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This guide explores the key aspects of teaching grammar, including methods such as rules, examples, and texts, as well as practicing, dealing with errors, integrating, and testing grammar in language education. Discover efficient activities to enhance learning, and understand the importance of appropriateness in addressing learners' needs. Gain valuable insights into presenting rules clearly, using examples judiciously, and integrating grammar seamlessly into language instruction.
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An Introduction to How to Teach Grammar Lu Qinchao May 2016
Contents • What is grammar? • Why teach grammar? • How to teach grammar from rules? • How to teach grammar from examples? • How to teach grammar through texts?
Contents • How to practice grammar ? • How to deal with grammar errors? • How to integrate grammar? • How to test grammar? • How not to teach grammar?
What is grammar? • Grammar is a tool for making meaning • the forms of the language • the meanings these forms convey
Why teach grammar? • Grammar presentation and practice activities should be evaluated according to • the E-factor --- how efficient they are • the A-factor --- how appropriate they are
Why teach grammar? • The efficiency of an activity is gauged by determining: • its efficiency --- how time-efficient is it? • its ease --- how easy is it to set up? • its efficacy --- is it consistent with learning principle?
Why teach grammar? • The appropriacy of an activity takes into account • learners’ needs and interests • learners’ attitudes and expectations
How to teach grammar from rules? • User-friendly rules • Truth --- is the rule true? • Limitation --- is it clear what the rule covers and what it doesn’t? • Clarity --- is it clearly expressed?
How to teach grammar from rules? • User-friendly rules • Simplicity --- is it uncluttered with sub-rules and exceptions? • Familiarity --- does it use concepts that the students are familiar with • Relevance --- reflecting students’ specific needs and problems
How to teach grammar from rules? • Effective rule presentation • it will be illustrated by examples • it will be short • students’ understanding will be checked • students will have an opportunity to personalize the rule
How to teach grammar from examples? • Minimal pairs • two sentences that are only different in one or two particulars • By presenting minimal pairs, the teacher • is better able to focus the students’ attention on exactly how the choice of form determines a difference in meaning.
How to teach grammar from examples? • Minimal Pairs Approach • Easy to set up • High volume of repetition
How to teach grammar from examples? Minimal Pairs Approach
How to teach grammar from examples? • Minimal pairs • However, in the absence of any contextual information, there is a danger that the sentences become leached of meaning , and that the discussion of differences may become rather academic. The teacher needs to choose lexically simple sentences with fairly self-evident contexts --- sentences, in other words, are not problematic in the way that authentic data can often be.
How to teach grammar through texts? • Language is context-sensitive • fully intelligible only when it is placed in its context • Context types • the co-text---the surrounding text • the context of situation---the situation in which the text is used • the context of culture
How to practice grammar • Criteria for choosing, designing and evaluating practice activities • The quantity factor • The more practice the better • The quality factor • Practice needs to juggle attention to form with attention to meaning
How to practice grammar • A practice activity for accuracy • Attention to form • Familiarity • Thinking time • for thinking and reflecting • Feedback • in the form of correction
How to practice grammar • A practice activity for fluency • Attention to meaning • Authenticity • real life language use • Communicative purposes • A built-in need to interact
How to practice grammar • Chunking • memorisable chunks • Repetition • built-in repetition
A Sample Lesson • Practicing the present perfect using a personalization task (Elementary) • Step 1
A Sample Lesson • Step 1
A Sample lesson • Step 2
A Sample Lesson • Step 3
A Sample Lesson • Step 4
Discussion • The preceding activity attempts to meet the conditions for fluency while incorporating an element of personalization. In this way it aims for a deeper level of personal investment in the task, intellectually and emotionally.
Discussion • The E-factor • Easy to set up • Highly economical • A high volume of repetition • A secure scaffold • Fit for classes of mixed ability • Activating a group dynamic
Discussion • The A-factor • It may help if learners were given the option of “passing” when topics come up that they do not wish to commit themselves to.
How to deal with grammar errors • Not all errors are caused by L1 interference. A lot of errors are developmental. • Not all errors matter equally. Nor do they all respond to the same kind of treatment. • Feedback---correction; positive feedback; clarification requests; reformulation • Appropriate negative feedback • Learners’ mistakes ---source for language forcus and consciousness---raising.
How to integrate grammar • How does grammar fit into the overall context of a language lesson? • In the PPP model • Language is learned in bits and in steps • Fluency develops out of accuracy • Grammatical knowledge is proceduralised through pracitce
How to integrate grammar • In the task-based model • language is acquired in lumps and in leaps • accuracy develops after fluency • the internal grammar develops through exposure and interaction
How to test grammar • Its practicality --- how easy is it to set up, administer and mark? • Its validity --- does it give consistent results • Its face validity --- do the students recognize it as a fair test, or will they perform therefore to their ability
How to test grammar • Backwash --- does it positively influence the teaching that will be done in preparation for it? • Spin-off --- can the test be used subsequently in review and remedial teaching?
How Not to teach grammar • The Rule of Context • The Rule of Use --- comunicative use • The Rule of Economy --- economising on presentation time
How Not to teach grammar • The Rule of Nurture --- try to provide right conditions for grammar learning • The Rule of Relevance ---teach only the grammar that students have problems with • The Rule of Appropriacy--- interpret the grammar according to the level, needs, interests, expectations, learning style of students
A few reflections • Grammar instruction involves • theoretical concepts and principles • learner understanding • the commons and differences between L 1 and L2 • practice for use • appropriate presentation • …