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1. Richard Johnstone
3. A POLICY EXAMPLE: EC ACTION PLAN Action Plan for the promotion of language learning and linguistic diversity (2003) :
strongly recommends the teaching of modern languages to young children from an early age, with a second AL introduced by the end of PS education.
The Action Plan aims:
to develop their proficiency in languages
to help them acquire a wider sense of belonging, citizenship and community, and
to develop a clearer understanding of their opportunities, rights and responsibilities as mobile citizens of a multilingual Europe.
4. FACTORS & OUTCOMES
5. Early Language Learning: DESIRABLE OUTCOMES? Openness
Competitiveness
Mobility
Revitalising a threatened language
.. Other? Multilingual proficiency
Development of the self
Social / Personal / Cognitive / Linguistic
..
Career /Higher Education
Global citizenship & mobility
Other?
..
For society For the child
6. THREE MODELS Bilingual Education
Early total or partial immersion
High in time & intensity
Teachers have to be highly proficient in AL
MLPS / FLES Dominant model across the world
Drip-feed, i.e. much smaller time allocation
May be separate subject or embedded
A number of possible starting-ages
Language Awareness
Introduce children to a variety of languages & cultures
7. MLPS / FLES: RESEARCH EVIDENCE ON OUTCOMES Evidence comes in part from two European Commission reviews, covering 200+ research reports
Can promote very favourable attitudes
Can promote some degree of language awareness
Only limited evidence of development of spontaneous creative proficiency in the Additional Language
Much evidence of prefabricated chunks, whether phrases or learnt-by-heart stories
If continuity into secondary not established, benefits may seem to disappear
Importance of sustainability over time, beyond favourable initial pilot stage
8. What JHS teacher may find in pupils coming from PS Substantial differences in
ML capabilities as developed at primary school
motivation for ML learning
self-perception and self-confidence
degree of literacy in Chinese general cognitive abilities
parental support
their socio-economic background
the quality of what has been provided at PS
their first-language background
perceived value of learning a ML in the part of China where they live
9. PUPIL TRANSITION PRIMARY TO SECONDARY It works well when between teachers across the two sectors (PS-SS) there is:
exchange of information and support
reciprocal visits
collaborative planning
mutual esteem
Large-scale project in NSW Australia: Chesterton et al (2004)
Joint planning by teachers covering 3 years at PS and 2 years at SS
10. CONDITIONS FOR MOVING ML AT SCHOOL FORWARD (LARGE SCALE) Political will for legitimisation, funding & sustainability
Parental involvement
Local community involvement
Exploiting the new technologies
Attitudes to AL learning
Attitudes to particular languages & cultural groups
Supply of teachers
CPD support for practising teachers
Technology & materials
Funding for research
Strong links between PS and SS
Time and Intensity
Supportive school ethos
Links with schools (abroad) Societal factors Provision factors
11. CONDITIONS FOR SUCCESS - EXAMPLE Djigunovich and Vilke (2000) identify key conditions for success in their project:
Children beginning early (aged 6)
45 minutes per day for five days per week
class size of 15 for languages
early incorporation of grammatical concepts after these are firmly established in first language (Croatian)
emotional warmth, intellectual challenge
all four skills introduced early
teachers who possessed a fluent command of the language and a good pronunciation and intonation.
12. 2/B CROATIA: OUTCOMES In Years 1 & 2:
much active learning through the target language
children systematically introduced to concepts about language through their first language (Croatian)
From Year 3 onwards:
these concepts systematically transferred into their learning of F, G, I or E, this achieved through the target language
By the end of Year 4:
the children could talk about language in the Target Language and were accurate and creative in their writing.
13. CROATIA: MOTIVATION A longitudinal study of the same childrens motivation
showed it was equally high in Years 1 and 3
but its nature had changed considerably
from motivation by fun
to motivation because Im a successful language learner
14. BECOMING CREATIVE AND ACCURATE How to help learners become both creative and accurate in their spontaneous spoken output?
Lyster (2004) studied form-focused instruction (FFI) and corrective feedback (CF) with Grade 5 children.
FFI and CF were found to be more successful than an approach based on no-FFI and no-CF.
He also found it useful to encourage pupils in noticing particular formal features of the target language
This helped them develop an awareness of language and to refine their internalised language systems as they progressed
15. EARLY READING Mertens (2003) found that children in Grade 1 learning French
benefited from being introduced to written French immediately
showed results superior to those in purely oral approaches
Vickov (2007) claims that children at Grade 1 in Croatia were
not disadvantaged in their writing in Croatian by being introduced to writing in English.
16. EARLY READING Dlugosz (2000) found that the introduction of reading in the foreign language at kindergarten
even when reading in the first language was also only just starting
helped speed the process of understanding and speaking the foreign language.
17. KEEPING A PORTFOLIO Short statements of what learners think they can do
I can explain
a game, a recipe, how to make something
I can narrate/tell
an experience, a story, a film
I can say
what I like/dislike, and explain why
I can speak/talk about
my friends, family
I can read
an illustrated childrens book
I can find
in a text what I am looking for
Personal diary of occasions outside school when the learner used the target language
Brief discussion of language-learning problems encountered, and of solutions which the learner has found
.. Other?
18. PROCESSES: PEER-TUTORING Xu, Gelper & Perkins (2005) studied class-wide peer-tutoring (CWPT)
Children at elementary school Grade 2 in the United States
Regular instances of:
cooperative play
reciprocal initiation & response.
The researchers concluded that:
CWPT had significantly helped the children in their social behaviour.
19. BRIEF DISCUSSION TASK With 1-3 colleagues who are sitting beside you, please discuss:
In what ways do young learners have an advantage over older learners in learning a modern language?
In what ways do older learners have an advantage over younger learners?
20. YOUNGER & OLDER LEARNERS COMPARED Sound system
Less language anxious
More time available overall
Productive links between first and additional languages
Range of acquisition and learning processes over time, can complement each other
Positive influence on childrens general development: cognitive, linguistic and literacy, emotional, cultural.
Make use of existing conceptual map of the world
Experienced in discourse, e.g. manage conversations and obtain feedback
Wider range of strategies, e.g. note-taking; summarising; reference materials;
Sense of WHY, WHAT and HOW, to guide their learning
Younger learners Older learners
21. CHILDRENS MOTIVATION: ACTIVITIES Wu (2003) studied children aged 5 learning English
primary school in Hong Kong, monolingual Cantonese
classroom activities which fostered intrinsic motivation
These included
a predictable learning environment,
moderately challenging tasks,
necessary instructional support,
evaluation that emphasises self-Improvement
attribution of success or failure to variables that the learner can do something about.
22. CHILDRENS INTRINSIC MOTIVATION: DEVELOPMENT Nikolov (1999) followed three cohorts of children
for eight years, taught by the same teacher.
It was found that
learners motivation could be maintained by intrinsically interesting and cognitively challenging tasks
Intrinsic motivation
Initially associated with fun activity
Then becomes linked to curiosity and challenge
Then becomes associated with perception of self as successful language learner
23. PROGRESSION: UPS & DOWNS Mitchell (2003) claims that second language learning is
not like climbing a ladder; but is
a complex and recursive process with multiple interconnections and backslidings, and
complex trade-offs between advances in fluency, accuracy and complexity.
Pelzer-Karpf & Zangl (1997) found that childrens utterances seemed impressive in Years 1&2
but then in Year 3 went through a phase of Systemturbulenz in which their grammar control seemed to fall apart
but eventually by Year 4 it sorted itself out.
24. PROCESSES: COMPUTER-MEDIATED Nutta et al (2002) compared
a conventional text-based approach with a computer-enhanced multimedia approach, pupils Grades 2-5 in a USA elementary school.
The computer-enhanced group:
more interactive
greater access to immediate feedback
more precise in pronunciation
smoother flow of reading
produced larger chunks of language.
Concluded that:
ICT can help younger learners in integrating their languages skills and in developing important strategies of monitoring.
25. CREATING A REAL + VIRTUAL COMMUNITY Partners in Excellence project
Scotland: 29 secondary schools
Government scheme: special funding to develop excellence
Ran for six years
Funding also for independent evaluation
Report will be published by the end of 2008 (Scottish CILT web-site)
26. PARTNERS IN EXCELLENCE: KEY DATA Main activities included
Residential weekends where pupils made up their own dramas and also learned how to make digitised films of the dramas they had written and acted out (full costume)
Project web-site which included special evening surgery sessions at which student from and of the 29 schools could ask questions which would be answered by an on duty teacher from one of the 29 schools.
Real visits and regular electronic links to schools in France, German and Spain
Annual special dinner attended by 200+ students, parents, local and national politicians, education officials and the press, at which the students video-dramas were shown on-screen and Oscar awards were presented.
27. PARTNERS IN EXCELLENCE: OUTCOMES Higher level of performance in national examinations
Higher uptake of foreign language learning in final years of secondary education
Stronger motivation for maintaining study and use of their foreign language
New sense of identity as a member of three interlocking communities:
28. DISCUSSION TASK Working with 1-3 colleagues sitting beside you, please briefly discuss what seem to be key qualities of:
A successful modern language teacher
A successful modern language learner.
29. SUCCESSFUL ML TEACHING Seeking to develop not only ML proficiency but also broader aims, e.g. citizenship, intercultural learning, social skills
Planning long-term for sustainability, as well as short-term for immediate success
Consulting colleagues, parents and pupils
Helping pupils understand the rich diversity of human language and the immense potential that each of us possesses
Providing a clear example to pupils of oneself as an enthusiastic, though by no means perfect, ML learner and user
Encouraging learners to be strategic and reflective, to engage in self-assessment and self-monitoring
30. SUCCESSFUL ML TEACHING Providing encouragement, sustained and varied input, interaction, feedback, a supportive learning environment and guidance
?Understanding that true progression in a language is not based on the ladder model but is a more complex and recursive process.
Building on childrens first language, whatever that may, be and promoting one plurilingual competence
?Providing open-ended questions and stimuli, encouraging children to be free and creative.
Encouraging learners to derive motivation from feelings of pleasure and success in what they are attempting to do
31. CONCLUSION: SUCCESSFUL TEACHER ?Helping learners understand the structure of different kinds of discourse, e.g. conversations, stories, reports, essays, letters
Helping learners develop skills of predicting, guessing and making inferences
?Providing a challenge which stimulates pupils interest and curiosity
?Ensuring corrective as well as positive feedback, while ensuring that this does not undermine confidence or self-esteem
Collaborating and joint planning with other colleagues in the school and with teachers from the other sector
Adopting an inclusive approach, bringing encouragement, emotional warmth appropriate support to all pupils
.. Other?
32. CONCLUSION: SUCCESSFUL LEARNER Plans, practices, revises
Reviews, Self-assesses
Processes input, e.g. notices, guesses, infers, predicts
Seeks opportunities to use the TL for real
Seeks feedback: - as well as +
Relates learning & use of ML to learning of other things
Uses reference material appropriately
Engages in positive attributions
Interacts and negotiates meaning, e.g. probes, seeks clarification
Offers help, seeks help
Takes personal responsibility Is aware of and manages different types of discourse
Produces spontaneous as well as non-spontaneous output
Focuses on form as well as on meaning, at different times
Controls anxiety and uses this productively
Feels confident, self-efficacious
Seeks underlying pattern
Pays attention, focuses attention, sustains attention
Develops strategies, uses these and reflects on / revises them
Self-motivates, self-rewards, is curious and seeks challenges
Other?
33. REFERENCES: All references in this PP are to be found in:
Chesterton, P., Steigler-Peters, S., Moran, W. & Piccioli, M. T. (2004). Developing sustainable language learning pathways: an Australian initiative. Language, Culture & Curriculum, 17, 1, 48-57
Edelenbos, P., Johnstone R. M. & Kubanek, A. (2006). The main pedagogical principles underlying the teaching of languages to very young learners. Languages for the children of Europe: Published Research, Good Practice & Main Principles. Brussels, European Commission. http://ec.europa.eu/education/policies/lang/doc/young_en.pdf
Johnstone, R. M. (2001) Addressing 'the age factor': some implications for languages policy. Guide for the development of Language Education Policies in Europe - From Linguistic Diversity to Plurilingual Education. Strasbourg, Council of Europe Reference Study
http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/JohnstoneEN.pdf
And finally:
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