National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
HELLENIC REPUBLIC
National and Kapodistrian
University of Athens
Applied Linguistics to Foreign
Language Teaching and Learning
Unit 2: Approaches and Methods for Foreign
Language Teaching
Evdokia Karavas
School of Philosophy
Faculty of English Language and LiteratureMain issues of this unit
- What is a method?
- What are the components of a method?
- What is an approach?
- Overview of most well known methods in
language teaching.
- Do methods help teachers?
- Problems with methods.
- Is there a super method?
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
2What is a method?What is a method? (1/2)
- All methods include prescriptions for the teacher
and the learners.
- All methods are a pre-packaged set of
specifications of how the teacher should teach
and how the learner should learn derived from a
particular theory of language and a theory of
language learning.
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
4What is a method? (2/2)
- For the teacher, methods prescribe what
materials and activities should be used, how they
should be used and what the role of the teacher
should be.
- For learners, methods prescribe what approach
to learning the learner should take and what
roles the learner should adopt in the classroom.
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
5What is an approach?What is an approach? (1/1)
- Underlying each method is a theory on the
nature of language and a theory on the nature of
language learning both of which comprise the
approach.
- These theories are derived from the areas of
linguistics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics and
are the source of principles and practices of
language teaching.
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Influences on an Approach
What is an approach influenced by?
- Theory of language: How is language viewed?
- Structural View of Language.
- Functional View of Language.
- Theory of language learning: How do learners learn
the language?
- What are the psychological and cognitive processes
involved (habit formation, induction, inferencing,
generalization)?
- What are the conditions that need to be met for these
learning processes to be activated?
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8
Theory of Language - Focus of Teaching (1/2)
Theory of language - focus of teaching
(1/2)
If language is seen as a system of structurally
related elements for the coding of meaning:
- What dimension of language is prioritized?
What needs to be taught?
- Phonological units.
- Grammatical units and operations.
- Lexical items.
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
9
Theory of Language - Focus of Teaching (2/2)
Theory of language - focus of teaching
(2/2)
If language is viewed as a vehicle for the expression
of functional meaning:
- What dimension of language is prioritized?
- semantic and communicative dimension of
language.
•
What needs to be taught?
- functions, notions of language.
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Components of a Method
Components of a methodSyllabus
- Syllabus is the level at which theory is put into
practice and at which choices are made about the
content to be taught, the skills to be developed, the
order of the content etc.
- The theory of language adopted will affect the
organisation and selection of language content.
- Different methods have different types of syllabi
associated with them i.e. different ways of selecting
and organising content.
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12
Teaching/Learning Practices (1/2)
Teaching/Learning Practices (1/2)
- Types of learning tasks and activities to be used in the
classroom.
•
Roles of learners in the classroom: the degree of
control that learners have over their learning, roles that
learners will assume in the classroom, learning
groupings recommended.
•
Roles of teachers: functions that the teacher is to fulfil
in the classroom, the degree to which the teacher
influences the learning process and the kind of
interaction between the teacher and the learners.
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
13
Teaching/Learning Practices (2/2)
Teaching/Learning Practices (2/2)
•
Role of materials: the function of materials in the
learning process and the forms they take. In some
methods, materials are designed to replace the
teacher so that learning can take place
independently. In others, materials are teacher
proof so that even poorly trained teachers with
imperfect control of the language can use them.
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Assessment
Assessment
- How students' language knowledge is to be
assessed.
- Error correction policy.
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Relationship Between Theories, Methods, and Techniques
How do all of these relate?
Different theories about
the nature of language
and how languages are
learned (the approach)
imply different ways of
teaching language (the
method) and different
methods make use of
different kinds of
classroom activities (the
techniques).
- techniques
method
approach
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Examples of Methods
Examples of methodsGrammar Translation (1/2)
- Traditional way of teaching Latin and Greek. In the
19th century used to teach French, German and
English.
- Typical lesson consisted of a) presentation of
grammatical rule, b) specially written text that
demonstrated the rule, c) list of new words, d)
translation exercises, e) grammar exercises.
- Emphasis on learning to read and write.
- Vocabulary is taught in the form of lists of isolated
words.
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Grammar Translation (2/2)
Grammar Translation (2/2)
- Long, elaborate explanations of the intricacies of
grammar are given.
- Medium of instruction was the mother tongue.
- No provision for the oral use of language.
- Little attention is paid to the content of texts, which
are treated as exercises in in grammatical analysis.
- Often the only drills are exercises in translating
disconnected sentences from the target language
into the mother tongue.
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Direct Method: Early 1900's (1/3)
Direct Method: Early 1900's (1/3)
- Posited by Charles Berlitz.
- Second language learning is similar to first language
learning.
- Emphasis on:
- oral interaction,
- spontaneous use of language,
- no translation,
- little if any analysis of grammatical rules and
structures.
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Direct Method: Early 1900's (2/3)
Direct Method: Early 1900's (2/3)
- Classroom instruction was conducted in the target
language.
- There was an inductive approach to grammar.
- Only everyday vocabulary was taught.
- Concrete vocabulary was taught through pictures
and objects.
- Abstract vocabulary was taught by association of
ideas.
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Direct Method: Early 1900's (3/3)
Direct Method: Early 1900's (3/3)
- New teaching points were introduced orally.
- Communication skills were organized around
question-answer exchanges between teachers and
students.
- Speech and listening comprehension were taught.
- Correct pronunciation and grammar were
emphasised.
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The Audiolingual Method (1950's) (1/3)
The Audiolingual Method (1950's)
(1/3)
- Outbreak of the World War II:
- Heightened the need to become orally proficient.
- "The Army Method" (an oral-based approach to
language learning).
- Influenced by structuralism and behaviourism:
- Identify the grammatical structures and the basic
sentence patterns.
- Practice these patterns by systematic attention to
pronunciation and intensive oral drilling.
Approaches and Methods for Foreign Language Teaching
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The Audiolingual Method (1950's) (2/3)
The Audiolingual Method (1950's)
(2/3)
- New material is presented in dialogue form.
- There is dependency on mimicry, memorization of
set phrases, and overlearning.
- By constant repetition the learner develops habits.
Language learning is seen as acquiring a set of
appropriate mechanical habits; errors are not
accepted because the lead to the development of
bad habits.
- The role of the teacher is to develop good language
habits.
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The Audiolingual Method (1950's) (3/3)
The Audiolingual Method (1950's)
(3/3)
- There is little or no grammatical explanation.
Grammar is taught inductively.
- Great importance is attached to pronunciation.
- Very little use of the mother tongue by teachers is
permitted.
- Successful responses are reinforced.
- There is great effort to get students to produce error-
free utterances.
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Typical Audiolingual Activities (1/2)
Typical audiolingual activities (1/2)
- Dialog memorization.
- Repetition drill: Students repeat the teacher's model
as accurately and as quickly as possible to learn the
lines of the dialog.
- Transformation drill: The teacher gives students a
certain kind of sentence pattern. Students are asked
to transform a sentence into a negative sentence.
- Question-and-answer drill: This drill gives students
practice with answering questions.
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Typical Audiolingual Activities (2/2)
Typical audiolingual activities (2/2)
- Complete the dialog: Selected words are erased
from a dialog. Students complete the dialog by filling
the blanks with the missing words.
- e.g. Lucy: I hear Mary got the first prize in that painting
competition.
- Rose: ...
- Lucy: Did she really?
- Rose: Yes she did. I saw her painting and it really was good.
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Designer Methods (Humanistic Approaches) 1970's-1980's
Designer Methods (Humanistic
Approaches) 1970's 1980's
- Influenced by principles of psychology and
psychotherapy.
- Developed in 70's and 80's mainly in US.
- The Silent way.
- Total physical response.
- Suggestopedia.
- Community language learning.
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The Silent Way (Caleb Gattegno) (1/2)
The silent way (Caleb Gattegno) (1/2)
- Characterized by a problem-solving approach.
- Develops independence and autonomy and
encourages students to cooperate with each other.
- Learning is facilitated if the learner discovers or creates
rather than remembers and repeats what is to be learned.
- Learning is facilitated by accompanying (mediating)
physical objects).
- Learning is facilitated by problem solving the material to
be learned.
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The Silent Way (Caleb Gattegno) (2/2)
The silent way (Caleb Gattegno) (2/2)
[1]
Sound-colour chart: Each colour symbolizes one
sound.
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