As 11 Eng 1 Notes
As 11 Eng 1 Notes
The language arts are commonly classified according to the tasks involved such as listening, speaking,
reading and writing. (Viewing.) These tasks may in turn be classified as Receptive (listening and reading) and
Expressive (speaking and writing). Another way of classifying them would be as Oral Activities (listening and
speaking) and Written Activities (reading and writing). Such a variety of possible classification schemes attests
to the commonality of the skills among the various language arts.
In the early childhood years, listening and speaking are closely linked. Listening is a major avenue of
learning. Through listening, children acquire a knowledge of their world translated into language. They learn
vocabulary through repeated associations of objects and their vocal symbols, they assimilate syntactic patterns
by hearing those patterns spoken over and over. Although very young children do not speak in the whole sentence
patterns that they hear, research indicates that they are, nevertheless, thinking in. As their language performance
develops, they sentence equivalents gradually expand their beginning minimum utterances to include all the
surface elements of adult language. Listening provides the models for oral language development.
The similarity of skills among the four language arts makes learning in one area complementary to that in
another area. Although each task may involve different cognitive processes, many skills involving language and
thought are used in all language arts activities. In both reading and writing for example, children use their
knowledge of such things as vocabulary, inflected form of words, sentence structure, and punctuation.
The relatedness of the language arts is graphically represented in Figure 1 above. The four categories-
listening, speaking, reading and writing- are shown as having overlapping sets of skills and abilities which operate
within a universe of language.
Cognition, at the center of the universe, is reflected in both the content and the process of using language.
It is the mind that controls our capacity for knowing and thinking and that allows us to organize and share
knowledge through the language system.
The Importance of Language
Language is the key to all human activities. It is the vehicle through which the world can be understood
and appreciated. Without language, people are isolated and helpless. (Gertrude Boyd,1976). Language is a
conscious or unconscious part of nearly everything we do. It is a personal matrix for receiving, processing, and
sharing ideas and information.
The need for language is a basic premise underlying language teaching and learning. Language permits
functional and creative exploration of the world of meaning by allowing us to communicate with others and with
ourselves. Competency in language is a prerequisite for productive and satisfying experience.
Language Functions
The uses of language are derived from the needs and customs of a given society. In addition to using
language to think, to communicate information and to direct behavior, we use language in social and very
personal ways.
Language is an important aspect of human relationships. Consider its use in greetings, conversation,
organizational meetings, ceremonies and informal written communications. It is also used as an expression of
emotion, as a release from tension, as a reaction to an emergency and as a means of sharing unique personal
perceptions.
DeStefano (1978) gives seven universal functions of language originally identified by Halliday (1975):
1. Instrumental language
• “I want” or “I need”.
• Language is used to satisfy needs or desires. It often takes the form of a request.
2. Regulatory Language
• “Do this,” or “Get out of here!” or “Stop it!”
• Language is used for controlling others.
3. Interactional Language
• “Will you play with me?” or “Let’s go for a walk together.”
• Language is used for establishing relationships, defining them and maintaining them. It is also used
for participating in social behavior.
4. Personal Language
• “I’m going to be a doctor” “I think….”
• Language is used for expressing individuality, to give personal opinions and feelings.
5. Imaginative Language
• “Let’s pretend” or “Once upon a time,” etc.
• Language is used to create a world of one’s own.
6. Heuristic Language
• “Why?” “What’s that for?” or “Why is the sky blue?” or “Why do people talk differently?”
• Language is used for exploring the world, for finding things out.
7. Informative Language
• “I’ve got something to tell you.”
• Language is used for conveying information.
To be competent users of language, children need to be aware of its functions and they should develop
skill in using it for different purposes. A balanced language program gives attention to the full range of language
functions. Through many activities, children discover the relationships of language choice and language function
and become flexible and competent in using language appropriately.
Grade 1 The learner listens for comprehension, speaks clearly and uses appropriate expressions in talking
about oneself, family. and other social context interactions.
Grade 2 The learner listens critically to one-two paragraphs: use appropriate expressions in varied
situations; reads texts for pleasure and information critically in meaningful thought units'
responds property to environmental prints likes signs, posters, commands and requests; and
writes legibly simple sentences and messages in cursive form.
Grade 3 The learner listens critically to get information from text heard. demonstrates independence in
using the basic language structure in oral and written communication. and reads with
comprehension.
Grade 4 The learner listens critically to news reports and other radio broadcasts and expresses ideas
accurately in oral and in written forms: demonstrates confidence in the use of the language to
meet every day needs; and reads independently and gets relevant information from various text
types.
Grade 5 The learner listens critically to different text types: expresses ideas logically in oral and written
forms; and demonstrates interest in reading to meet various needs.
Grade 6 The learner listens critically: communicates feelings and ideas orally and in writing with a high
level of proficiency: and reads various text types materials to serve learning needs in meeting a
wide range of life's purposes.
Grade 7 The learner demonstrates communicative competence through his/her understanding of
Philippine Literature and other texts types for a deeper appreciation Of Philippine Culture.
Grade 8 The learner demonstrates communicative competence through his/her understanding Of Afro-
Asian Literature and other texts types for a deeper appreciation Of Philippine Culture and those
Of other countries.
Grade 9 The learner demonstrates communicative competence through his/her understanding Of British-
American Literature, including Philippine Literature and other text types for a deeper
appreciation of Philippine Culture and those of other countries.
Grade 10 The learner demonstrates communicative competence through his/her understanding of literature
and other text types for a deeper appreciation of World Literature. including Philippine Literature.
DEFINITION OF LANGUAGE
Linguistic define language as a system of arbitrary vocal symbols through which members of a group
communicate. This definition contains several concepts that help us understand what language is and how it
works.
Nature of Language
1. Language is Systematic – Language is consistent and predictable. It follows patterns or rules that allow
an infinite number of communications. We develop an intuitive knowledge of the language system which
allows us to generate and receive and messages that are totally new to us.
2. Language is Arbitrary – The elements of a language system are arbitrarily determined. Individuals
cannot utter any string of sounds in any order and expect others to understand them. Communication is
dependent on an established system and decisions about the elements within that system are necessarily
arbitrary.
3. Language is Vocal – Language is based on a set of speech sounds produced by the vocal organs of the
body. Words are made by combining those sounds. Thus, speech is the primary language of a group.
Writing is a symbolic representation of speech and was developed thousands of years later.
4. Language is Symbolic – Words stand for objects and things and they allow us to talk about them when
they are not present. A word is not the thing; it is a symbol for the thing. The symbolic nature of our
language allows us to think and talk about abstract ideas such as democracy and love, as well as about
concrete objects and things.
The Purpose of Language is Group Communication
The need for communication among members of a group gives rise to language. The language that
develops belongs to the group and binds them together. They in turn are responsible for knowing the language; it
is a prerequisite for functional membership in the group.
Four Phases of the Teaching and Learning of English as a Second Language
Phase I: Establishing Meaning
The first of the four phases is the establishment of meaning. A teacher cannot teach without giving careful
attention to the critical task of setting a clear-cut meaning for the student. The learner must not be practicing
meaningless language. The student must have a meaning for the language, and it must be clear to the student and
the teacher that comprehension has been achieved.
Student comprehension, within the limits set by the teacher and the situation, must not be sacrificed in the
name of speed, curriculum, objectives and time or materials.
There are at least Five Ways to Teach Meaning:
1. The first is through the use of a tangible object-a glass, a vase, a table.
2. Second, through illustrations, paintings, photographs, drawings.
3. The third way is through the development of a verbal context- a number of already known elements are
recombined so that student can guess the meaning of the new item from the language which surrounds it.
4. A fourth effective way to establish meaning is through actions-walking, running, swimming.
5. The last means is through translation. Where all other means of establishing meaning have been considered
and found wanting, translation should be used. Remember, however, translation occurs once. After that,
it is practiced. These “h
6. ows” can be used independently or in any variety of combinations.
Through each phase, a certain set of conditions or life-giving environment should be maintained. The
teacher needs to develop for the learner a non-threatening environment where the learner is safe enough to take
personal risks without fear of personal loss of self-esteem, peer respect, and teacher acceptance. To foster such
a safe and, therefore, effective learning environment, the teacher should first draw the language content of the
materials from the students’ own lives. Students have friends, work, concerns, needs-in short, they have
experiences for which they need language. Secondly, the teacher should vary the activities. Language learners
especially need a variety of experiences that are both relaxing and exhilarating.
Finally, and this one may be the most difficult-the teacher should sustain her enthusiasm. The teacher’s
performance should be as fresh and enthusiastic as if she were hearing or saying or reading or writing it for the
first time. All of these conditions make for a setting which helps learning occur.
Phase II: Practice
The second phase of the teaching and /learning function has three characteristics. Practice must be
manipulative, meaningful, and communicative, if pupils are to reap maximum benefits.
1. Manipulation ensures that the learner won’t be dealing with linguistic functions he is incapable of
handling.
2. Meaningful practice goes a long way toward easing the boredom factor long associated with the phase by
eliminating extraneous effort on the part of the students. It guarantees that students will practice only as
long as that practice is meaningful (i.e., necessary) for them.
3. Communicative practice is essential in helping students make the jump between the security of the
classroom and the real-life surprise of communication in the second language outside the classroom.
These characteristics must be ever-present in the practice phase and must be carefully woven together by
the teacher. The three characteristics are consistently interdependent and omission of any one of the characteristics
will result in lessened lesson effectiveness and increased frustration, boredom, and parroting.
The backbone of the Practice Phase consists of the Audio-Lingual Drill types. Although the audio-lingual
method has come under fire in recent years, drills of this type remain an important component of any English
class and methodology. The bottom line is that drills must be meaningful.
1. Minimal Pair Drill – This refers to a pair of words, phases or sentences which sound alike except for one
phonemic difference. The students may be asked solely to recognize the difference between the two
examples or may be expected to recognize the difference and incorporate it into a productive activity
(saying the two examples, etc.).
2. Substitution Drill – This consists of a base phrase or sentence in which one element is replaced by
another.
Examples:
Teacher: Mary has a book.
Teacher: Train
Student/s: Mary has a train.
Teacher: Truck
Student/s: Mary has a truck.
3. Multiple Slot Substitution Drill – This employs some features of single slot substitution. However,
introduction of the first new element necessitates the change of a second element.
Examples:
Teacher: John called his mother.
Teacher: Mary
Student/s: Mary called her mother
Teacher: They
Student/s: They called their mother.
4. Moving Slot Substitution – This is more complex because attention is focused on different slots on the
frame.
Examples:
T: The play starts at seven tonight.
S: The play starts at seven tonight.
T: _______ tomorrow.
S: The paly starts at seven tomorrow.
T: _______ eight.
S: The play starts at eight tonight.
5. Transformation – This drill effects a change in sentence type or tense.
Examples:
John is happy. John isn’t happy.
John wrote a letter yesterday.
John will write a letter tomorrow.
6. Integration – Two separate statements are combined into one.
Examples:
I saw the dog. The dog had brown spots.
I saw the dog that had brown spots.
7. Expansion – This refers to the use of an additional word/words to an utterance.
Examples:
The dress is pretty.
The blue dress is pretty. (Blue)
A second form of practice is achieved through the Question-Answer Sequence. There are four basic
question types.
1. Yes/No – It asks for nothing more than affirmation or negation of information presented.
Examples:
Are you going to the party?
Do you know the answer?
2. Choice – It presents the respondent with two or more alternatives.
Example:
Are they watching Vilma or Awitawanan?
3. Interrogation Word – It requires the respondent to supply the information to the question.
Examples:
Where is my chicken sandwich?
How long have you lived in Manila?
4. Tag – This requires affirmation or negation of a statement which precede it. The tag agrees with the
statement part in number, tense, and in verb type.
Examples:
He’s not serious, is he?
He’s serious, isn’t he?
Sharon sings nightly, doesn’t she?
Sharon doesn’t sing nightly, does she?
The third component of practice is Dialogue Completion. In this circumstance the student is given a
contextual situation to which he must respond. It may also supply a response to which the student supplies a
question.
S1: ________________
S2: No, I was at the library last night.
S3: Did you find the book you wanted?
S4: No, _______________________.
The practice components of Phase II may be implemented in several ways. All are essentials to complete
the Practice Phase.
1. The first method of implementation is repetition. Repetition includes the old stand-bys, choral,
individual, backward build-up, chain and songs.
2. The second type of implementation is recombination of oral/aural drills for reading and writing practice.
3. The final method of implementing the Practice Phase is through a category called selection. Selection
implies that the teacher has set up a fairly controlled communication situation based on what has been
learned previously in an even more controlled situation.
Three major areas of selection are available to teachers and pupils; open-ended questioning, description
and games.
1. Open-ended questioning may be either teacher or student initiated. In the case of teacher initiation, she
has no way of predicting the student’s answer.
Example:
What’s your favorite food?
Student initiated questioning may be found in such circumstances as student interviews or as a component
of the other two categories of selection: description and games.
2. Description entails the teacher controlling what is to be described where she sets up the pattern to be used
in describing through instructions to the student.
Example:
The class has been studying “there is,” “there are” and types of food. A picture of a supermarket is handed
to the student and the teacher says. “Tell me all the things there are in the picture.” If the class has been
studying the simple present tense, the teacher may instruct the student, “Tell me five things you see using
there is or there are.”
3. Games are included as part of selection due to the more flexible nature of most games.
As demonstrated in the First Phase “Establishing Meaning,” the four conditions the teacher must maintain
to foster a good learning environment remain in the Practice Phase. There is, however, an additional condition
imposed on the teacher in this phase. The teacher must vary the difficulty level of the drill or activity. The
difficulty level has a direct impact on whether the student will be bored or frustrated.
Phase III: Purposeful Student Communication
The third phase of the teaching/learning function is one which pushes the student out of the “practice
nest.” It encourages students to try their wings in the second language through student-initiated manipulation and
recombination of what has been previously taught as well as student-initiated introduction of patterns and
vocabulary.
The bulk of the third phase rests within a single concept-student utilization of what has been introduced and
learned (whether inside or outside of the classroom) to suit the individual’s purposes. It is a time of
experimentation, both for the student and the teacher, as both parties try to move through the shock-waves of
increasing language variations on what has been taught, to the epicenter of effective communication.
Selection may be implemented in several ways:
1. Role-playing – A situation is established which requires certain behavior on the part of the students. The
student responds to the situation using language which best fits his own role in the situation with regard
to reactions issued by other students taking part in the role-play.
2. Gaming-simulation – It is best viewed as an extended role-play. Here the student creates not only a
character in a single situation but a whole environment-a culture, an economy, a life- style. Role-play may
be considered a single scene in the play while gaming simulation is the play itself.
3. Problem-solving – A real life problem is introduced to the students. Student communication takes place
within the context of brainstorming to find a solution to the problem.
4. Hypothetical Recombination – This involves stretching language capacities to deal with situations that
will probably not occur. It is a matching of creativity and imagination with functional language patterns.
Example:
What would you be like if you lived on Mars?
5. Directed Discourse – This is the use of a structured situation to encourage the student both to choose and
use language that is appropriate to the specific situation and at the same time to help the student safely
encounter situations which she has avoided.
The additional condition introduced is that of identification and incorporation of learner goals into the
class.
Phase IV: Review, Recombination or Reteaching
It is important to review and recombine language already covered in the first three phases using any or all
of the three phases and activities outlined in each for 1) establishing a meaning; 2) practicing; and 3) purposeful
communication. This fourth phase may also mean reteaching the material or the need once again to move the
student through each of the first three phases.
Below is the diagram summarizing the conditions, skills and ways to accomplish the said skills.
Conditions Environment What How
Phase I: Establishing Meaning
1. Draw language content 1. Establish Meaning 1. Tangible Objects
from student’s own 2. Introduce A. The classroom itself.
experiences. 3. Present B. Common Objects
2. Sustain enthusiasm. 4. Explore C. Common Substances
3. Vary the type of activities. 5. Clarify D. Models (such as toy cars)
4. Vary the pace of activities. E. Actual student experiences
F. Anything that can be seen,
heard, smelled, touched.
2. Illustrations
A. Pictures
B. Cards
C. Charts
D. Films
E. Video Tapes
F. Sketches
G. Cartoons, Comic Strips
H. Stick Figures
I. Maps
J. Filmstrips
3. Contexts
A. Phrases
B. Clauses
C. Sentences
D. Dialogues
E. Anecdotes
F. Songs
G. Newspaper Articles
H. Stories
I. Poetry
J. Jokes
K. Riddles
L. Cartoons, Comic Strips
M. Questions and Answers
4. Actions
A. Gestures
B. Mime
C. Films
D. Television
E. Isolated Actions
F. Action Chains
G. Action Sequences
5. Translation
A. Oral
B. Written
C. Combination of Oral and
Written
Phase II: Practice
1. Draw language content 1. A-L Drill Techniques 1. Repetition
from students’ own A. Minimal Pair (Recognition A. Choral
experiences. and Reproduction) B. Individual
2. Sustain enthusiasm. B. Substitution C. Backward Buildup
3. Vary the type of drill C. Multiple-Slot-Substitution D. Chain
4. Vary the pace. D. Transformation E. Songs
5. Vary the difficulty of the E. Integration 2. Recombination of
drill. F. Expansion Oral/Aural Drills for
2. Questions and Answers Reading and Writing
A. Yes-No Practice
B. Choice 3. Selection
C. Interrogative Word A. Questions and Answers
D. Tag B. Descriptions
3. Dialogue Completion C. Games
Phase III: Purposeful Student Communication
1. Draw language content 1. Language initiated by 1. Role-playing
from students’ own student. 2. Gaming-simulation
experiences. 2. Language choice left up to 3. Problem-solving
2. Sustain enthusiasm. student. 4. Hypothetical
3. Vary the type of activities. 3. Purpose chosen by student. Recombination
4. Vary the difficulty of the 4. “Teacher” role greatly 5. Directed Discourse
drills. reduced or eliminated.
5. Identify and incorporate
specific learner goals into
the class content.
Phase IV: Review, Recombination or Reteaching
1. Conditions appropriate for 1. Teacher selection based on 1. Teacher selection based on
Phases One, Two, three student needs and student needs and
remain the same. requirements. requirements.
Theory of Learning
CBI makes an assumption that learners learn best when they are given language in a meaningful,
contextualized form with the primary focus on acquiring information.
• People learn a second language more successfully when the information they are acquiring is
perceived as interesting, useful and leading to a desire goal.
• Language learning is more motivating when students are focusing on something other than
language, such as ideas, issues and opinions.
• Some content areas are more useful than others.
• Teaching builds on the previous experiences of the learners. CBI build on students’ knowledge
and previous experiences. Students bring a wealth of knowledge to the classroom.
Language is Purposeful – Language is used for a specific purpose such as, vocational, social or recreational.
In order to make the content comprehensible, teachers need to make adjustments and simplifications for the
students to learn.
Objectives – In CBI, the language is second to learning the content. The objectives relate to the content, not to
the language.
Syllabus – The syllabus comes from the content. However, it is common for a topical syllabus to be used in
theme-based CBI.
Types of Learning and Teaching Activities
Stroller (1997) proposed Classification Categories:
1. Language Skills 3. Discourse Organization 5. Study Skills
Improvement 4. Communicative 6. Synthesis of Content,
2. Vocabulary Building Interaction Materials, and Grammar
Learner ´s Role
1. Become autonomous. 4. Willing to tolerate uncertainty.
2. Support each other. 5. Willing to explore alternative learning
3. Active interpreters of input. strategies and sources of content.
6. And have a learn by doing attitude.
Teacher ´s Role
1. A good language teacher. 3. Be able to draw out that knowledge from
2. Knowledgeable in the subject matter. students.
Stryker & Leaver suggest the following Essential Skills for any CBI Instructor:
1. Varying the format of classroom instruction.
2. Using group work and team-building techniques.
3. Organization jigsaw arrangements.
4. Defining the background knowledge and language skills required for students’ success.
Role of Materials
1. Whatever facilitates subject matter of the content course.
2. Comprehensibility and authenticity are both important in CBI. In addition, instructional media
enriches the context.
Types of Classes
1. Sheltered Content 2. Adjunct Language 3. Team Teach Approach
Instruction Instruction
Principles of CBI
1. The subject matter content is used for language teaching purposes.
2. Teaching should build on students' previous experiences.
3. Learners feel motivated when they perceive the relevance of the language used.
4. The Teacher helps students to complete or build expressions when they can´t.
5. Language is learned most effectively when it is used with a real purpose.
6. Vocabulary is easier to acquire when it is used to convey meaning.
7. Language support is needed when they work with authentic subject matter.
8. Learners work with meaningful and cognitively demanding language and content.
9. Communicative competence involves more than using language conversationally.
SCAFFOLDING INSTRUCTION
For ELs Brooke Ahrens EDTE 162 Summer 2008
Interaction
• To learn a new language and be successful you need interaction with others.
• Many of you indicated that you learned another language, only to lose it when you stopped using it or that
it was hard to acquire because you couldn’t practice.
ZPD and Vygotsky
• All of this will be revisited in your foundation’s classes.
• If you feel fuzzy on it, that is okay for right now!
• The biggest focus is on the idea of scaffolding in the developmental area where a student is ready to learn
math.
1. Learning precedes development.
• Introduce concepts as you are coming into the ability to know them.
2. Language is a vehicle of thought.
• We are always running internal dialogues with ourselves.
• Learning occurs in a dialogue with ourselves or others.
3. Mediation is central to learning.
• Language is a tool we use for learning.
4. Social interaction and internalization.
• The basis for all learning.
• Initially things are “outside” the child (riding a bike)- society’s tool • Become internalize and “inside” the
child- Becomes the child’s tool to use.
ZPD and scaffolding
• The Zone of Proximal Development – what you can do without help vs what you can do with help.
• A child follows the example of the adult until they are able to do the task on their own.
o Dressing a young child is a good example.
Scaffolding
1. Contingent – Dependent on the needs of the student at the moment.
2. Collaborative – Working together toward an end goal.
3. Interactive – Not a script that the teacher uses but a dialogue. Everyone participates.
Scaffolding and ZPD
• It is meant to be fluid and flexible. Removed when it appears the student doesn’t need it anymore.
• It can be rebuilt and may need to be!
3 Levels of Scaffolding
• Level 1: Classroom Procedures – How we enter the classroom or are called on.
• Level 2: Instruction of a Lesson – How we will divide fractions.
• Level 3: In the Moment Interaction – How I will help you solve that particular math problem.
Features of Scaffolding
1. Continuity – Repeated practice of a task.
2. Contextual Support – Exploration is ok- coming to the answer in different ways.
3. Intersubjectivity – The teacher and learner are working together.
4. Contingency – We change the scaffolding or dialogue as needed.
5. Handover/Takeover – As the learner is ready, they do more and more of the task while the teacher
monitors.
6. Flow – We are not at frustration level- skill and challenges are in balance.
Scaffolding “Talk”
• Instead of looking for correct or right answer we are in discussion with the student.
• We are leading the student toward the answer by means of conversation.
• It is not an oral quiz like IRF.
1. Doesn’t have to be a teacher.
• Researchers have found that students of varying ability will scaffold for each other.
• Hard to talk to all 30 students all the time.
• Easier to all them to collaborate.
• It isn’t cheating! It is problem solving.
Way of Providing Scaffolding
1. Teacher as expert scaffolds.
2. Collaboration with other learners (all in ZPD).
3. Student teaches another student.
4. Student teaches self.
• Might be a progression.
How to use Scaffolding with Els
• Spiral – Revisit the same concept within different tasks
o How can you spiral in your subject area?
• Help them be meta-cognitive.
o “This is going to be hard because it is new.” or “This should be getting more familiar to you.”.
Scaffolding with EL students.
• Remind them of the scaffolds that have fallen away - give them a sense of accomplishment!
• Repeat, repeat, repeat- but not always in the same way.
Modeling
• Give students clear examples.
o EL students need them.
o Do your native speakers?
• Model the use of academic language “when I fill in the Venn Diagram – I am comparing and contrasting
these ideas – what is the same and what is different?”
Bridging
• (Oh! Loved the bookmark!)
• Use prior knowledge from life and from class. Connections!
• LINK (remember that?) is an example of anticipation guide.
• Cultivate and honor what is already known - they are pretty savvy.
Contextualization
• The INTO
o Introduce the unit before you teach it.
o Give background, context and more information than you think is needed.
o You have been around the block a few more times.
o Beowulf.
Contextualization
• Build on what they know.
• Harry Potter.
Schema Building
• Again – You will see this in your foundation’s classes.
• Introduce the through and go over it before you teach it.
• Lower their fears – How many times have you taken a class and thought “I can’t do this” only to find you
could?
Text Re-Presentation
• Also called “Recreation” as I learned it…
• Getting the students to revisit and come to own the text as their own.
• Making plays from short stories…. a waste of time? Not really….
Metacognitive Development
• As educated adults we are able to do this automatically OR after asking for help… (the boxes).
• Kids have to be told to do it and reminded and told again.
1. Give them strategies and explain their purpose. We are using a Venn diagram.
2. Choose the most effective strategy – I am not a file cabinet person. Is this the best outline for this task?
What else might work?
3. How did that work for me? Should I use it again? How could it work? When will I not use it again?
Scaffolding Conclusion
• You can basically learn anything if someone scaffolds it for you.
• A funny story about our toilet.
Chapter 5 of our SIOP book
• Lots of familiar-ish stuff – I hope… Feature 13.
• Metacognitive Strategies
• Cognitive Strategies – creating context for themselves.
• Social/Affective strategies – interaction with others while learning.
Feature 14 – Scaffolding
• Love thinks – Aloud… Feel totally insane while doing them. It cracks older kids up.
• Contextual definitions – Vocab asides in the book.
• Repeating back the correct pronunciation – Do it carefully.
Feature 15 – Questioning
• Blooms Taxonomy is great fun for kids.
• Write/create quizzes.
• Quiz each other.
• Dice rolling game.
PARTICIPATORY APPROACH
Participatory approach is based on solving the learner’s problem in real life, using the target language as
a tool this purpose. Learners bring their outside problems into class. Participatory approach is geared towards
planning and conducting the research process with those people whose life-word and meaningful actions are under
study.
Typelogy of Participation
1. Passive Participation 4. Functional Participation
2. Participation in Information Giving 5. Interactive Participation
3. Participation by Consultation 6. Self-mobilization
The Goal of Participatory Approach
• Is to help student to understand the social, historical cultural forces that effect their lives, and then to help
empower students to take action and make decision in order to gain control over their lives.
Advantages of Participatory Approach
• Participation carries with it feelings of ownership, and builds a strong base for the intervention in the
community.
• It can bring together and establish ties among community members who might normally have no contact.
• A participatory planning process builds trust.
• A participatory planning process generally reflects the mission and goals of grass roots and community-
based organizations.
Disadvantages of Participatory Approach
• A participatory process takes longer.
• Members of the target population or the community may not agree with the “experts about what is
needed”.
• It may be difficult to assure that all the right people get to the table.
• A participatory planning process takes patience and commitment on everyone’s parts.
Two Elements of Participatory Approach
1. Group Work (Discussion) 2. Public Speaking
Role of Student
1. Actives in pursuing on going learning 2. Upholds democratic values.
process. 3. Interacting and find a way out.
Roles of Teacher
1. Motivate students. 3. Group work (discussion).
2. Shows and guide learners so that learners 4. Public speaking.
learning activities.
This history of participatory approaches adapted from G. Backman, in bergt et. al 1997 in this method the
teacher applies the scientific principle contextually and proportionally to create effective teaching and learning.
Conclusion
Participatory approach is based on solving the learner’s problem in real life, using the target language as
a tool this purpose, Learners bring that be active in the community-based organization and in their lives.
Behaviorism
Correct Behavior = Positive Reinforcement = Habit
Incorrect Behavior = Negative Reinforcement = Formation
Grammatical explanation is avoided. Any device which helps the learners is accepted-
varying according to their age, interest, etc.
Communicative activities only come after a long Attempts to communicate may be encouraged from
process of rigid drills and exercises. the very beginning.
The use of the student’s native language is forbidden. Judicious use of native language is accepted where
feasible.
Translation is forbidden at early levels. Translation may be used where students need it or
benefit from it.
Reading and writing are deferred till speech is Reading and writing can start from the first day, if
mastered. desired.
The target linguistic system will be learned through The target linguistic system will be learned best
the overt teaching of the patterns of the system. through the process of struggling to communicate.
Linguistic competence is the desired goal. Communicative competence is the desired goal (i.e.,
the ability to use the linguistic system effectively and
appropriately.
Varieties of language are recognized but not Linguistic variation is the central concept in materials
emphasized. and methodology.
The sequence of units is determined solely by Sequencing is determined by any consideration of
principles of linguistic complexity. content, function, or meaning which maintains
interest.
The teacher controls the learners and prevents them The teacher helps the learner in any way that motivates
from doing anything that conflicts with the theory. them to work with the language.
“Language is habit”, so errors must be prevented at all Language is created by the individual often through
costs. trial and error.
Accuracy, in terms of formal correctness, is a primary Fluency and acceptable language is the primary goal;
goal. accuracy is judged not in the abstract but in context.
Students are expected to interact with the language Students are expected to interact with other people,
system, embodied in machines or controlled materials. either in flesh, through pair and group work, or in
writing.
The teacher is is expected to specify the language that The teacher cannot know exactly what language the
the students are to use. students will use.
Intrinsic motivation will spring from an interest in the Intrinsic motivation will spring from an interest in
structure of the language. what is being communicated by the language.
The communicative approach in language teaching starts from a theory of language as communication.
The goal of language teaching is to develop what Hymes(1972) referred as “communicative competence.”
In Hyme’s view, a person who acquires communicative competence acquires both knowledge and ability
for language use with respect to:
• Whether (and to what degree) something is formally possible
• whether (and to what degree) something is feasible by virtue of the means of implementation available.
• Whether (and to what degree) something is appropriate (adequate, happy, successful) in relation to a
context in which it is used and evaluated.
• Whether (and to what degree) something is in fact done, actually performed, and what it’s doing entails.
(Hymes 1972:281)
Halliday described (1975:11-17) seven basic functions that language performs for children learning their
first language:
1. The instrumental function: using language to get things.
2. The regulatory function: using language to control the behaviors of others.
3. The interactional function: using language to create interaction with others.
4. The personal function: using language to express personal feelings and meanings.
5. The heuristic function: using language to learn and to discover.
6. The imaginative function: using language to create a world of the imagination.
7. The representational function: using language to communicate information.
Canale and Swain (1980) identified four dimensions of communicative competence:
1. Grammatical Competence, socio-linguistic competence, discourse competence, and strategic
competence.
2. Grammatical competence refers to what Chomsky calls linguistic competence and what Hymes intends
by what is “formally possible. “It is the domain of grammatical and lexical capacity.
3. Sociolinguistic Competence refers to an understanding of the social context in which communication
takes place, including role relationships, the shared information of the participants, and the communicative
purpose for their interaction.
4. Discourse Competence refers to the interpretation of individual message elements in terms of their
interconnectedness and of how meaning is represented in relation to the entire discourse or text.
5. Strategic Competence refers to the coping strategies that communicators employ to initiate, terminate,
maintain, repair, and redirect communication.
At the level of language theory, Communicative Language Teaching has a rich, if somewhat eclectic,
theoretical base. Some of the characteristics of this communicative view language as follows:
1. Language is a system for the expression of meaning.
2. The primary function of language is for interactions and communication.
3. The structure language reflects its functional and communicative uses.
4. The primary units of language are not merely its grammatical and structural features, but categories of
functional and communicative meaning as exemplified in discourse.
Finochiarro and Brumfit provided a lesson outline for teaching the function “making a suggestion.”
1. Presentation of a brief dialog or several mini-dialogs, preceded by a motivation (relating the dialog
situation/s to the learners’ probable community experiences) and a discussion of the function and
situation-people, roles, setting, topic, and the informality or formality of the language which the function
and situation demand.
2. Oral practice of each utterance of the dialog segment to be presented that day (entire class repetition, half-
class, groups, individuals) generally preceded by a model. If mini-dialogs are used, engage in a similar
practice.
3. Questions and answers based on the dialog topics and situation itself. (Inverted wh, or or questions).
4. Questions and answers related to the students’ personal experiences but centered around the dialog theme.
5. Study one of the basic communicative expressions in the dialog or one of the structures which exemplify
the function. Give several additional examples of the communicative use of the expression or structure
with familiar vocabulary mini-dialogs (using pictures, simple real objects or dramatization)to clarify the
meaning of the expression or structure.
6. Learner discovery of generalization or rules underlying the functional expression or structure.
7. Oral recognition, interpretative activities.
8. Oral production activities-proceeding from guided to freer communication activities.
9. Copying of the dialogs or mini dialogs or modules.
10. Sampling of the written homework assignment, if given.
11. Evaluation of learning (oral only) e.g. “How would you ask your friend to ______? And how would you
ask me to ______?”
(Finocchiaro and Brumfit 1983:107-108)
F. Total Physical Response (TPR)
A language teaching method built around the coordination of speech and action; it attempts to teach
language through physical (motor) activity. Developed by James Asher, it draws on several traditions, including
developmental psychology, learning theory and humanistic pedagogy as well as on language teaching procedures
proposed by Harold and Dorothy Palmer in 1925.
Asher’s emphasis on developing comprehension skills before the learner is taught to speak links him to a
movement in foreign language teaching sometimes referred to as the Comprehension Approach (Winitz,1981).
This refers to several different comprehension-based language teaching proposals, which share the belief
that
a. Comprehension abilities precede productive skills in learning a language;
b. The teaching of speaking should be delayed until comprehension skills are established;
c. Skills acquired through listening transfer to other skills;
d. Teaching should emphasize meaning rather than form; and
e. Teaching should minimize learner stress.
An important condition for successful language learning is the absence of stress. By focusing on meaning
interpreted through movement, rather than on language forms, the learner is able to devote full energy to learning.
Imperative drills are the major classroom activity in TPR. They are typically used to elicit physical
actions and activity on the part of the learners. Other class activities include role plays and slide presentations.
Role plays center on everyday situations. The slide presentations are used to provide a visual center for teacher
narration. Reading and writing activities may also be employed to further consolidate structures and vocabulary
as follow-ups to oral imperative skills.
G. Community Language Learning
In Curran’s CLL (1976) there are four major aspects of the learning process, namely: security, assertion,
reflection, and discrimination. The language teacher starts out by giving the student a feeling of security and a
sense of community. Then he encourages the student to make investment in his own learning by asserting himself
through participation in the group experience.
In this way, the student’s attention is infallibly guaranteed. The third and possibly, the most important step
is reflection which occurs during moments of silence. The student is asked to reflect on his own learning
experience, including his interactions with the group.
Retention of material learned is usually reinforced during the periods of reflection. Finally, there is the
discrimination stage during which the student scrutinizes linguistic material used in the group conversation in
order to infer linguistic relationships, functions, classes, etc.
H. Silent Way
The concepts underlying Gattegno’s Silent Way (1972) may be outlined as follows: Learning is work that
has to be done by the student. Teaching is subordinated to learning and the teacher’s concern, therefore, is not
how he teaches but how he can help the student to learn.
Hence, silence on the teacher’s part is of the essence. In the initial stages, learning must be conscious and
must take place within the learner. The learner tries to adjust to the outside unknown and, in the process, increases
his understanding of himself as a learner and of the learning process itself.
In order to avoid wasteful practices, the time available for the student’s work is limited. Moreover, the
Silent Way places a heavy emphasis on the value of sleep and idle moments during which, it is claimed, much
learning takes place (particularly, the types of learning commonly referred to as sorting-out, establishing
interconnections, etc.)
I. Suggestopaedia
Lozanov’s Suggestopaedia consists of “creating learning conditions that remove the results of previous
conditioning and suggestion, permitting the student’s reserves to be reached, his memory to be increased, and his
intellectual functions to be activated” (Racle, 1975:217).
The language learner (or any other learner, for that matter), according to Lozanov, surrounds himself
protectively with anti-suggestive barriers which may be broken down in suggestopaedic teaching by means of the
teacher’s prestige, the building up of the student’s confidence, the teacher’s awareness of the double level
(conscious-unconscious) in teaching, and the appropriate utilization of the arts in teaching. The teacher’s prestige
promotes the student’s acceptance and retention of whatever information is given to him by the teacher. The
teacher must always be on the alert, removing the student’s tensions that may be caused by the conscious and
unconscious elements of the teacher’s behavior. Furthermore, the suggestive influence of the arts, i.e., music,
must be put to good use in furthering the student’s relaxed, tension-free, joyous feelings.
J. Eclectic Method
An eclectic approach is one which utilizes the best (most appropriate and/useful) parts of existing methods.
These are some general principles which comprise the eclectic method in teaching English.
1. Language learning must be meaningful, real.
2. Translation is a specialized language skill and is inappropriate for the beginning language learner and for
the most teachers to rely on as a method of learning.
3. Language learning should be done in the target language.
4. Mimicry, memorization, and pattern practice do not “teach” language. They may be appropriate
techniques for a variety of classroom needs but are in general, disfavored because of their mechanical
nature, they’re overused by teachers and their tendency to be stilted and boring.
5. Reading aloud (oral reading) while useful during the decoding stage does not teach reading. It promotes
word reading and does not allow for normal regressions in reading nor does it facilitate comprehension.
6. Vocabulary acquisition, the use of a large and varied vocabulary should come early. Vocabulary should
be dealt with in meaningful contexts. Retention is not required of all new items but continuous, appropriate
usage is encouraged.
7. Reading and writing should not be delayed but taught as soon as the student is ready.
8. Structure is still generally accepted as being most efficiently taught in some organized way.
Belonging
(Interests, Partners, Local/Global)
Thinking
Subject
(Outcomes, Analysis,
(Integration, Implementation, Skills and Culture)
Assessment)
Communication
(Involvement, Support Mat, Discussions)
Main Aspects:
1. Multiple Focus – integration of subject and language teaching, blending subjects and topics, out-of-class
projects, analysis.
2. Learning Environment – Typical tasks, lots of aids, overcoming fear, authentic materials
3. Authenticity – Student is the speaker, topics related to their needs, everyday life and interest; contacts
with target language users; use of authentic materials.
4. Active Learning – Students talk more, help to rephrase the outcomes, assess progress, co-operate, discuss.
Teacher is a guide and provider.
5. Support Structure – Learning is based on prior knowledge, skills, attitudes, interests and experience;
information is provided in student-friendly forms paying attention to different learning styles; critical and
creative thinking is supported; new challenging tasks.
6. Co-operation – Courses / classes / topics are planned in co-operation with subject and language teachers;
parents are informed and invited to support students; learning reaches outside the common classroom.
How – A Dozen Ways:
1. Language Camps 4. Language Practice 6. Language Showers
2. Student Exchange Abroad 7. One or Several Subjects
3. Project Work 5. Immersion 8. CLIL Modules
In a CLIL lesson, all language skills should be combined and seen as:
• Listening is a normal input activity, vital for language learning.
• Reading using meaningful material, is the major source of input.
• Speaking focuses on fluency. Accuracy is seen as subordinate.
• Writing is a series of lexical activities through which grammar is recycled.
CLIL lessons exhibit the following characteristics:
• Integrate language and skills, and receptive and productive skills.
• Lessons are often based on reading or listening texts/passages.
• The language focus in a lesson does not consider structural grading.
• Language is functional and dictated by the context of the subject.
• Language is approached lexically rather than grammatically.
• Learner styles are taken into account in task types.
How to Begin:
• Lesson framework.
• A CLIL lesson looks at content and language in equal measure, and often follows a four-stage framework.
Processing the Text:
• The best texts are those accompanied by illustrations.
• When working in a foreign language, learners need structural markers in texts to help them find their way
through the content.
• Once a 'core knowledge' has been identified, the organization of the text can be analyzed.
Identification and Organization of Knowledge:
• Texts are often represented diagrammatically.
• Diagram types include tree diagrams for classification, groups, hierarchies, flow diagrams and timelines
for sequenced thinking such as instructions and historical information, tabular diagrams describing people
and places, and combinations of these.
Language Identification:
• Learners are expected to be able to reproduce the core of the text in their own words.
• There is no grading of language.
• Highlight useful language in the text and categorize it according to function.
• Pay attention to collocations, semi-fixed expressions, set phrases and subject-specific and academic
vocabulary.
Tasks For Students:
• There is little difference in task-type between a CLIL lesson and a skills-based ELT lesson. A variety of
tasks should be provided, taking into account the learning purpose and learner styles and preferences.
• Tasks designed for production need to be subject-orientated, so that both content and language are
recycled.
Typical Listening Activities Include:
• Listen and label a diagram / picture / map / graph / chart.
• Listen and fill in a table.
• Listen and make notes on specific information (dates, figures, times).
• Listen and reorder information.
• Listen and identify location / speakers.
• Listen and label the stages of a process / instructions / sequences.
• Listen and fill in the gaps in a text.
Typical Speaking Activities Include:
Question Loops – Questions and answers, terms and definitions, halves of sentences.
Information gap activities with a question sheet to support.
Trivia Search – 'Things you know' and 'things you want to know'.
Typical Speaking Activities Include:
• Word guessing games.
• Class surveys using questionnaires.
• 20 Questions – provide language support frame for questions.
• Students present information from a visual using a language support handout.
Planning CLIL Lessons:
• Teaching a subject in the first language of your learners there are at least two things which you can count
on: basic language ability and academic language proficiency.
• Learners in CLIL programs are learning basic language skills, academic language skills and new subject
concepts all at the same time.
• To overcome the language barrier, CLIL teachers need to plan their lessons to include language support
as well as content teaching.
Difficulties:
Learners have to be able to:
• Listen to and understand teachers talking about subjects – can they do that?
• Talk about subjects themselves – to each other in groups and to the teacher in the plenary classroom – can
they do that?
• Read subject textbooks, and write about subjects – can they do that?
Language Problems:
• The language is likely to be an issue at either the word or text level (grammar is less of an obstacle to
listening or reading).
Support Strategies for Listening:
• To help learners listen, subject teachers highlight or explicitly teach vocabulary. At the text level they help
learners to follow them by using visuals and by adjusting their talking style: they enumerate points, give
examples, explain, summarize, more than they would in L1.
Support Strategies for Speaking:
• To help students talk in the plenary classroom, teachers adjust their questions (asking, perhaps, some
cognitively demanding but short answer questions); they prompt (for example they start learners’
responses for them); they provide vocabulary, they may allow some L1 responses.
• To help them talk in groups, they provide support at the word level by listing key words to use; to help
with making sentences they can offer supportive task types such as talking frames, sentence starters or
substitution tables; or they ask students to use their L1 when discussing but their L2 when reporting.
Support Strategies for Reading:
• To help students with reading teachers may check that students understand key vocabulary before they
read; they may provide them with pre-reading questions to reduce the reading demands of the text; or they
may offer help at the text level by giving reading support tasks, such as a chart to fill in, a diagram to
label, etc.
Support Strategies for Writing:
• To students with writing, teachers can offer support at all three levels by providing a vocabulary list,
sentence starters, or a writing frame. They can also ensure that the learners talk through their writing at
the word, sentence and text level, with each other, probably in L1, before they write.
Conclusion
• From a language point of view the CLIL 'approach' contains nothing new to the EL teacher.
• CLIL aims to guide language processing and 'support language production in the same way as ELT by
teaching strategies for reading and listening and structures and lexis for spoken or written language.
• What is different is that the language teacher is also the subject teacher, or that the subject teacher is also
able to exploit opportunities for developing language skills.
• This is the essence of the CLIL teacher training issue.