Second-Language Teaching Methods: Principles & Procedures
Second-Language Teaching Methods: Principles & Procedures
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Grammar-Translation Approach
Direct Approach
Reading Approach
Audiolingual Method
Community Language Learning
The Silent Way
Communicative Approach--Functional-Notional
Total Physical Response
Classes are taught in the students' mother tongue, with little active
use of the target language. Vocabulary is taught in the form of
isolated word lists. Elaborate explanations of grammar are always
provided. Grammar instruction provides the rules for putting words
together; instruction often focuses on the form and inflection of
words. Reading of difficult texts is begun early in the course of study.
Little attention is paid to the content of texts, which are treated as
exercises in grammatical analysis. Often the only drills are exercises
in translating disconnected sentences from the target language into
the mother tongue, and vice versa. Little or no attention is given to
pronunciation.
d. Drill
9. Don’t stand in one place; move about the room standing next to as
many different students as possible to spot check their production.
Thus you will know who to give more practice to during individual
drilling.
10. Use the "backward buildup" technique for long and/or difficult
patterns.
--tomorrow
STAGE 1
2. The counselor then reflects these ideas back to the client in the
foreign language in a warm, accepting tone, in simple language in
phrases of five or six words.
3. The client turns to the group and presents his ideas in the foreign
language. He has the counselor's aid if he mispronounces or
hesitates on a word or phrase. This is the client's maximum security
stage.
STAGE 2
1. Same as above.
2. The client turns and begins to speak the foreign language directly
to the group.
3. The counselor aids only as the client hesitates or turns for help.
These small independent steps are signs of positive confidence and
hope.
STAGE 3
STAGE 4
STAGE 5
1. Same as stage 4.
2. The counselor intervenes not only to offer correction but to add
idioms and more elegant constructions.
Procedures
Materials
The complete set of materials utilized as the language learning
progresses include:
Functional-notional Approach
Finocchiaro, M. & Brumfit, C. (1983). The Functional-Notional
Approach. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Step 2 The teacher says the command as both the teacher and the
students then perform the action.
Step 3 The teacher says the command but only students perform the
action
Step 5 The roles of teacher and student are reversed. Students give
commands to teacher and to other students.
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