Teaching English as a Foreign Language, Second Edition
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But what topics should be the basis of the games and activities of the primary classroom? What centres of interest are commonest in children between 5 and 11? At the younger end of the primary spectrum, the most attractive items are those with potential rather than intrinsic interest. It is what the child can do with a thing, rather than what it is, which matters. Things to hold, drop, throw or carry, things to build with, to colour, to wear, to give and take, to hide and find are what matter when the child is growing experimentally in relationship to his environment. The activity is all important, though bright colours, manageable size and sympathetic textures are compelling. This being so, the earliest choice of objects to be named should be portable (balls, balloons and bags) wearable (coats, hats and shoes) and manipulative (bricks, dolls, and small items of furniture). Gradually the vocabulary of the immediate natural surroundings can be built up—the familiar lexis of home, toy cupboard, family, of streets and shops and play. The need to name things is best harnessed by learning lexical sets—parts of the body, clothes, furniture, food, toys and animals and so on—and the manipulative appeal may be supplied by simple drawing and colouring activities followed up by games which use these objects—real or represented—as tokens for touching, collecting, finding, counting or constructing, as appropriate. The natural developmental patterns of the primary school child, then, suggesting an initial concern for naming things— nouns—and identifying where things are—prepositions— and doing things to things—verbs—opens up the world of Young Children Learning English 172 action and role-playing. Giving, and taking and holding grows into helping in the house; collecting and carrying becomes shopping; playing with clothes develops into getting ready to go out and the putting and taking, the pushing and pulling, the hiding and finding crystallise into the simulated activities of parents, animals and work-people of the familiar world. The sex-role stereotyping of the maturing young child—little girls are by nature more interested in dolls and kitchens, little boys are more interested in boats and trains and lorries is something to be exploited in the language activities, rather than shaped by the sociologically zealous teacher. Whatever is a natural topic in the mother tongue is a suitable topic for English. The introduction of reading and writing in English should not take place until a fluent oral foundation has been established and, in foreign language situations, not until the children are familiar with the printed word in the mother tongue. Indeed, many teachers of primary English, using activity methods, prefer to withhold reading and writing for up to two years. Such concentration on spoken English pays dividends in fluency, pronunciation and the natural use of English, but demands considerable expertise from the teacher. It is true that once children can read and write English their language practice and experience is no longer totally reliant upon the teacher as a model and initiator. It is also true that in the more formal systems of primary education, and those second language situations where English is being developed as an academic instrument, the printed word is properly introduced at about the end of the first year of study. But in any case, reading, and later writing, are best woven gradually into the fabric of an oral/activity methodology. There can be no doubt that primary school children can and do learn English with remarkable ease, enthusiasm and naturalness. Perhaps the saddest aspect of the FLES movement has been the problem of continuity; for unless the early learning of English is designed and functions as part of a process which continues unbroken in secondary schooling the sense of frustration in both children and teachers is considerable. It is basically for this reason that French in British primary schools has proved disappointing, and that the English teaching in French primary schools has been Young Children Learning English 173 discouraged. On the other hand, where English is taught in a co-ordinated and unbroken sequence from primary through secondary education, and where the language teaching is vigorously non-selective, as in Sweden and Malta for instance, the results are a very high percentage of the population who are bilingual. It need hardly be added that in scores of private schools in many countries where children learn English from the age of 6 or 7, and continue in the same establishment for their whole school career, standards of spoken and written English tend to be most impressive. The reason lies not in the selective nature of these schools, in superior teaching methods or smaller classes, but in the unbroken sequence of teaching English which (it is taken for granted) every child can and does learn for both instrumental and integrative purposes. The degrees of proficiency in the different languages of a multi-lingual speaker vary. That is to say, it is not uncommon for a foreign learner to have a lesser competence in speaking English than in reading and writing it. This often proves to be the case where English has been taught indirectly by translation from the mother tongue, or where the teaching has been book-centred—foreigners who ‘speak written English’ are all too common. Perhaps one great advantage of an early start to learning English is that this danger is avoided: the young learner, unhampered by folk-myths about foreign languages, is put into the position of thinking in English from the very start far more readily than the older beginner. What is more, the foreign language grows with him as an active part of his thinking and talking, and having first encountered English in its oral form he is never likely to regard the spoken word as inferior to print. Download 0.82 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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