The document describes three language teaching methods:
1. The Grammar-Translation Method emphasizes vocabulary, grammar, reading and writing skills. Speaking receives little attention and activities include reading aloud, question-answer exercises, and self-correction drills.
2. The Direct Method aims to communicate without translation using the target language. It emphasizes oral communication and teaches pronunciation from the start. Activities include conversations, fill-in-the-blank exercises, dictation and map drawing.
3. The Audio-Lingual Method aims to help students use the language communicatively through habit formation. It minimizes vocabulary and focuses on sounds, patterns and skills in a natural order. Activities include dialogue memorization, backward build
The document describes three language teaching methods:
1. The Grammar-Translation Method emphasizes vocabulary, grammar, reading and writing skills. Speaking receives little attention and activities include reading aloud, question-answer exercises, and self-correction drills.
2. The Direct Method aims to communicate without translation using the target language. It emphasizes oral communication and teaches pronunciation from the start. Activities include conversations, fill-in-the-blank exercises, dictation and map drawing.
3. The Audio-Lingual Method aims to help students use the language communicatively through habit formation. It minimizes vocabulary and focuses on sounds, patterns and skills in a natural order. Activities include dialogue memorization, backward build
The document describes three language teaching methods:
1. The Grammar-Translation Method emphasizes vocabulary, grammar, reading and writing skills. Speaking receives little attention and activities include reading aloud, question-answer exercises, and self-correction drills.
2. The Direct Method aims to communicate without translation using the target language. It emphasizes oral communication and teaches pronunciation from the start. Activities include conversations, fill-in-the-blank exercises, dictation and map drawing.
3. The Audio-Lingual Method aims to help students use the language communicatively through habit formation. It minimizes vocabulary and focuses on sounds, patterns and skills in a natural order. Activities include dialogue memorization, backward build
The document describes three language teaching methods:
1. The Grammar-Translation Method emphasizes vocabulary, grammar, reading and writing skills. Speaking receives little attention and activities include reading aloud, question-answer exercises, and self-correction drills.
2. The Direct Method aims to communicate without translation using the target language. It emphasizes oral communication and teaches pronunciation from the start. Activities include conversations, fill-in-the-blank exercises, dictation and map drawing.
3. The Audio-Lingual Method aims to help students use the language communicatively through habit formation. It minimizes vocabulary and focuses on sounds, patterns and skills in a natural order. Activities include dialogue memorization, backward build
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A.
The Grammar-Translation Method
1, Goal - Helping students to read and appreciate foreign language literature. - Develope ability to recognize and translate between the target language and the student primary language. - Studying another language provides students with good mental exercise, which helps develop their minds. - Through the study of the grammar of the target language students would become more familiar with the grammar of their native language and that this familiarity would help them speak and write their native language better. 2, Emphasize - Vocabulary and grammar are emphasized. Reading and writing are the primary skills that the students work on. There is much less attentio given to speaking and listening. Pronunciation receives little, if any, attention. 3, Activities are applied • Reading Aloud Students take turns reading sections of a passage, play, or dialogue out loud. At the end of each student’s turn, the teacher uses gestures, pictures, realia, examples, or other means to make the meaning of the section clear. • Question and Answer Exercise This exercise is conducted only in the target language. Students are asked questions and answer in full sentences so that they practice new words and grammatical structures. They have the opportunity to ask questions as well as answer them. • Getting Students to Self-correct The teacher of this class has the students self-correct by asking them to make a choice between what they said and an alternative answer he supplied. There are, however, other ways of getting students to self-correct. For example, a teacher might simply repeat what a student has just said, using a questioning voice to signal to the student that something was wrong with it. Another possibility is for the teacher to repeat what the student said, stopping just before the error. The student then knows that the next word was wrong. • Conversation Practice The teacher asks students a number of questions in the target language, which they have to understand to be able to answer correctly. In the class we observed, the teacher asked individual students questions about themselves. The questions contained a particular grammar structure. Later, the students were able to ask each bother their own questions using the same grammatical structure. • Fill-in-the-blanks Exercise This technique has already been discussed in the Grammar-Translation Method, but differs in its application in the Direct Method. All the items are in the target language; furthermore, no explicit grammar rule would be applied. The students would have induced the grammar rule they need to fill in the blanks from examples and practice with earlier parts of the lesson. • Dictation The teacher reads the passage three times. The first time the teacher reads it at a normal speed, while the students just listen. The second time he reads the passage phrase by phrase, pausing long enough to allow students to write down what they have heard. The last time the teacher again reads at a normal speed, and students check their work. • Map Drawing The class included one example of a technique used to give students listening comprehension practice. The students were given a map with the geographical features unnamed. Then the teacher gave the students directions such as the following, ‘Find the mountain range in the West. Write the words “Rocky Mountains” across the mountain range.’ He gave instructions for all the geographical features of the United States so that students would have a completely labeled map if they followed his instructions correctly. The students then instructed the teacher to do the same thing with a map he had drawn on the board. Each student could have a turn giving the teacher instructions for finding and labeling one geographical feature. • Paragraph Writing The teacher in this class asked the students to write a paragraph in their own words on the major geographical features of the United States. They could have done this from memory, or they could have used the reading passage in the lesson as a model 4, Use this method in context of Vietnam This method can be applied well in Vietnam. This is also one of the popular methods in Vietnam when teaching English at all levels, especially primary school. In Vietnam, learning English often focuses on Writing skills and focuses on grammar (this is shown in English tests in Vietnam). Therefore, this method is suitable for use in the current Vietnamese context. However, overusing this method will make students dependent on their mother tongue and will translate word by word when speaking English. Therefore, when applying this method in Vietnam, it should not be over used but should instead be combined with methods that can help students develop other language skills such as listening, speaking, reading, and writing. B. THE DIRECT METHOD 1, Goal - Use another language to communicate without translate. 2, Emphasized - Vocabulary is emphasized over grammar. Although work on all four skills (reading,writing, speaking, and listening) occurs from the start, oral communication is seenas basic. Thus the reading and writing exercises are based upon what the students practice orally first. Pronunciation also receives attention right from the beginning of a course. 3, Activities - Question and answer activities: Students practice new words and grammar rules by asking and responding question on full sentences. - Reading aloud: Learners have their turn to read sections of a play, passage or whatever teaching materials. - Self-correction: Students are ssuporteded to self correction themselves by selecting the answer that seems best to them among the choices related to a given topic. The teacher can answer the question by repeating what the students say and stop him or her on the sentence to signal that something is wrong with the answers. - Conversation activities: In order to assess communicatio skills, the teaching contains conversational exercises, exchanges between teacher and learners: starting with questions in target language, followed by studets asking one another using some the same grammar structures. - Fill-in-blank exercise. - Dictation: a normal speed- phrase by phrase. - Map drawing: A map with an unknown geographycal feature is drawn by the teacher, where the students label in the map. Then the teacher switches roles. - Pharagraph writing: Learner write a pharagraph in their own terms, by using a model and the teaching materials. - Vocabulary teaching through demonstration. - Memorizing. 4, Vietnam context This method can be applied in the Vietnamese context when learning English in class simply emphasizes learning grammar, forgetting about developing skills. Especially speaking skill - an important skill. Vietnamese students often pay attention to grammar, so their listening comprehension as well as speaking English fluently are still limited. Therefore, this method is the key to make up for the shortcomings of students in Vietnam. However, this method should be applied in classes where students have good English vocabulary because the mother tongue is prohibited in this method. Therefore, students who do not have a good command of English will not understand the teacher's requirements and explanations.
C. THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
1, Goal - Teachers want their students to be able to use the target language communicatively. - In order to do this, they believe students need to overlearn the target language, to learn to use it automatically without stopping to think. Their students achieve thisby forming new habits in the target language and overcoming the old habits of their native language. 2, Emphasized - Vocabulary is kept to a minimum while the students are mastering the sound systemand grammatical patterns. A grammatical pattern is not the same as a sentence. Forinstance, underlying the following three sentences is the same grammatical pattern: ‘Meg called,’ ‘The Blue Jays won,’ ‘The team practiced.’ - The natural order of skills presentation is adhered to: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. The oral/aural skills receive most of the attention. What students write they have first been introduced to orally. Pronunciation is taught from the beginning, often by students working in language laboratories on discriminating between members of minimal pairs. 3, Activities • Dialogue Memorization Students memorize the dialogue through mimicry; students usually take the role of one person in the dialogue, and the teacher the other. After the students have learned the first person’s lines, they switch roles and memorize the other person’s part. After the dialogue has been memorized, pairs of individual students might perform the dialogue for the rest of the class. In the Audio-Lingual Method, certain sentence patterns and grammar points are included within the dialogue. These patterns and points are later practiced in drills based on the lines of the dialogue. • Backward Build-up (Expansion) Drill This drill is used when a long line of a dialogue is giving students trouble. The teacher breaks down the line into several parts. The students repeat a part of the sentence, usually the last phrase of the line. Then, following the teacher’s cue, the students expand what they are repeating part by part until they are able to repeat the entire line. The teacher begins with the part at the end of the sentence (and works backward from there) to keep the intonation of the line as natural as possible • Repetition Drill Students are asked to repeat the teacher’s model as accurately and as quickly as possible. This drill is often used to teach the lines of the dialogue. • Chain Drill A chain drill gets its name from the chain of conversation that forms around the room as students, one by one, ask and answer questions of each other. The teacher begins the chain by greeting a particular student, or asking him a question. That student responds, then turns to the student sitting next to him. The first student greets or asks a question of the second student and the chain continues. A chain drill allows some controlled communication, even though it is limited. A chain drill also gives the teacher an opportunity to check each student’s speech. • Single-slot Substitution Drill The teacher says a line, usually from the dialogue. Next, the teacher says a word or a phrase (called the cue). The students repeat the line the teacher has given them, substituting the cue into the line in its proper place. The major purpose of this drill is to give the students practice in finding and filling in the slots of a sentence. • Multiple-slot Substitution Drill This drill is similar to the single-slot substitution drill. The difference is that the teacher gives cue phrases, one at a time, that fit into different slots in the dialogue line. The students must recognize what part of speech each cue is, or at least, where it fits into the sentence, and make any other changes, such as subject–verb agreement. They then say the line, fitting the cue phrase into the line where it belongs. • Transformation Drill The teacher gives students a certain kind of sentence pattern, an affirmative sentence for example. Students are asked to transform this sentence into a negative sentence. Other examples of transformations to ask of students are: changing a statement into a question, an active sentence into a passive one, or direct speech into reported speech. • Question-and-answer Drill This drill gives students practice with answering questions. The students should answer the teacher’s questions very quickly. Although we did not see it in our lesson here, it is also possible for the teacher to cue the students to ask questions as well. This gives students practice with the question pattern. • Complete the Dialogue Selected words are erased from a dialogue students have learned. Students complete the dialogue by filling the blanks with the missing words. • Grammar Game Games like the Supermarket Alphabet Game described in this chapter are used in the Audio-Lingual Method. The games are designed to get students to practice a grammar point within a context. Students are able to express themselves, although in a limited way. Notice there is also a lot of repetition in this game.