IDE 205 APPROACHES METHODS IN ELT AYA YALIN

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IDE 205 APPROACHES & METHODS IN ELT AYÇA YALÇIN 07285002 SELİN HOMAN 07285003

IDE 205 APPROACHES & METHODS IN ELT AYÇA YALÇIN 07285002 SELİN HOMAN 07285003

REASONS FOR THE DECLINE OF DIRECT METHOD • Difficulties to implement in public schools

REASONS FOR THE DECLINE OF DIRECT METHOD • Difficulties to implement in public schools – Restricted time – Limited skills of teacher – Size of classrooms • Reading knowledge (Coleman Report) • Lack of sound methodological principles

RESULTS OF THE DECLINE OF DIRECT METHOD • An attempt to develop more scientific

RESULTS OF THE DECLINE OF DIRECT METHOD • An attempt to develop more scientific foundation for an oral approach to teaching English • Systematic study of principles and procedures - Audiolingualism (USA) - Oral Approach or SLT (Britain)

ORAL APPROACH & SLT ►Developed by British applied linguists Harold Palmer – A. S.

ORAL APPROACH & SLT ►Developed by British applied linguists Harold Palmer – A. S. Hornby (1930 s-1960 s) ►It involved systematic principles of selection, gradation and presentation

ORAL APPROACH & SLT Important features of the method: ►Vocabulary Control Emphasis on reading

ORAL APPROACH & SLT Important features of the method: ►Vocabulary Control Emphasis on reading skills ►Grammar Control Structures through sentence patterns

ORAL APPROACH & SLT Main characteristics of the approach: • • • Oral introduction

ORAL APPROACH & SLT Main characteristics of the approach: • • • Oral introduction before written form The language of the classroom = Target language New language points = in situations Vocabulary selection = a core of common words Grammar = Simple to complex (inductively) Reading and writing are introduced later

THE ORAL APPROACH & SITUATIONAL LANGUAGE TEACHING METHOD APPROACH DESIGN PROCEDURE Theory of Language

THE ORAL APPROACH & SITUATIONAL LANGUAGE TEACHING METHOD APPROACH DESIGN PROCEDURE Theory of Language Objectives Theory of Learning Syllabus Learning-Teaching Activities Learner Roles Teacher Roles Instructional Materials Classroom techniques

APPROACH A. Theory of Language • • • British Structuralism The basis of language

APPROACH A. Theory of Language • • • British Structuralism The basis of language = Speech The heart of speaking ability = Structure Relationship between the structure, context and situation (notion of situation) Oral practice of structures

APPROACH B. Theory of Learning • A type of behaviorist habit-learning theory • Processes

APPROACH B. Theory of Learning • A type of behaviorist habit-learning theory • Processes rather than the conditions of learning (Frisby) - Receiving the knowledge - Fixing it in the memory by repetition - Using it in practice

APPROACH B. Theory of Learning • Language learning = habit formation - Correct speech

APPROACH B. Theory of Learning • Language learning = habit formation - Correct speech habits are fundamental • An inductive approach to the teaching of grammar - The meaning of structures = induced from the situation - No explanations or translation • Apply the language in class to situations outside the class.

DESIGN A. Objectives • To teach the four basic skills of language through structure

DESIGN A. Objectives • To teach the four basic skills of language through structure • Accuracy is important in grammar and pronunciation • Automatic control of basic structures and sentence patterns

DESIGN B. The Syllabus • The structural syllabus - A list of the basic

DESIGN B. The Syllabus • The structural syllabus - A list of the basic structures and sentence patterns - Arranged according to order of presentation - Structures are taught within the sentences - Vocabulary = to teach sentence patterns

DESIGN C. Types of Learning & Teaching Activities • New sentence patterns presented in

DESIGN C. Types of Learning & Teaching Activities • New sentence patterns presented in situations • Drill-based practice • The form of new words demonstrated with examples (no translation-grammatical explanations-description) • Guided repetition and substitution activities • Dictation, imitation and controlled oral-based reading and writing tasks

DESIGN D. Learner Roles • In the initial stages of learning – Passive –

DESIGN D. Learner Roles • In the initial stages of learning – Passive – No control over the content of learning – Likely to display undesirable behaviors • During the practice phase of the lesson – More active – Initiating responses and questions

DESIGN E. Teacher Roles • • Teachers serve as a model - To set

DESIGN E. Teacher Roles • • Teachers serve as a model - To set up situations - To model the new structure for students to repeat - To be a manipulator Teachers’ responsibilities according to Pittman - Timing - Oral practice to support the textbook structures - Revision - Adjustments to special needs of individuals - Testing - Developing language activities in addition to the textbook

DESIGN F. The Role of Instructional Materials • Textbook - organized lessons planned around

DESIGN F. The Role of Instructional Materials • Textbook - organized lessons planned around grammatical structures • Visual Aids - wall charts, pictures, stick figures…

PROCEDURE ● Procedures move from →controlled to freer practice of structures →oral use of

PROCEDURE ● Procedures move from →controlled to freer practice of structures →oral use of sentece patterns to automatic use in speech-reading-writing ● An example of SLT lesson plan (Pittman) First Part Body Part → stress and intonation practice → pronunciation → revision → oral practice - drilling → reading

PROCEDURE Teaching procedures to be used with SLT consists of: 1. 2. 3. Listening

PROCEDURE Teaching procedures to be used with SLT consists of: 1. 2. 3. Listening practice -get student’s attention -repeat the new model clearly, slowly Choral imitation -repeat what the teacher has said -hand signals -instruction Individual imitation -check pronunciation

PROCEDURE 4. 5. 6. Isolation - words, sounds that cause trouble - go through

PROCEDURE 4. 5. 6. Isolation - words, sounds that cause trouble - go through the previous techniques (before context) Building up to a new model - ask/answer questions (with patterns they know) - bring about necessary information - introduce the new model Elicitation - use mimes, gestures, prompt words - ask questions, make statements - give new examples of the pattern

PROCEDURE 7. 8. 9. Substitution drilling - use cues (words-pictures-numbers-names) - substitute, mix words

PROCEDURE 7. 8. 9. Substitution drilling - use cues (words-pictures-numbers-names) - substitute, mix words into new patterns Question-answer drilling - practice the new question form Correction - repeating the error - shaking head - correction by the same or different student - encouraging students to listen each other carefully

CONCLUSION • The first attempt to establish theoretical principles • Textbooks were written according

CONCLUSION • The first attempt to establish theoretical principles • Textbooks were written according to the principles of SLT HOWEVER • In 1960 s, The views of language and language learning underlying SLT were called into question

REFERENCES 1. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching, Jack C. Richards, Theodore S. Rodgers,

REFERENCES 1. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching, Jack C. Richards, Theodore S. Rodgers, Second Edition, Cambridge University Press 2001 2. Oral Approach and. Situated Language Learning, prepared by Doris Shih, FJU (Power. Point Presentation) http: //www. ling. fju. edu. tw/tesl/oral%20 approach%20&%20 SLL. ppt#256, 1, Oral Approach and Situated Language Learning