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TESOL Materials Design and Development Finish Tomlinson’s “Introduction” and begin Harmer’s “Describing Learners” Week 3.

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Presentation on theme: "TESOL Materials Design and Development Finish Tomlinson’s “Introduction” and begin Harmer’s “Describing Learners” Week 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 TESOL Materials Design and Development Finish Tomlinson’s “Introduction” and begin Harmer’s “Describing Learners” Week 3

2 Key Concepts & Ideas Implicit vs. Explicit learning Inductive vs. Deduction teaching and which do we use to facilitate learner self investment and discovery? How do we create materials with impact and that Ss will find useful and relevant? How do we put Ss at ease? How do we build confidence in Ss? How do we know if Ss are ready to acquire the points being taught?

3 8. Learner’s attention should be drawn to the linguistic features of the input Meaning before form Materials help s to notice gap in interlanguage Recycling of key points or features to assure that Ss notice and acquire Use enhanced input techniques to drawn Ss attn to salient features of input Schema activation

4 Enhanced Input Jane plans to marry Tom. She likes Tom, but Tom doesn’t like her. Tom always runs when he sees her. She catches Tom. Tom falls in love. It ends happily. What do I want my Ss to notice? How is their attention drawn to the input?

5 Schema Theory & Schema Activation

6 Preparing Ss to learn new vocabulary and concepts

7 9. Materials should provided opportunities to use the TL for communicative purposes Information and opinion gaps Survey Mingle activities

8 10. Materials should take into account that the positive effects of instruction are usually delayed

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10 11. Materials should take into account that learners have different learning styles This will be discussed in detail later in the lesson.

11 12. Materials should take into account that learners differ in affective attitude providing choice of… –different types of texts –different kinds of activities providing optional extras for highly motivated and higher level learners remembering variety is the spice of life including opportunities for Ss to discuss… –the value of learning English –their attitudes and feeling about the course and materials being aware of the cultural sensitivity of your learners giving Ss opportunities to connect classroom themes and topics to their own lives and experiences providing roles for reluctant learners who do not want to participate in group work

12 13. Materials should permit a silent period at the beginning of instruction

13 14. Materials should maximize learning potential Left Brain uses logic detail oriented facts rule words and language present and past math and science can comprehend Knowing Acknowledges order/pattern perception knows object name Right Brain uses feeling "big picture" oriented imagination rules symbols and images present and future philosophy & religion can "get it" (i.e. meaning) believes appreciates spatial perception knows object function

14 15. Materials should not rely too much on controlled practice

15 16. Materials should provide opportunities for outcome feedback

16 Next Week’s Homework Please read the chapter on “Learning Objectives” and answer the questions (turned in online before our next class). Post your discussion forum entry and reply to at least two other participants’ entries.

17 Warm up: Think about the following Qs: What are the different aspects of learners mentioned in this reading? How does “age” affect the way we teach our students? What is meant by “learning styles”? Is important to consider our students’ learning styles? Why? What are some different ways we can motivate our students?

18 How Learner’s Differ Age Level Ability/Aptitude Multiple Intelligences (related to aptitude) Learning styles Motivation

19 Respond to meaning even if they don’t understand individual words. Often learn indirectly than directly. Understanding comes from what they see, hear, touch and interact with, not just from explanation. Generally display an enthusiasm for learning and are curious about the world around them. Have a need for individual attention and approval from the teacher. Keen to talk about themselves and respond well to learning that uses their own lives as topics in the classroom (personalization). Have limited attention span unless the activity is extremely engaging.

20 Adolescents and Praise Is it always appropriate for a T to openly praise a middle school Ss in front of his or her peers? Why or why not?

21 Adults and Language Learning Are adult learners more comfortable with inductive or deductive approaches to language learning? Why? Tomlinson and many researches say that the best way to learn a language is implicitly through a focus on procedural knowledge, how do we apply this to adult learners?

22 Attention Span & Older Learners

23 Discussion Questions What are the characteristics of a “good learner” in terms of Korean culture? What is your definition of a “good learner”?

24 Learning Styles visual (images, pictures, demonstrations) auditory (prefer to hear the language) kinesthetic (prefers to do something physical action) tactile (hands) studial (pays attention to the linguistic feature of the language) experiential (prefers to use the language, meaning more than correctness) analytic (learns language piece by piece) global (prefers to respond to whole chunks of language) dependant (prefers to learn from a teacher and a book) independent (prefers to learn from their own experience)


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