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ELT 214 Approaches to ELT II Lect. Dr. Seden Eraldemir Tuyan

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1 ELT 214 Approaches to ELT II Lect. Dr. Seden Eraldemir Tuyan
The Natural Approach ELT 214 Approaches to ELT II Lect. Dr. Seden Eraldemir Tuyan

2 VIDEO

3 Background Coined by Terrell in 1977
Theoretical rationale: Krashen’s influential theory of second language acquisition Krashen and Terrell’ book: The Natural Approach (1983)

4 Krashen and Terrell They identified the Natural Approach with Traditional approaches to language teaching. Traditional approaches: based on the use of language in communicative situations without recourse to the native language and without reference to grammatical analysis, grammatical drills or a particular theory of grammar.

5 Natural Approach vs. Natural Method
There are similarities and differences between Natural Approach and Natural Method. Both the Natural Method (the Direct Method) and the Natural Approach emphasized that the principles were believed to conform to the principles of naturalistic language learning in young children.

6 The emphasis in the Natural Approach is on
Unlike the Direct Method, the Natural Approach put less emphasis on teacher monologues, direct repetition, and formal questions and answers and less focus on accurate production of target-language sentences. The emphasis in the Natural Approach is on exposure, or input, rather than practice optimizing emotional preparedness for learning a prolonged period of attention to what the language learners hear before they try to produce language a willingness to use written and other materials as a source of comprehensible input

7 Theory of Language According to Krashen and Terrell, primary function of language is communication. They consider NA as an example of a communicative approach. For them, the nature of language emphasizes the primacy of meaning: Language is a set of messages that can be understood. “Acquisition can take place only when people understand messages in the target language”. Although they are against earlier methods like ALM, the ‘input hypothesis’ refers to the mastery of structures by stages.

8 In order to process to the next stage in the acquisition of the target language, language learners need to understand input language that includes a structure that is part of the next stage: I + 1 Thus the Natural Approach assumes a linguistic hierarchy of structural complexity. Besides, the importance of vocabulary is stressed: the lexicon for both perception and production is considered critical in the construction and interpretation of messages. Lexical items should be grammatically structured, and more complex messages involve more complex grammatical structure.

9 Theory of Learning There is a continuing reference to the theoretical and research base that underlie the Natural Approach Krashen and Terrell believe this makes the method unique. The theory and research are grounded on Krashen’s views of language acquisition.

10 Theory of Learning: Principles of Krashen’s Language Acquisition Theory
The Acquisition/Learning Theory: Language acquisition (an unconscious process developed through using language meaningfully) is different from language learning (consciously learning or discovering rules about a language). Language acquisition is the only way competence in a second language occurs. Formal teaching is necessary for learning to occur and correction of errors helps with the development of learned rules. Learning cannot lead to acquisition.

11 The Monitor Hypothesis:
The acquired linguistic system initiates utterances when we communicate in a second/foreign language. Conscious learning operates only as a monitor or editor that checks or repairs the output of what has been acquired. We may call upon learned knowledge to correct ourselves when we communicate: conscious learning has only this function.

12 Three conditions limit the successful use of the monitor:
Time: there must be sufficient time for a learner to choose and apply a learned rule. Focus on form: the language user must be focused on correctness or on the form of the output. Knowledge of rules: the performer must know the rules. The monitor does best if (a) the rules are simple to describe and (b) if they do not require complex movements and re-arrangements.

13 The Natural Order Hypothesis:
Grammatical structures are acquired in a predictable order and it does little good to try to learn them in another order. Errors are signs of naturalistic developmental processes and during acquisition (not during learning), similar developmental errors occur (whatever the native language is).

14 The Input Hypothesis: The relationship between the input and language acquisition. It involves four main issues: a) It relates to acquisition, not to learning b) People acquire language best by understanding input that is slightly beyond their current competence (I + 1) c) Ability to speak fluently cannot be taught directly; it emerges independently in time after the acquirer builds up linguistic competence by understanding input. d) If there is a sufficient quantity of comprehensible input, I+1 will be provided automatically. As long as the message is understood, input need NOT be finely- tuned. Rough-tuning is enough like the ‘caretaker speech’ (child acquirers of a first language) or ‘’foreigner talk (native speakers’ simplified speech).

15 The Affective Filter Hypothesis:
The learner's emotional state can act as a filter that impedes or blocks input necessary to acquisition: Low affective filter is desirable because it impedes or blocks less of the necessary input. Three kinds of affective/attitudinal variables: Motivation: learners with high motivation generally do better Self-confidence: learners with self-confidence and a good self-image tend to be more successful Anxiety: low personal anxiety and low classroom anxiety contribute more to second language acquisition

16 What does Affective Filter Hypothesis state?
Acquirers with low affective filter receive more input, interact with confidence and are more receptive to the input. Anxious acquirers have a high affective filter: it prevents acquisition from taking place. Affective filter rises in early adolescence: that’s why children are superior to older acquirers of a second language.

17 Implications for language teaching
1. As much comprehensible input as possible must be presented 2. Whatever helps comprehension is important. Visual aids and a wide range of vocabulary are useful, not the study of syntactic structure 3. The focus in the classroom should be on listening and reading; speaking should be allowed to “emerge” 4. In order to lower the affective filter, student work should center on meaningful communication rather than on form; input should be interesting and contribute to a relaxed classroom atmosphere

18 Design: Objectives The NA is for beginners: designed to help them become intermediates. However, specific objectives depend on learner needs and the skill/level being taught. Learners are communicated to learn what they can expect of a course and what they should not expect. Possible goal and non-goal statements are offered: “you will be able to …” “you will not be able to…”

19 Design: The Syllabus Two approaches to course organization 1. listing the goals and suggesting the ones that the Natural Approach aims under 4 areas: Basic personal communication skills: oral (listening to news) Basic personal communication skills: written (writing a personal letter) Academic learning skills: oral (listening to a lecture) Academic learning skills: written (note-taking in a lecture) These show the main goal of the Natural Approach as developing basic communication skills. Then comes the communication goals: topics, situations, functions

20 2. Purpose of the course varies according to the learner needs and their interests.
Not possible to specify goals that fit all students, so any list of topics and situations can be suggested in the syllabus Low affective filter is also considered while deciding the content.

21 Design: Types of learning and teaching activities
The main emphasis: presenting comprehensible input in the target language. Teacher talk: on objects in the classroom and the pictures (like in Direct Method) Students are not forced to talk until they feel ready. When they are ready, teacher gives comprehensible language and simple response opportunities and talks slowly and clearly.

22 A gradual progress from Yes/No questions to more advanced ones.
Charts, pictures, and other realia are used for questions and talk. Acquisition activities (focus on meaningful communication, not on language form) are encouraged

23 Many techniques are borrowed from other methods:
Command-based activities (Total Physical Response) Using mine, gesture, and context; situation-based practice of structures (Direct Method) Group-work activities (Communicative Language Teaching) Nothing new in techniques of this approach. Its main characteristics: using familiar techniques within the framework of a method that focuses on comprehensible input, low anxiety level and self-confidence

24 Design: Learner Roles Acquirer is seen as a processor of comprehensible input. S/He is challenged by input that is slightly beyond his/her current level of competence. Their roles change according to their stage of linguistic development: decision on when to speak, what to speak about, what linguistic expressions to use in speaking.

25 Pre-production stage: learners participate in the activity without having to respond in the target language. They can act out, point to pictures, etc Early-production stage: learners respond to either-or questions, use single words/phrases, fill in charts, etc Speech-emergent phase: learners involve themselves in role play and games, participate in problem-solving activities, etc

26 Four kinds of responsibilities of learners:
Provide info about specific goals Take an active role to ensure comprehensible input Decide when to start producing speech and when to upgrade it Decide with the teacher the amount of time to be devoted to learning activities Krashen and Terrell’s warning: Some communication activities may fail to provide learners with well- formed and comprehensible input. No suggestion is provided!

27 Design: Teacher roles Three main roles:
1. primary source of comprehensible input. Generates the flow of language input and provides multiplicity of nonlinguistic clues to help learners interpret the input 2. creates an interesting, friendly atmosphere (low affective filter) Not demanding speech from the learners before they are ready, not correcting errors, and providing subject matter of student interests 3. chooses and orchestrates a rich mix of classroom activities

28 Design: Role of instructional material
The primary aim of materials is to promote comprehension and communication and to make classroom activities as meaningful as possible. Relating real-world activities Fostering real communication Realia is used not the textbooks Pictures and other visual aids (supply the content for real communication) Schedules, brochures, maps, etc games

29 Procedure Techniques and activities are a mixture from other methods. Difference is the aim: comprehensible input Some examples for how to use other methods for that aim. 1. TPR for a start (commands) 2. TPR to teach names of body parts, numbers, sequence, etc. 3. Use commands for classroom terms (pick up a pencil) …

30 Conclusion Comprehension and meaningful communication and the right kinds of comprehensible input provide the necessary and sufficient conditions for successful classroom second/foreign language acquisition. Thus various techniques were adapted and integrated. Thus, (like CLT) the Natural Approach is evolutionary, not revolutionary in its procedures. Its originality is the way the techniques are used by emphasizing comprehensible input and meaningful practice activities, not production of grammatically perfect sentences


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