles: facilitator, guides, and researchers.Classification of questionsHow to deal with errors?Unit 6 Teaching PronunciationCritical Period HypothesisThe goal of teaching pronunciation should be: consistency, intelligibility, and communicative efficiency.List some methods of practicing sounds.Unit 7 Teaching GrammarGrammar presentation methodsGrammar practice is usually divided into two categories, mechanical practice and meaningful practice.Unit 8 Teaching VocabularyWhat does knowing a word involve? Receptive vocabulary and productive vocabulary.List some ways of presenting new wordsHow to consolidate vocabulary?Developing vocabulary building strategiesUnit 9 Teaching ListeningCharacteristics of listening processPrinciples and models for teaching listeningAs far as classroom procedures are concerned, the teaching of listening generally follows three stages: pre-listening stage, while-listening stage, and post-listening stage.Unit 10 Teaching SpeakingWhat are the characteristics of spoken language? Discuss their implications to teaching.Information-gap activitiesList some of the speaking tasks that the students are often asked to do in language classroomUnit 11 Teaching readingThe role of vocabulary in reading: sight vocabularySkills involved in reading comprehensionModels for teaching readingStages involved in Teaching ReadingProblems in reading are often seen as a failure to recognize words that may not exist in the learner’s vocabulary or in understanding grammatical structures that may not have been acquired by the learner. Therefore, the task of teaching reading is seen as teaching vocabulary along with the grammatical structure of the target language. Do you agree with such an opinion? Explain your reasons.In teaching reading, teachers often engage students in pre-reading, while-reading and post-reading activities. What do you think are the major functions of pre-reading activities?Unit 12 Teaching WritingWhat is the main idea of communicative approach to writing?What is the main idea of the process approach to writing?Exercises for the course of English teaching methodologyI. Multiple choiceDirections:Choose the best answer for the following questions and write your answers on the answer sheet.1. What syllabus is designed around grammatical structures, with each lesson teaching a grammar structure, starting with simple ones, and progressing through to more complex ones?A. Structural syllabus.B. Situational syllabus.C. Functional syllabus.2. Which of the following is a communicative activity?A. Listen to the weather broadcast and fill in a form.B. Listen to the weather broadcast and talk about a picnic.C. Transfer the information from the weather broadcast into a table.3. In which of the following situations is the teacher playing the role of a prompter?A. Explain the language points and meanings of words and sentences.B. Give examples of how to do an activity after the explanation and instructions.C. Elicit ideas from students.4. Which of the following is a social interaction activity?A. Information gap.B. Role-play.C. Information transfer.5. What reading approach is based on the assumption of reading as a guessing game?A. The top-down approach.B. The bottom-up approach.C. The interactive approach6. What reading strategy does the following activity help to train?The students were asked to read each paragraph and then match the paragraph with relevant headings.A. Inferring.B. Scanning.C. Skimming.7. Which of the pre-reading activities exemplifies the bottom-up approach?A. The teacher brings in pictures and asks the students to discuss in groups about the life of old people.B. The teacher raises several questions about old people and asks the students to discuss in pairs.C. The teacher presents a picture about the life of old people on the screen and brainstorm vocabulary related to old people’s life.8. What listening skill does the following activity help to train?Listen to the folio-wing text and answer the multiple-choice question.In this dialogue, the speakers are talking about________.A) going to a picnic B) attending a concert C) having a partyA. Listening for gist.B. Listening for specific information.C. Listening for detailed information.9. Which of the following features does spoken English have?A. It is generally produced in fairly simple sentence structures.B. It is produced with little redundancy.C. It is produced with good organization.10. What should a required lesson plan look like?A. a copy of explanation of words and structuresB. a timetable for activitiesC. transcribed procedure of classroom instruction11. For better classroom management, what should the teacher do while the students are doing activities?A. participate in a groupB. prepare for the next procedureC. circulate around the class to monitor, prompt and help12. Which of the following activities can best motivate junior learners?A. gamesB. recitationC. role-play of dialogues13. To cultivate communicative competence, what should correction focus on?A. linguistic formsB. communicative strategiesC. grammatical rules14. Which of the following activity is most productive?A. read the text and then choose the best answer to the questionsB. discuss on the given topic according to the text you have just readC. exchange and edit the writing of your partner15. To help students understand the structure of a text and sentence sequencing, we could use----- for students to rearrange the sentences in the right order.A. cohesive devicesB. a coherent textC. scrambled sentences16. The purpose of the outline------ is to enable the students to have a clear organization of ideas and a structure that can guide them .A. in the actual writingB. in free writingC. in controlled writing17. The grammar rules are often given first and explained to the students and then the students have to apply the rules to given situations. This approach is called .A. deductive grammar teachingB. inductive grammar teachingC. guiding discovery18. It is easier for students to remember new words if they are designed in ------and if they are ------and again and again in situations and contexts.A. context, sameB. context, differentC. concept, difficultII. DefinitionDirections: Define the following terms1. Communicative compentence2. Lesson planning3. Classroom management4. Receptive vocabulary and productive vocabulary.5. Sight vocabulary6. Information-gap activities7. Display questions8. Task9. Audiolingual approach to language learning10.ReadingIII. Blank fillingDirections: fill in blanks according to what you’ve learn in the course of foreign language teaching.1. Socio-constructivist theory of language learning emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context.2.The quality of a good language teacher includes ethic devotion, professional quality and personal styles.3.One influential idea of cognitive approach to language teaching is that students should be allowed to create their own sentence based on their own understanding of certain rules.4. The overall language ability required in the 2001 National English Curriculum includes the following aspects language knowledge, language skills, learning strategies, affects and cultural understanding.5. The role of the teacher ---- contoller, assessor, organizer, prompter, participant, resource providerThe new curriculum requires the teacher to put on the following new roles: facilitator, guides, and researchers.6.The goal of teaching pronunciation should be: consistency, intelligibility, and communicative efficiency.7. Grammar practice is usually divided into two categories, mechanical practice and meaningful practice.8. As far as classroom procedures are concerned, the teaching of listening generally follows three stages: pre-listening stage, while-listening stage, and post-listening stage.IV. Problem SolvingDirections: Below are some situations in classroom instruction. Each has at least one problem. First, identify the problem(s). Second, provide your solution (s) according to what you have learned. You should elaborate on the problem(s) and solution(s) properly. Write your answer on the Answer Sheet.1.In one of the lessons. Mr. Li arranged the students into groups to talk about what they want to be when they grow up. To ensure thatthey applied what they learned, he required them to use the expressions in the text. To his surprise, students were not very active and some groups were talking about something else and one group was talking in Chinese.Problems:1) Maybe the topic does not correspond with the students’ current needs. Suppose these students were interested only in getting high scores in examinations, they would not have interest in such a talk.2) The activity is much controlled. They may like to talk about their hobbies, but they have to use the expressions the teacher presents, which to some extent restricts them. That is perhaps why they are not very active.3) If students talk in Chinese, it may be because the talk is a little too demanding for them in terms of language competence. When students have difficulty in expressing themselves in English, they will switch to Chinese.4) Maybe the teacher does not arrange such activities very often in class. The students are not used to such communicative activities and so do not take an active part.Solutions:1)The teacher can ask the students to talk about their hobbies freely without considering the structure2) The teacher can give the task a real purpose. For example, he can ask the students to ask others about their hobbies to form a hobby club.3) It’s better to explain to the students the value of such kind of activity.4) The teacher can circulate around to encourage the students to talk in English.2. To cultivate communicative competence, Mr. Li chose some news reports from China Daily for his middle school students. Problems:1) Authentic materials are desirable in cultivation of communicative competence. But they should correspond to students" ability. News reports from China Daily are too difficult for middle school students.2) The content of news reports may not be relevant to the course requirement of middle school English.Solutions:1) If Mr. Li insists on using the materials from China Daily, it is necessary for him to adapt the material or select those reports which are easier to read and more relevant to students" interests.2) If he can, it is better to select news reports from other newspapers which are relevant to the students" life and study. It is necessaryto bear in mind the students" needs when selecting materials for classroom instruction.(第一项要求写出两点即可,而第二项要求能说出两点。

(完整word版)英语教学法复习题

(完整word版)英语教学法复习题

山东理工大学成人高等教育英语教学法复习题Ⅰ. Explain the following terms.1)Discourse competence2)Mistake3)Critical period hypothesis4)Implicit knowledge5)Sight vocabulary6)Pragmatic competence7)task8)active vocabulary9)Exercises10)Denotative meaning (of a word)Ⅱ.Fill in the blanks with proper words.1. The elements that contribute to the qualities of a good language teacher can be categorized into three groups: ______________ , ________________ and _______________ .2. Task-based language teaching has stressed the importance to combine _____________ teaching with __________ teaching.3. Questions have been classified using different criteria. For example, it can be classified into _________ and open questions, display questions and _____________ questions, lower-order and _____________ questions.4. There are two kinds of stress that are important to achieving good pronunciation. They are ________ stress and _________ stress.5. In meaningful practice the focus is on ____________ , ___________ or ____________.6. Our realistic goal of teaching pronunciation should be: ________ , _______ and _______.7. Receptive / passive vocabulary refers to words that one is able to _____ and _____ in reading or listening but unable to _______ in speaking or writing.8. Littlewood(1981:20)divides communicative speaking activities into two types: ____ activities and _______ activities.9. The main purpose for reading aloud is to ______ with others while silent reading is for _____ or _______ information.10. The most popul ar teaching stages are three P’s model, which include:_______,________, and___________.11. The theory of learning is referred to as behaviorism, which has three major stages, “______________ , _____________and reinforcement”.12. Grant (1987) designed a _____________ questionnaire, which can be used as checklist when teachers select textbooks for their students.III. Judge the following statements true (T) or false (F).( )1. The main aim of English language teaching is promoting the students “overall l anguageability”.( )2. Students need to be able to write International Phonetic Alphabets. (IPA)( )3. When the teacher joined the students, he should not dominate or appear to be authoritative.( )4. Students need to be given detailed grammar rules if they are to learn a foreign language successfully.( )5. The process approach to writing highlights accurate choice of words, complete sentence structure, paragraph organization and systematic model.( )6. Languages consist of "words" with equivalents from one language to another.( )7.When we read, our eyes are constantly moving from letter to letter, word to word and sentence to sentence.( )8. When the structural view of language was combined with the stimulus-response principles of Behaviouristic psychology, TBLT emerged.( )9. Portfolios may increase the workload of teachers and students, but if used properly, it shouldn’t.Ⅳ. Answer the following questions briefly.1. How do you interpret bottom-up model for teaching reading?2. What does it mean to know a word?3. What does “structural view on language” advocates?4. What do effective readers do?5. What’s the cognitive theory of language learning?6. What are the features of communicative language teaching?7. What are the three steps in helping learners learn to use resources according to Ryan?8. What are the seven intelligences proposed by Gardner? Can you explain them briefly?9. What are the measures for indisciplined acts and badly behaving students suggested by Harmer?参考答案I.1. Discourse competence refers to one’s ability to creat coherent written text or conversation and the ability to understand them.2. A mistake refers to a performance error that is either a random guess or a ‘slip of tongue’, and it is a failure performance to a known system’.3. Critical Period Hypothesis states that if humans do not learn a foreign language before a certain age(perhaps around puberty),then due to changes such as maturation of the brain, it becomes impossible to learn the foreign language like a native speaker.4. implicit knowledge refers to knowledge that unconsciously exists in our mind, which we can make use of automatically without making any effort.5. Words that one is able to recognize immediately are often referred to as sight vocabulary.6. It is concerned with the appropriateness use of the language in social context. The choice of the vocabulary and structure depends on the setting, the relative status of the speakers, and their relationships.7. Task has four main components: a purpose, a context, a process, a product.8. Active vocabulary refers to words that one is not only able to recognize and comprehend but also able to use automatically in speaking and writing.9. the activities which focus on individual aspects of language, such as vocabulary, grammar or individual skills.10. Denotative meaning of a word or a lexical item refers to those words that we use to label things as regards real objects in the physical world.II.1. ethic devotion, professional qualities, personal styles2. form-focused, communication-focused3. closed, genuine, higher-order4. word-level stress, phrase-level / sentence-level stress5. production, comprehension, exchange of meaning6. consistency, intelligibility, communicative efficiency7. recognise, comprehend, use automatically8. functional communication, social interaction9. share information, getting, extracting10. Presentation, practice and production11. Stimulus, response12. Three-partⅢ.1. T2. F3. T4. F5. F6. F7. F8. F9. TⅣ.1. Some teachers teach reading by introducing new vocabulary and new structuresfirst and then going over the text sentence by sentence. This is followed by some questions and answers and reading aloud practice. This way of teaching reading reflects the belief that reading comprehension is based on the understanding and mastery of all the new words, new phrases, and new structures as well as a lot of reading aloud practice. Also, this reading follows a linear process from the recognition of letters, to words, to phrases, to sentences, to paragraphs, and then to the meaning of the whole text.2. 1) Knowing a word means knowing its pronunciation and stress; 2) knowing a word means knowing its spelling and grammatical properties; 3) knowing a word means knowing its meaning; 4) knowing a word mean knowing how and when to use it to express the intended meaning.3. Watson and Raynor formulated a stimulus-response theory of psychology, in which all complex forms of behavior are seen as composed of simple muscular and glandular elements that can be observed and measured. They claimed that emotional reactions are learned in much the same way as other skills. The key point of the theory of conditioning is that “you can train an animal to do anything if you follow a certain procedure which has three major stages, stimulus, response, and reinforcement.Based on the theory of conditioning, Skinner suggested language is also a form of behavior. It can be learned the same way as an animal is trained to respond to stimuli. This theory of learning is referred to as behaviorism.4. They have a clear purpose in reading;read silently;read phrase by phrase,rather than word by word;concertrate on the important bits,skim the rest,and skip the insignificant parts;use different speeds and strategies for different reading tasks; perceive the information in the target language rather than mentally translate; guess the meaning of new words from the context, or ignore them; have and use background information to help understand the text.5. W hat’s the cognitive theory of language learning?According to Chomsky, language is not a form of behavior, it is an intricate rule-based system and a large part of language acquisition is the learning of this system. There are a finite number of grammatical rules in the system and with a knowledge of these rules an infinite number of sentences can be produced. A language learner acquires language competence, which enables him to produce language. Though Chomsky’s theory is not direc tly applied in language teaching, it has had a great impact on the profession. One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentences based on their understanding of certain rules.6. What are the features of communicative language teaching?Based on the concept of communicative competence and aiming at developing such competence, communicative language teaching has the following features:1) It stresses the need to allow students opportunities for authentic and creative use of the language.2) It focuses on meaning rather than form.3) It suggests that learning should be relevant to the needs of the students.4) It advocates task-based language teaching. Students should be given tasks toperform or problems to solve in the classroom.5) It emphasizes a functional approach to language learning. Also, to be competent in the target language, learners should acquire not only linguistic knowledge, but also the culture of that language.7. What are the three steps in helping learners learn to use resources according to Ryan ?The first step is a consciousness-raising discussion of available resources. The teacher can ask the students to discuss and share what resources they use to extend learning outside the classroom. Then the teacher will model by presenting and practicing some techniques to exploit resources: gathering information from newspapers in readily understandable form or using photos and names in headline to predict the contents of articles. Finally, the teacher can introduce the theoretical assumptions underlying the selection of resources and techniques.8. What are the seven intelligences proposed by Gardner? Can you explain them briefly?Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence: the ability to use words effectively, both orally and in writing.Musical Intelligence: sensitivity to rhythm, pitch, and melody.Logical/Mathematical Intelligence: the ability to use numbers effectively and reasons as well.Spatial/Visual Intelligence: sensitivity to form, space, color, line, and shape. Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence: the ability to use the body to express ideas and feelings, and to solve problems.Interpersonal Intelligence: the ability to understand another person’s mood, feelings, motivation, and intentions.Intrapersonal Intelligence: the ability to understand yourself, your strength, weakness, moods, desires, and intentions.9. What are the measures for indisciplined acts and badly behaving students suggested by Harmer?1) Act immediately. If possible, indisciplined acts should be immediately stopped so that less damages is caused. The longer a disciplined problem is left unchecked, the more difficult it is to taken action.2) Stop the class. If the discipline is so disruptive as to hinder the progress of the whole class, the teacher should stop the class and make it clear what is wrong.3) Rearrange the seats. If troublesome students are sitting together, the teacher should separate them. Besides, if students are moved to the front of the class they may behave better.4) Change the activity. If the class seems to be getting out of control, or if indiscipline occurs due to inappropriacy of the activity, a change of activity will often restore the class.5) Talk to students after class. If a student is continually making trouble, the teacher should talk to that student after class. The student should be given a chance to explain why he/she behaves in this way.6) Use the instruction. When problems become extreme it will be necessary to usethe institution—the school or institute—to solve the problem.。

英语教学法复习资料

英语教学法复习资料

英语教学法复习资料英语教学法复习资料在当今全球化的时代,英语已经成为一门必备的语言技能。

因此,英语教学法的研究和实践变得尤为重要。

本文将回顾一些常见的英语教学法,帮助读者巩固他们的知识,并提供一些实用的教学技巧。

一、交际法交际法是一种以交流为中心的教学法。

它强调学生在真实的语境中使用英语,以提高他们的交际能力。

在交际法中,教师应该创造一个积极互动的学习环境,鼓励学生参与各种交际活动,如角色扮演、小组讨论和真实情境模拟等。

通过这种方式,学生可以更好地理解和运用英语。

二、语法翻译法语法翻译法是一种传统的英语教学法。

它注重语法规则的学习和应用,并通过翻译来帮助学生理解和运用这些规则。

在语法翻译法中,教师通常会使用课文翻译、句子翻译和篇章翻译等练习,以帮助学生提高他们的语法和翻译能力。

然而,这种教学法也存在一些问题,如过度依赖母语和缺乏真实语境等。

三、听说法听说法是一种以听力和口语为核心的教学法。

它强调学生在真实的听力和口语活动中提高他们的听力理解和口语表达能力。

在听说法中,教师应该提供大量的听力材料,如录音和视频,以帮助学生培养他们的听力技巧。

同时,教师还应该鼓励学生参与各种口语活动,如对话练习、演讲和辩论等。

通过这种方式,学生可以更好地理解和运用英语。

四、任务型教学法任务型教学法是一种以任务为导向的教学法。

它注重学生在解决实际问题的过程中学习和应用英语。

在任务型教学法中,教师应该设计一系列有挑战性的任务,以激发学生的学习兴趣和动机。

同时,教师还应该提供必要的语言支持和反馈,以帮助学生完成任务。

通过这种方式,学生可以更好地运用英语解决问题,并提高他们的学习效果。

五、多媒体教学法多媒体教学法是一种以多媒体技术为支持的教学法。

它通过使用电脑、投影仪和互联网等工具,提供丰富多样的学习资源,以帮助学生更好地理解和运用英语。

在多媒体教学法中,教师可以使用动画、音频和视频等多媒体材料,以增加学生的学习兴趣和参与度。

王蔷《英语教学法》复习

王蔷《英语教学法》复习

Revision Contents:Unit 1 Language and Learning1. What are the major views of language? What are their implications to language teaching or learning?Structural View: It sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystem:from phonological, morphological, lexical, etc. to sentence. Each language has a finite number of such structural items.To learn a language means to learn these structural items so as to be able to understand and produce language.Audiolingual approach: The teaching of a second language through imitation, repetition, and reinforcement. It emphasizes the teaching of speaking and listening beforereading and writing and the use of mother tongue in the classroom is not allowed. Theprincipal features of audiolingualism are an emphasis on structures in the language whichcan be learned as regular patterns of verbal behavior and the belief that learning is a process of habit formation.Functional View: It sees language as a linguistic system but also as a means for doingthings. Most of our day-to- day language use involves functional activities: offering, suggesting, advising, apologizing, etc. Therefore, learners learn a language in order to dothings with it. To perform functions, learners need to know how to combine thegrammatical rules and the vocabulary to express notions that perform the functions. Communicative approaches are based on this view of language.Interactional View: It considers language as a communicative tool, whose main use is tobuild up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only needto know the grammar and vocabulary of the language, but also need to know the rules forusing them in a whole range of communicative context.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: Strategic interaction; communicative approaches.2. What are the major Views on language learning? What are their implications to language teaching?Behaviouralist theoryBased on the theory of conditioning, Skinner suggested language is also a form of behaviour. It can be learned the same way as an animal is trained to respond to stimuli.This theory of language learning is referred to as behaviouralism, which was adopted forsome time by the language teaching profession, particularly in America.One influential result is the audio-lingual method, which involves endless “listen and repeat” drilling activities. The idea of this method is that language is learned by constantrepetition and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakes were immediately corrected, andcorrect utterances were immediately praised. This method is still used in many parts of theworld today.Cognitive theoryIt seems to be largely the result of Noam Chomsky’s reaction to Skinner’s behavioural theory, which led to the revival of structural linguistics.The key point of Chomsky’s theory is reflected in his most famous question: if language is a learned behaviour, how can a child produce a sentence that has never beensaid by others before.One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentencesbased on their understanding of certain rules. This idea is clearly in opposition to the Audio-Lingual Method.According to the cognitive theory, learning is a process in which the learner activelytries to make sense of data. The basic technique associated with a cognitive theory of language learning is the problem-solving task.Constructivist theory: Learning is a complex cognitive process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his or her own experiences and what he /she already knows.Implications for classroom teachingTeaching should be built based on what learners already know and engage learnersin learning activities.It is believed that education is used to develop the mind, not just to rotate or recallwhat is learned.Teachers need to design activities to interact with learners to foster inventive, creative,critical learners.Teachers must balance an understanding of the habits, characteristics as well as personalities of individual learners with an understanding of the means of arousing learners’ interest and curiosity for learning.Socio-constructivist theory: It emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of ‘Zone of Proximal Development’(ZPD) and scaffolding.Learning is best achieved through the dynamic interaction between the teacher andthe learner and between learners. With the teacher’s scaffolding through questions and explanations, or with a more capable peers’ support, the learner can move to a higher level of understanding and extend his / her skills and knowledge to the fullest potential.Unit 2 Communicative Principles and Activities1. The goal of CLT is to develop students’communicative competence.2.What is communicative compentence? Try to list some of its components and theirimplication to teaching.Communicative compentence refers to both the knowledge about the language and the knowledge about how to use the language appropriately in communicative situations. According to Hedge, it includes five components.Linguistic competence --- knowledge of the language itself, its form and meaningPragmatic competence --- the appropriate use of language in social contextDiscourse competence --- one’s ability to create coherent written text or conversation andthe ability to understand them (ability to express or to understand a topic logically and coherently by effectively employing or comprehending the cohesive markers used in the discourse /ability to initiate, develop, enter, interrupt, check, or confirm in a conversation) Strategic competence--- strategies one employs when there is communication breakdown due to lack of resourcesFluency---- one’s ability to ‘link units of speech together with facility and without strain or inappropriate slowness or undue hesitationImplications for teaching and learning:Linguistic competenceTeachers need to help learners----achieve accuracy in the grammatical forms of the language;----pronounce the forms accurately;----use stress, rhythm, and intonation to express meaning;----build a range of vocabulary;----learn the script and spelling rules;----achieve accuracy in syntax and word formation.Pragmatic competenceTeachers need to help learners---learn the relationship between grammatical forms and functions;---use stress and intonation to express attitude and emotion;---learn the scale of formality;---understand and use emotive tone;---use the grammatical rules of language;---select language forms appropriate to topic, listener, or setting, etc.Discourse competenceTeachers need to help learners----take longer turns, use discourse markers and open and close conversations;----appreciate and be able to produce contextualised written texts in a variety of genres;----be able to use cohesive devices in reading and writing texts;----be able to cope with authentic texts.Strategic competenceTeachers need to enable learners----to take risks in using the language;----to use a range of communicative strategies;----to learn the language needed to engage in some of these strategies, e.g. ‘What do you call a thing that/person who…’FluencyTeachers need to help learners-----deal with the information gap of real discourse;-----process language and respond appropriately with a degree of ease;-----be able to respond with reasonable speed in ‘real time”.3.What is communicative language teaching?Communicative language teaching began in Britain in the 1960s as a replacement to。

英语教育专业教学法期末复习内容(1)

英语教育专业教学法期末复习内容(1)

一.教学法流派:1)直接法:对待学生错误的态度:the direct method ,Errors are regarded natural and avoidable and can be self-collected.2)听说法:对待学生错误的态度;audio-lingual methodErrors should be corrected once discovered or spotted.全身反应法的定义The teacher gives the instruction and the students do the action as asked.With TPR the children listen to their teacher telling them what to do and then do it认知法的特征:主张创造性学习和对规则的学习;Rules learning and creative learning are very important .3)自然途径:克拉申,输入理论;情感过滤假设:内在动机,外在动机,工具性动机,综合性动机;情感因素The Natural ApproachA.Krashen’s five theories1. Learning and acquisition theoryLearning is a conscious process while acquisition is a subconscious process.2. Input theory△Input should be comprehensible△Ideal input should meet the 4 requirements: comprehensible, relevant and interesting, adequate, notgrammatically sequenced.△i+1 formula: I stands for the learner’s present language level. The input should be a little beyond the learner’s present language level.3.The affective filter hypothesisAffective factors such as interest, motivation, attitude, anxiety, self-image,self-concept, self-esteem and so on affect the result of language learning like a filter. When the motivation is strong, the filtering effect is weak, the learning result will be better; when the anxiety and self-esteem are strong, then the filter effect will be strong too, and the learning result will be worse.Input-filter-LAD-practice-acquired ability4.Kinds of motivation:integrative motivation:indicates an interest in learning the language to meet and communicate with members of the second language community.instrumental motivation: refers to the practical and pragmatic one of learning the second language. Nowadays in China it is instrumental motivation that plays a major part.intrinsic motivation : has something to do with one’s real need extrinsic motivation.:is connected with external stimuli,including something like achievement, parents and teacher’s expectation and so on.5.Affective Factors--- motivation, self-confidence, self-esteem, anxiety, attitude interestCognitive Factors--- intelligence, aptitude sex age pesonality 6.交际法:交际教学的三个特征;Three feature of CLT(communicative approach are rmation gap. 2.feedback 3.choice.4.交际法的教学目标;the purpose of CLT is to develop student’s ability to use target language appropriately in a given social context.4)哪些活动属于交际性活动,哪些属于前交际活动;哪些属于机械性活动;Communicative activities: 1.problem-solving 2. discussion 3.debates 4.interview 5.fluency-focused games 6.ninformation gap activityPre-communicative activity:1. reading aloud 2.read after 3.immititation 4.pattern drill 5.transformation drill substitution drill (机械性活动)机械性活动属于前交际性活动,而前交际性活动属于非交际性活动。

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Revision Contents:Unit 1 Language and Learning1. What are the major views of language? What are their implications to language teaching or learning?Structural View: It sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystem: from phonological, morphological, lexical, etc. to sentence. Each language has a finite number of such structural items.To learn a language means to learn these structural items so as to be able to understand and produce language.Teaching methods based on this view:the Audio-lingual methodTotal Physical Responsethe Oral ApproachSituational Language Teaching.Audiolingual approach: The teaching of a second language through imitation, repetition, and reinforcement. It emphasizes the teaching of speaking and listening before reading and writing and the use of mother tongue in the classroom is not allowed.The principal features of audiolingualism are an emphasis on structures in the language which can be learned as regular patterns ofverbal behavior and the belief that learning is a process of habit formation.Functional View: It sees language as a linguistic system but also as a means for doing things. Most of our day-to- day language use involves functional activities: offering , suggesting , advising, apologizing, etc. Therefore, learners learn a language in order to do things with it. To perform functions, learners need to know how to combine the grammatical rules and the vocabulary to express notions that perform the functions.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: communicative approachesInteractional View: It considers language as a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary of the language, but also need to know the rules for using them in a whole range of communicative context.Some of the language learning approaches and methods based on this view of language are: Strategic interaction; communicative approaches.were immediately praised. This method is still used in many parts of the world today.Cognitive theoryIt seems to be largely the result of Noam Chomsky’s reaction to Skinner’s behavioural theory, which led to the revival of structural linguistics.The key point of Chomsky’s theory is reflected in his most famous question: if language is a learned behaviour, how can a child produce a sentence that has never been said by others before.One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentences based on their understanding of certain rules. This idea is clearly in opposition to the Audio-Lingual Method.According to the cognitive theory, learning is a process in which the learner actively tries to make sense of data. The basic technique associated with a cognitive theory of language learning is the problem-solving task.Constructivist theory--- represented by John DeweyLearning is a complex cognitive process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his or her own experiences and what he /she already knows.Implications for classroom teachingTeaching should be built based on what learners already know and engage learners in learning activities.It is believed that education is used to develop the mind, not just to rotate or recall what is learned.Teachers need to design activities to interact with learners to foster inventive, creative, critical learners.Teachers must balance an understanding of the habits, characteristics as well as personalities of individual learners with an understanding of the means of arousing learners’ interest and curiosity for learning.Socio-constructivist theory ----represented by VygotskyIt emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of ‘Zone of Proximal Development’(ZPD) and scaffolding.Learning is best achieved through the dynamic interaction between the teacher and the learner and between learners. With the teacher’s scaffolding through questions and explanations, or with a more capable peers’ support, the learner can move to a higher level of understanding and extend his / her skills and knowledge to the fullest potential.3. Socio-constructivist theory of language learning emphasizestext or conversation and the ability to understand them (ability to express or to understand a topic logically and coherently by effectively employing or comprehending the cohesive markers used in the discourse /ability to initiate, develop, enter, interrupt, check, or confirm in a conversation) Strategic competence--- strategies one employs when there is communication breakdown due to lack of resourcesFluency---- one’s ability to ‘link units of speech together with facility and without strain or inappropriate slowness or undue hesitation Implications for teaching and learning:Linguistic competenceTeachers need to help learners----achieve accuracy in the grammatical forms of the language;----pronounce the forms accurately;----use stress, rhythm, and intonation to express meaning;----build a range of vocabulary;----learn the script and spelling rules;----achieve accuracy in syntax and word formation.Pragmatic competenceTeachers need to help learners---learn the relationship between grammatical forms and functions;---use stress and intonation to express attitude and emotion;---learn the scale of formality;---understand and use emotive tone;---use the grammatical rules of language;---select language forms appropriate to topic, listener, or setting, etc.Discourse competenceTeachers need to help learners----take longer turns, use discourse markers and open and close conversations;----appreciate and be able to produce contextualised written texts in a variety of genres;----be able to use cohesive devices in reading and writing texts;----be able to cope with authentic texts.Strategic competenceTeachers need to enable learners----to take risks in using the language;----to use a range of communicative strategies;----to learn the language needed to engage in some of these strategies, e.g. ‘What do you call a thing that/person who…’FluencyTeachers need to help learners-----deal with the information gap of real discourse;-----process language and respond appropriately with a degree of ease;-----be able to respond with reasonable speed in ‘real time”.3.What is communicative language teaching?Communicative language teaching began in Britain in the 1960s as a replacement to Situational Language Teaching. This was partly in response to Chomsky's criticisms of structural theories of language and partly based on the theories of British functional linguistics, as well as American sociolinguists.The goal of communicative language approaches is to create a realistic context for language acquisition in the classroom. The focus is on functional language usage and the ability to learners to express their own ideas, feelings, attitudes, desires and needs.Open ended questioning and problem-solving activities and exchanges of personal information are utilized as the primary means of communication. Students usually work with authentic materials in small groups on communication activities, during which they receive practice in negotiating meaning.This method is learner-centered and emphasizes communication and real-life situations. The role of the instructor in CLT is quite different from traditional teaching methods. In the traditional classroom, the teacher is in charge and "controls" the learning. In CLT the teacher serves as more of a facilitator, allowing students to be in charge of their own learning.4.Principles in communicative language teachingCommunication principle: Activities that involve real communication promote learning.Task principle: Activities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning.Meaningfulness principle: Language that is meaningful to the learning supports the learning process.5.Strong version and week versionA weak version: Learners first acquire language as a structural system and then learn how to use it in communication.It regards overt teaching of language forms and functions as necessary means for helping learners to develop the ability to use them for communication.A strong version:Strong version: The strong version claims that ‘language is acquire through communication’. Learners discover the structural system in the process of learning how to communicate.It regards experiences of using the language as the main means or necessary conditions for learning a language as they provide the experience for learners to see how language is used in communication.5. List some of the communicative activities.1) Functional communicative activitiesIdentifying picturesDiscovering identical pairsDiscovering sequence or locationsDiscovering missing informationDiscovering missing featuresDiscovering “secrets”Communicating patterns and picturesCommunicative modelsDiscovering differencesFollowing directionsReconstructing story-sequencesPooling information to solve a problemSome main features of communicativeactivities (Ellis 1990)Students make use of materials6. No materials control Students work by themselves.5. No teacher interventionStudents are free to use all kinds of language forms and skills, not just certain forms given by teacher.4. Variety of languageConcentrate on what to do and what to say in the activity, not how to say certain forms.3. Content, not formA need to do something 2. Communicative desireA need to know something.---’an information gap’1. Communictive purposeThe six criteria7. The Task-based ApproachA task-based approach sees the language process as one of learning through doing. It stresses teaching with communication-focused teaching.The task-based approach aims at providing opportunities for the learners to experiment with and explore both spoken and written language through learning activities which are designed to engage learners in the authentic, practical and functional use of language for meaningful purposes.Task -based Learning offers an alternative for language teachers. In a task-based lesson the teacher doesn't pre-determine what language will be studied, the lesson is based around the completion of a central task and the language studied is determined by what happens as the students complete it.So it aims to provide learners with a natural context for language use.As learners work to complete a task,they have abundant opportunity to interact.Such interaction is thought to facilitate language acquisition as learners have to work to understand each other and to express their own meaning.By so doing,they have to check to see if they have comprehended correctly and,at times,they have to seek clarification.By interacting with others,they get to listen to language which may be beyond their present ability,but which may be assimilated into their knowledge of the target language for use at a later time.Task presented in the form of a problem-solving negotiationbetween knowledge that the learner holds and new knowledge7. What is a task?Any one of the following definitions is ok:A task is “a piece of work undertaken for oneself or for others, freely or for some reward. Thus examples of tasks include painting a fence, dressing a child. In other words, by ‘task’ is meant the hundred and one things people do in everyday life, at work, at play and in between”.-------- Long (1985)[A task is] an activity which require learners to arrive at an outcome from given information through some process of thought, and which allows teachers to control and regulate that process. ------ Prabhu (1987)… a piece of classroom work which involve learners in comprehending, manipulating, producing or interacting in the target language while their attention is principally focused on meaning rather than on form. ----Nunan (1989) Tasks are always activities where the target language is used by the learner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.”A task is an activity in which students use the target language to do3. What is curriculum?A curriculum, however, provides (1) general statements about the rationale about language, language learning and language teaching, (2) detailed specification of aims, objectives and targets learning purpose, and (3) implementations of a program. In some sense, a syllabus is part of a curriculum.Syllabus is often used to refer to something similar to a language teaching approach, whereas curriculum refers to a specific document of a language program developed for a particular country or region.4. Designing principles for the National English Curriculum1) Aim for educating all students, and emphasize quality-oriented education.2) Promote learner-centeredness, and respect individual differences.3. Develop competence-based objectives, and allow flexibility and adaptability.4) Pay close attention to the learning process, and advocate experiential learning and participation.5. Attach particular importance to formative assessment, and give special attention to the development of competence.6. Optimize learning resources, and maximize opportunities forLockstep refers to the time when all the students are under the control of the teacher. They are all doing the same activity at the same rhythm and pace. Lockstep is adopted when presenting new language, give explanations, check answers, do accuracy-based reproduction, or summarize learning.Advantages:It reinforces a sense of belonging among a group of members. When students are doing the same activity together, everyone feels being together with others.It is good for teachers to give instruction and explanation together and it is an ideal way to show materials and do presentations together.Disadvantages:Everyone is forced to do the same thing at the same time and at the same pace. Individuality is not favored in this sense.Not everyone has the opportunity to express what they want.Some students feel nervous and anxious when they are asked to present in front of the class.It favors the transmission of knowledge from teacher to students rather than students discovering things by themselves.It is not a good way to enhance real communication. Students cannotcommunicate with each other in this sense.2) pair work: the time when students work in pairs on an exercise or task. It could be a dialogue reading, a game or an information-gap task between two students.Advantages:It dramatically increases students’speaking time in each class.It allows students to work together rather than under the teacher’s guidance.It allows teacher’s time to work with the week pair while others are working on their own.It can promote cooperation between students.It can create a more relaxed and friendly context for students to learn.It is relatively quick and easy to organize.DisadvantagesIt is often very noisy and teachers are afraid of losing control of the class.Some students may talk in native language or something not related to the topic. It is not very easy for teachers to monitor every pair.Some students may not like to work with the peers, and they thinkthey can only learn from the teacher. So they refuse to participate in the activities.The choice of a pair is also a problem. Some students don’t like to work with particular partner while someone may dominate all the time.3) group workGroup work refers to the time when students work in small groups.Advantages:Like pair work, it dramatically increases the amount of talk of individual students.There is always a great chance of different opinions and contributions to the work.It also encourages cooperation and negotiation skills among students.It promotes learner autonomy by allowing students to make their own decision rather than follow the teachers.DisadvantagesLike pair work, it is likely to make the classroom very noisy and some teachers feel very uncomfortable with the noise.Not everyone enjoys the work since many of them prefer to work with teachers rather than peers.Some students may dominate the talk while others may be very passive or even quiet all the time.It is difficult for teacher to organize. It may take a longer time for teachers to group students and there may be not enough space for students to move around in classroom.Some groups may finish the task fast while some may be very slow. So teachers need to prepare the optional activities for the quick group and be ready to help the slower ones all the time.4) individual studyIndividual study is the stage where the students are left to work on their own and at their own speed.Advantages:It allows students free time, style and pace to study on their own.It is less stressful compared with whole class work.It can develop learner autonomy and form good learning habits.It can create some peaceful and quiet time in class.DisadvantagesIt does not help a class to develop a sense of belonging. Students learn by themselves and it does not promote team spirit.It may not be very motivating for students.To stimulate recall of informationTo challenge studentsTo assess learning6. Classification of questionsQuestions have been classified using different criteria, mainly based on the level of thinking involved in answering the questions.Closed v.s open--- Closed questions refer to those with only one single correct answer while open questions may invite many different answers.Display v.s genuine--- Display questions are those that the answers are already known to the teacher and they are used in checking if students know the answers, too. Genuine questions are those which are used to find out new information and more communicative.Lower-ordered v.s high-ordered--- Lower-ordered questions refer to those that simply require recalling of information or memorisation of facts while higher-ordered questions require more reasoning, analysis, and evaluation.7. How to deal with errors?The distinction between mistakes and errors:A mistake: a performance error that is either a random guess or a “slip of tongue/pen”, it is a failure performance to a known system. A mistake has nothing to do with the language competence.An error has direct relation with the learners’ language competence. Errors do not result from carelessness nor hesitation, but lack of knowledge in the target language. Language errors cannot be self-corrected.When to correct:accuracy-based activities;fluency-based activitiesHow to correct:Direct teacher correctionIndirect teacher correctionSelf correctionPeer correctionWhole class correctionSelf-correction is encouraged before teacher correction or peer correction because if it is a mistake, the student himself/herself will be able to correct it.Indirect teacher correction is encouraged rather than direct teacher correction to avoid damaging students’ Self esteem and confidence.what order would you teach and practice the sound? On the line tick the steps that you think are necessary. In the brackets, write the order numbers.Focus only on those sounds which are causing difficulty to the students. The following steps may be helpful in teaching the difficult sounds:1) Say the sound alone, but this may be avoided wherever possible.2) Say the sound in a word.3) Contrast it with other sounds if necessary.4) Write words on the board only when it becomes necessary to make your point clearer.5) Explain how to make the sound when necessary.6) Have students repeat the sound in chorus.7) Have individual students repeat the sound.6. List some methods of practicing sounds.Minimal pairsWhich orderOdd one outCompletionSame or different?Unit 7 Teaching Grammar1. Read the following statements about grammar in English learning and decide if you agree with them or not.1) Students need to be given detailed grammar rules if they want to learn a foreign language successfully.2) Children do not learn grammar rules when they acquire their first language, so they do not need them either when learning a foreign language.3) If students get enough chance to practice using a foreign language, they do not need to learn grammar.4) Making students aware of grammatical information is one of the teaching objectives, allowing students opportunities for using the language is just as important.5) Grammar should be taught to help students to analyze difficult structures in texts.6)Teaching and learning grammar should focus on practice rather than the study of grammar itself.7) Grammar should be taught and practiced in context.8) Knowing grammar is not enough for real communication.an isolated way; Little attention is paid to meaning; The practice is often mechanical.However, the deductive method is not without merits. It could be very successful with selected and motivated students. It could save time when students are confronted with a grammar rule which is complex but which has to be learned. It may help to increase student’ confidence in those examinations which are written with accuracy as the main criterion of success.The inductive methodThe teacher provides learner with authentic language data and induces the learners to realize grammar without any form of explicit explanation. It is believed that the rules will become evident if the students are given enough appropriate examples. After presentation, the students are invited to apply the newly presented structure to produce sentences with given visual aids or verbal prompts. The teacher tries to say nothing except to correct when necessary. Finally, but optionally, the teacher may elicit the grammar rule from the students.It is believed that the rules will become evident if the students are given enough appropriate examples.It is believed that the inductive method is more effective inmodels and drills the new grammarcorrects mistakes (self-correction)uses a variety of controlled practice activities, of increasing difficultymakes students thinkuses exercises in the text bookgoes over any problem areasP3The teacher: lets the students produce the language organises free activities with a clear structure and aims monitors and corrects any mistakes later, with studentsWhich P? (Presentation, practice or production)1) Students write a diary about what they did last week (using the past simple). Production2) The teacher uses a timeline to show how to use the past continuous. Presentation3) Students discuss what food they would cook for a foreign friend (using the third conditional).Production4) Students fill in the gaps with the correct form of the present tense. Practice5) The teacher uses flashcards to elicit the correct form of the passive. Practice6) The teacher writes example sentences in a substitution table to show how to form the present perfect. PracticeUnit 8 Teaching Vocabulary1. What does knowing a word involve?1) The form2) How it is pronounced3) How it is spelt4) Denotative meaning5) The connotations that the item may have6) The situations when the word is or is not used7) How the word is related to others8) Collocation or the way that words occur together9) What the affixes may indicate about the meaning? (the prefixesand suffixes)2.Implication for teaching vocabularyWe now understand that knowing a word involves far more than just remembering its pronunciation and translated meaning. As teachers, we need to develop vocabulary learning activities based on our understanding of the lexical system of English to help students learn vocabulary more effectively. The following are some of the implications we can draw: Both denotative and connotative meaning need to be learned;Words are better understood in context;A group of related words is likely to be more memorable than a list of unrelated items, i.e. words learned with synonyms, antonyms or hyponyms;Knowledge of word formation is a useful source for developing vocabulary.Exploring sense relations among/between words help with learning and remembering words.Teachers and learners need to be aware of the difference between receptive and productive vocabulary.3. Receptive vocabulary and productive vocabulary.Receptive /passive vocabulary refers to words that one is able torecognize and comprehend in reading or listening but unable to use automatically in speaking or writing.Productive/active vocabulary refers to those that one is not only able to recognize but also able to use in speech and writing.4. List some ways of presenting new words1) Try to provide a visual or physical demonstration whenever possible, using pictures, stick drawings, photos, video clips, mime or gestures to show meaning.2) Provide a verbal context to demonstrate meaning. Then ask the students to give meaning first before it is offered by the teacher.3) Use synonyms or antonyms to explain the meanings.4) Use lexical sets or hyponyms to show relations of words and their meanings.5) Translate and exemplify, especially with technical words or words with abstract meaning.6) Use word formation rules and common affixes to build new lexical knowledge on what is already known.7) Teach vocabulary in chunks. Chunks refer to a group of words that go together to form meaning. It is also referred to as ‘prefabricated formulaic items’ (Lewis, 2002:121)8) Think about the context in real life where the word might be used. Relate newly-learned language to students’ real life to promote high motivation.9) Think about providing different context for introducing new words.10) Prepare possible misunderstanding or confusion that student may have.6.What does a teacher do after presentation?Try to provide opportunities for students to use multiple senses such as visual, auditory, action, etc, to get familiar with the newly learned words.Engage the students in variety of activities, such speaking, listening, reading, writing or acting, using multiple senses.To create meaningful and personalized tasks for the students to use the words in their own ways.Remember, a word can not be learned by only being presented to the students, often it has to be encountered at least seven times in different contexts/tasks before it can be learned by the students.5. How to consolidate vocabulary?Labeling: Students are given a picture. They are to write the names of objects indicated in the picture.Spotting the difference: Students are put into pairs. Each member of the pair receives a picture which is slightly different from his partner’s. Students hide the pictures from one another and then, by a process of describing, questioning and answering, discover what the differences are.Describe and draw: Students are put in pairs. One student has a picture, the other a blank piece of paper and a pencil. The student with a picture must tell his/her partner what to draw so that the drawing ends up the same as the original picture. The student must not show the picture until the drawing is completed.Playing a gameUsing words series: Students construct the series following an example.Word bingoWord association: The teacher says a key word, e.g. traveling. The students then have to write down all the words they can think of connected with traveling. They have a time limit. When time is up, the person with the highest number of acceptable words is the winner.Synonyms and antonyms: The students are given a list of words。

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