Using Course books for Language Teaching

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cognitive Academic Language Learning Approach
Advertisements

T B L in college English teaching. What is your teaching style? PPresentation PPractice PProduction.
Grammar Translation Method presented by :
PRESENTATION TECHNIQUES
Approach, Methods, Techniques
Approach, method and technique
- Briefing for Parents Monday 8 April The revised 2010 English Language (EL) Syllabus is implemented at Primary Four from It has been implemented.
Materials for ELT.
Natalie Fong English Centre, The University of Hong Kong Good Practices in a Second Language Classroom: An Alternating Use of ICT in Independent Learning.
Supporting Learning Process: Content Based instructions Course books Computer Assisted Language Learning Learning Styles Learners’ autonomy in the classroom.
Unit II Four Language Skills: Aural and Oral Reading and Writing.
Topic: Learning and teaching activities
The Audiolingual Method
Topic: Methodology of English Language Teaching in Middle Schools General objectives: 1.Students will be able to tell the reasons of taking up the course.
FOR SECOND AND FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHING CONTENT-BASE INSTRUCTION AND IMMERSION MODELS.
The 6 Principles of Second language learning (DEECD,2000) Beliefs and Understandings Assessment Principle Responsibility Principle Immersion Principle.
GSE M&M WEEK 11.
Course-books and Their Use.
©2003 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. Study Skills Topic 6 Learning Styles & Teaching Styles PowerPoint by JoAnn Yaworski.
Arunee Wiriyachitra, Chiang Mai University
The Skills series. A new six-level skills-centered English course for young adults and adults based on the highly successful, award-winning Skills in.
The Grammar-Translation Method
Lecture 3 DESIGN AND PROCEDURE Prepared by: Ms. Mahaya Ahmad.
Communicative Language Teaching Vocabulary
Unit 1 Language and Learning Methodology Unit 1 Language and learning I.How do we learn language ? 1 ) How do we learn our own language ? 2 ) How do.
Grammar Translation Method
Learning English Communicative Language Teaching.
Teaching language means teaching the components of language Content (also called semantics) refers to the ideas or concepts being communicated. Form refers.
GSE Materials and Methods
Overview of the Pedagogical Guidelines (2006) IST workshop, Agadir, December, 2006.
Communicative Language Teaching
The Communicative Language Teaching Lecture # 18.
Supplementary materials
Content-based Instruction. “A learner is successful when the focus is on the content rather than on mastery language.”
Unit 3 The Direct Method.
B.A. (English Language) UNIVERSITI PUTRA MALAYSIA Second Semester 2011/2012 BBI 3211 (English for Specific Purposes)
SIOP The Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP)
Are you ready to play…. Deal or No Deal? Deal or No Deal?
THE GRAMMAR TRANSLATION METHOD
How Much Do We know about Our Textbook? Zhang Lu.
 There must be a coherent set of links between techniques and principles.  The actions are the techniques and the thoughts are the principles.
NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. CONTENT-BASED.
TEFL METHODOLOGY I COMMUNICATIVE LANGUAGE TEACHING.
GSE Materials and Methods
Chapter 6 Acquiring knowledge for L2 use
11 TOPIC 1: INTRODUCTION TO CONTENT- BASED INSTRUCTION (CBI) IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION. DEFINITION DEFINITION  CBI- the integration of a particular.
THE AUDIO -LINGUAL METHOD. Audio-lingual Method The theory behind this method is that learning a language means acquiring habits. There is much practice.
Cognition linked in with Communication CLIL SECONDARY.
Differences Between Direct Method (DM) and Grammar Translation Method (GTM) Lecture 6.
COURSE AND SYLLABUS DESIGN
Materials Design Frances Fabiani What is Materials Design?  Any systematic description of the techniques and exercises to be used in classroom.
Chapter 9 The Communicative Approach.
Pedagogy As it relates to the field of linguistics.
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
3. Nine-Twentieth-Century Approaches to Language Teaching
T H E D I R E C T M E T H O D DM. Background DM An outcome of a reaction against the Grammar- Translation Method. It was based on the assumption that.
Boulder Valley Public Schools Sheltered Instruction.
SIOP Review Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol.
Presented by: Ivan Aguilar.  Communicative language teaching (CLT) is an approach to the teaching of second and foreign languages that emphasizes interaction.
Chapter 3 The Grammar-Translation Method. The Grammar-Translation Method is a method of foreign or second language teaching that uses translation and.
Chapter 11 Linguistics and Foreign Language Teaching Lecturer: Rui Liu.
Popular Methods Approach – describes how language is used and how its constituent parts interact. With other words it offers a model of language competence.
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
The Oral Approach and Situational Language Teaching
ELT materials development
THE DIRECT METHOD.
Chapter 4 The Audiolingual Method
COMMUNICATIVE LANGUAGE TEACHING
Scaffolding.
Presentation transcript:

Using Course books for Language Teaching Lecture # 27

Review of Lecture 26 We had a discussion on CBI and some of its more commonly practiced models (theme-based, sheltered, adjunct, and SCLT). We have situated CBI within the broader paradigm of CLT, articulated the underlying principles of CBI, and shown how these principles mesh with those of the communicatively oriented classroom. The classroom extracts illustrate the underlying principles in action. They provide a clearer picture of how content and language provide complementary aspects of the curriculum and how the input –rich environment of the CBI classroom can lead to successful language acquisition.

What is a Course book? Course books are prepackaged, published books used by the students and teacher as the primary basis for a language course. Course books range from those that are broadly focused on the developing all language skills to those that focus on a specific skills such as writing, or specific area such as hotel management. In addition to the student book, course book packages may include audio-cassettes or CDs, videos, work books, CD Roms, test packages and internet material. A course book is a learning tool shared by teachers and learners that can be used in systematic and flexible ways. To use it well, it is important to understand how it is put together and how it can be adapted to meet the needs of your particular learners.

Background to the design and use of course books Up until the mid twentieth century, language books were mainly used in academic setting to understand the written texts of the target language. This approach is called as grammar translation approach. We saw in GTM, the use of course books for reading passages…. In the 1960s and 1970s, the focus shifted from GTM to Audio lingual Method and grammar. ALM was the outgrowth of behaviorist theories that learning is habit formation, the result of response to stimuli. Language course books used dialogues, pattern practice and substitution drills in which the teacher provided a stimulus such as a sentence beginning with they and cue she and the learners provided a response sentence, changing the subject from they to she…….

Background to the design and use of course books Structural linguistics, which views language as a system In the 1970s and 80s, there was a shift toward the notional-functional approach. According to this approach, language was understood to be used for purposes, of functions, such as expressing opinions, and to talk or write about both abstract and concrete topics, or notions, such as time and weather. Communication took precedence over grammar. Course books began to emphasize functional language as well as pair work and group work activities in which learners used the language to communicate with each other. The development of EAP and ESP also influenced the kinds of materials that were published. Other approaches to language teaching have also questioned the effectiveness of course books. The intro of Task based Language Teaching in 1980s ……….

Principles for Using a Course book 1) Understand how the course book is organized A course book provides a visible outline for what is to be learned in the classroom. Course books are described metaphorically as maps. Most course books are organized around key features of language. These features include topics associated vocabulary, grammar structures and social and cultural interaction skills. Course books also emphasize two or more of the four skills of speaking, listening, reading and writing.

Principles for Using a Course book 2) Adapt the material Course books are not written for a specific group of people. They are written for a generalized target group (e.g for children or adults for use in English speaking countries or in other countries, for beginner, intermediate or advanced levels and so on. No book can meet all the needs and interests of each group of learners that uses it. For this reason, a course book must be adapted to your particular group of learners. Acklam (1994, p.12) suggests the following acronym for adapting a coursebook: “ SARS” SARS on next slide

Principles for Using a Course book SARS S= Select; what parts of the course book do you definitely want to keep? A= Adapt; What parts of the course book do you basically want to keep, but need to change in some way to make them more suitable for your students, and in tune with your teaching style? R= Reject; What parts of the course book do you definitely want to leave out. S= supplement; what else do you need to bring to the course book to fulfill the requirements of the overall syllabus your are working to, and to respond to the needs of your particular students.

Principles for Using a Course book 3) Prepare the learners; Preparing the learners means two things, First it means orienting them to the content and purpose of the activity, that is making sure they know what the activity is about and why they are doing it. Second, it means making sure they understand the steps of the activity, how to do it. Simply telling the learners the what, how and why of an activity doen’t prepare them. Preparing the learners means preparing yourself. What is the context for the acitiviy?

Principles for Using a Course book Monitor and Follow up Any activity actually has three parts: preparation, implementation, and follow-up. While the students are doing an activity, you have an important role: to monitor what and how well they are doing. The easiest way to monitor is to walk around the classroom and observe what they are doing. As you circulate, you can answer questions, keep track of language problems, offer helpful corrections and make sure they are doing what they are supposed to be doing. Monitoring also helps you to see if the time limit you set was appropriate and whether it will need to be shortened or extended.

Principles for Using a Course book Build a repertoire

Classroom techniques and tasks Survey or map the territory Group prioritizing Personalizing Format shift

Classroom techniques and tasks Use props, visuals or realia Visual instructions Elicitation Mistake log Group survey Activity chart

Using a course book in the class room Talk it over Talk about…..

Summary In this lecture, we talked about some of the ways in which course books have changed through the years, as well as some of the disadvantages and advantages of using course books. We talked about five principles for using a course book, followed by techniques that show how to put the principles into practice; How a course book is organized, ways to prepare for, monitor, and follow up an activity, ways to adapt and supplement what is in a course book, as well how to build a repertoire of one’s own.