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Classroom practice and beyond
Module 25 Classroom practice and beyond
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What’s inside Learner’s specialist knowledge Class size Beyond the classroom
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Learner’s specialist knowledge
Since ESP learners bring to their language learning some knowledge of the own specialist field and the communication within it, the ESP teacher has to develop a conscious awareness so that control is gained, whether over language, rhetorical structure or communication skills.
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Content Knowledge Teaching ESP is different from teaching EFL because learners have knowledge that they need to use, which generally ESP teachers do not have.
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Roles and Relationships
An ESP teacher provides a bank of English for learner’s to use. Any judgment of appropriacy, versus accuracy can only be made jointly. An ESP teacher is often more of a consultant than a teller giving advice, suggesting alternatives and allowing the learner to make informed decisions.
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Teaching and learning Materials
Methodological approaches
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Integrating the methodologies of other Disciplines Case studies
- design an advertisement - write a letter/report - draw up a business plan - design an announcement for display on computer screens.
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In subject projects students generally have to:
Project Work In subject projects students generally have to: - generate a hypothesis - carry out a literature review - test the hypothesis - write a report - give an oral presentation or seminar
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Classroom practice and beyond
Module 26 Classroom practice and beyond
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What’s inside Learner’s specialist knowledge Class size Beyond the classroom
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Class Sizes When is large large? When small is small – one-to-one classes.
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When is large large? The notion of what constitutes a large class
depends on situation, purpose and experience.
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Large class size Largest Class taught Large becomes intolerable
Large, problems begin 1-20 33.3 25.0 21-40 44.5 34.1 41-60 50.0 37.4 61-80 60.5 42.1 81-100 64.5 85.0 62.9 80.0 55.0
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Dealing with large classes
Run classes at alternative times Combine and split classes Split classes Team-teach
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Get the authorities to increase resources – teachers, rooms, materials, etc so that class size can be reduced or out of class support can be increased
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Changing the approach Allow learners to consult each other
Introduce pair and group work Introduce new feedback procedures Have core and alternative/additional activities
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When small is small one to one Intensive Extensive
Direct Direct Indirect Eg. EAP Tutorials Eg. Telephone courses Eg. Professionals in Business, diplomacy courses
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Beyond the classroom Five modes of technology Video discs and CD-ROMS
The Internet Electronic mail ( ) CALL Material Computer-based corpora
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