Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
Teaching and language input
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
Teaching and language input
L2 learning differs from L1 learning in that the majority of students fall by the wayside before they get to a high level. An important element in L2 success appears to be how learners are treated: the teaching method they encounter, the language they hear and the environment in which they are learning. The purpose of language teaching in one sense is to provide optimal samples of language for the learner to profit from – the best ‘input’ to the process of language learning. Everything the teacher does provides the learners with opportunities for encoun- tering the language. At this point, communicative and task-based methods of teaching mostly part company with the listening-based methods. The communicative methods have emphasized the learners’ dual roles as listeners and as speakers. A typical exercise requires students to take both roles in a conversation and not only to understand the information they are listening to, but also to try to express it themselves. They are receiving input both from the teacher and from their peers in the class. The listening-based methods, however, confine the student to the role of listener. In a technique such as total physical response, the students listen and carry out com- mands, but they do not have to speak. Hence the input they receive is totally con- trolled by the teacher. An example from Krashen and Terrell’s The Natural Approach (1983) consists of getting the students to choose between pictures according to the teacher’s description: ‘There are two men in this picture. They are young. They are boxing.’ This approach was encapsulated in Krashen’s slogan, ‘Maximize compre- hensible input’ (Krashen, 1981b). Proponents of communicative teaching methods have often felt that it is bene- ficial for students to listen to authentic language consisting of judiciously chosen samples of unexpurgated native speech, as we have seen. Authentic speech evi- dently needs to be made comprehensible in one way or another if it is to be use- ful. Its lack of any concession to the learner needs to be compensated for in some way, for example, with explanations or visuals. Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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