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Teaching the Language System

Teaching the Language System. Part 1. Main issues in FL grammar teaching. Whether to teach it at all Whether to do so “directly” or “indirectly”. Issue 1: pro. Krashen’s Hypotheses (the Monitor Model) -> Natural Approach, Procedural Syllabus, Content-based Learning, Immersion, etc.

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Teaching the Language System

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  1. Teaching the Language System Part 1

  2. Main issues in FL grammar teaching • Whether to teach it at all • Whether to do so “directly” or “indirectly”

  3. Issue 1: pro • Krashen’s Hypotheses (the Monitor Model) • -> Natural Approach, Procedural Syllabus, Content-based Learning, Immersion, etc. • learners are exposed to communication or take part in problem-solving tasks or learning of other school subject-matter in the foreign language, and language system knowledge is learned as a by-product

  4. Issue 1: con • a native-speakerist/BANA-oriented view • learning and acquisition processes nowadays seen as alternative “pathways” • Krashen’s ideas best seen as drawing attention to the role of acquisition as a complement to learning, rather a replacement for it

  5. Issue 2 • “direct” vs. “indirect” teaching of language system knowledge (“grammar”) • a “par excellence” example of the former: PPP (Presentation, Practice, Production)

  6. PPP

  7. PPP - some benefits • relatively well-defined overall procedure • not dissimilar to basic paradigm of teaching in other subject areas • high face-validity (looks like what language learning should be about) • many learners all over world have learned successfully using it • supported by some findings of SLA research (e.g., Wong-Fillmore in O’Neill)

  8. PPP - some drawbacks • uninvolving, potentially monotonous • usually just PP • learners may well have learned despite rather than because of it • no guarantee that forms focussed on in earlier stages will be used in later ones • conflicts with some findings of SLA research (see, e.g., Skehan in Willis & Willis)

  9. Focus on form vs. Focus on formS • Focus on formS (direct): “discrete-point grammar teaching, or what I call focus on forms, where classes spend most of their time working on isolated linguistic structures in a sequence predetermined externally by a syllabus designer or textbook writer” (Long, 1997) • E.g., GT, A-L, TPR, PPP, etc.

  10. Focus on form vs. Focus on formS • Focus on form (indirect): “during an otherwise meaning-focused lesson… learners' attention is briefly shifted to linguistic code features, in context, when students experience problems as they work on communicative tasks, i.e., in a sequence determined by their own internal syllabuses, current processing capacity, and learnability constraints” (Long, 1997) • E.g., TBLT, etc.

  11. Recommended reading

  12. Seminar • Watch the lvideo of the lesson and make notes of the main stages. Then try to answer the following questions: • Was the lesson mainly an “FoF” or “FoFS” one? • What did you like/dislike about the way language system knowledge was taught? • What would you have done differently?

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