LÝ LUẬN TIẾNG ANH 2 2
LÝ LUẬN TIẾNG ANH 2 2
INDUCTION
Course objectives
- To learn and practice how to teach English (vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation,
macro skills).
- To be aware of how to use teaching aids.
- To practice preparing some teaching aids.
- To practice some classroom management.
- To study some major types of tests and their characteristics.
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LESSON 2
Process of learning
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Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning
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● Creating: putting information together in an innovative way.
● Evaluating: making judgements based on a set of guidelines.
● Analysing: breaking the concept into parts and understand how each part is
related to one another.
● Applying: use the knowledge gained in new ways.
● Understanding: making sense of what you have learnt.
● Remembering: recalling relevant knowledge from long-term memory.
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What are 8 types of MI (multiple intelligences)?
● Visual/Spatial Intelligence: ability to perceive the visual.
● Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence: ability to use words and language.
● Logical/Mathematical Intelligence: ability to use reason, logic & numbers.
● Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence: ability to control body movements and handle
objects skillfully.
● Musical/Rhythmic Intelligence: ability to produce & appreciate music.
● Interpersonal Intelligence: ability to relate & understand others.
● Intrapersonal Intelligence: ability to self-reflect.
● Natural Intelligence: ability to understand natural words.
VAK learning style
❖ Visual learners
- Need to see the teacher's body language and facial expression.
- Prefer sitting at the front of the classroom.
- Think in pictures and learn best from visual displays.
- Prefer to take detailed notes.
- Weakness:
feel frustrated when unable to take notes.
have difficulty following lectures that are long.
unnecessary movement can be a distraction.
❖ Auditory learners
- Learn best through verbal instructions, taped lectures and face-to-face instruction
- Interpret the underlying meanings of speech.
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- Benefit from reading text aloud and using a tape recorder.
- Weakness:
have difficulty with reading and writing tasks.
unnecessary noise can be a distraction.
❖ Tactile/Kinesthetic learners
- Learn best through moving, doing, acting out & touching.
- Enjoy conducting experiments, exploring & performing tasks.
- Use color highlighters and take notes.
- Weakness:
tend to lose concentration if there is little or no external stimulation or
movement.
weak at spelling.
handwriting often not good.
Background knowledge
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Top – down Bottom – up
- Ss get a general view overall picture
- T / Ss focus on details.
- Ss recall schemata compare prior
- T / Ss analyze info (sounds, words,
knowledge and new info express
structures) get further understanding.
predictions / expectations.
● If only one process is focused, students are UNABLE to develop language skills.
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Writing an objective
❖ What are included in the objective?
- Language knowledge
- Language skills
- Attitudes (language behaviors)
- (Teaching aids)
❖ Tense: future perfect simple
❖ What makes a clear and specific objective? (SMART Criteria)
Specific
Measurable
Achievable
Relevant
Time-bound
LESSON 3
TEACHING VOCABULARY
❖ Example
Words to be taught Techniques Examples
A kimono is traditional clothing of the
kimono (E9, U2) definition
Japanese people.
Farmers may have a buffalo or a tractor
context, simple
to plow (E9, U3) plow the soil. This makes the soil soft
English
and ready for their growing rice.
cold (E6, U10) opposites / antonyms cold ≠ hot
to call (E7, U2) synonyms call s.o = telephone s.o
enumeration / Fruit includes apples, bananas, oranges,
fruit (E6, U10)
super-ordinates etc.
parts of words / unhappy UN- + happy = not
unhappy (E7, U1)
word-formation happy, sad
Presenting vocabulary
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Teaching steps (PPP)
P1: 1) Eliciting/ Presenting the meaning: using pictures, real objects, gestures, etc.
2) Concept check: asking CCQs.
3) Pronunciation drill: choral repetition individual check.
4) Memory check: stimulating games, activities.
P2: 5) Practice: vocabulary, exercises.
P3: 6) Speaking activities: communicative activities.
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What make a word difficult?
● Pronunciation
● Spelling
● Length and complexity
● Derivation
● Grammar
● Meaning
● Range, connotations and idiomaticity
Lexical approach
- A syllabus should be organized around meanings.
- A lexical approach is based on the belief that lexical competence comes simply
from frequent exposure, consciousness raising & memorizing.
Reminders
- Raise awareness of phrases & collocations.
- Introduce phrases in context but drill them as short chunks.
- Point out patterns.
- Keep written records of phrases as phrases.
- Reinforce & recycle as much as possible.
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Phrasal verbs Strategies
- Intransitive - Gap filling
- Transitive separable - Rephrasing
- Transitive inseparable - Matching
- Three-part
- Synonyms
Teaching idioms
- An idiom is a group of words whose meaning is different from the meanings of
the individual words.
- Example: It's a piece of cake. (= easy)
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LESSON 4
TEACHING GRAMMAR
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What is grammar?
● Rules about sentence formation, tenses, verb patterns.
● The moment-by-moment structuring of what we say as it is spoken.
● Exercises (fill in the gap, multiple choice) about tenses.
● Our internal "database" as to what are possible or impossible sentences.
Approaches
DEDUCTIVE INDUCTIVE
- T presents rules - T provides context, examples
- T gives examples for illustration - Ss are exposed to language form
- Ss practice or do application rules by themselves
exercises DISCOVERY LEARNING trials
RULE-DRIVEN LEARNING + errors
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Situational presentation
1) T uses visuals & word prompts to build up a context that will generate
examples of the target language.
2) T elicits an example sentence of the target language perhaps writing it on the
board.
3) T uses oral concept checking questions to check the meaning of the target
language.
4) Having checked understanding of the new language, T highlights the form and
then rubs the example sentence off the board.
5) T writes up key words on the board that are clearly connected to the context.
These are used to model and drill examples of the target language.
6) T elicits an example of the target language on the board for a second time and
highlights aspects of pronunciation that have just been practiced.
LESSON 5
TEACHING PRONUNCIATION
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Pronunciation errors
Examples Errors
Unfamiliar sounds θ ð ʒ dʒ tʃ p æ using nearest equivalents
sp-, spr-, st-, -st, -ts, -sts, uttering single sounds or skipping
Consonant clusters
-ks, -sks, br-, ... one consonant
have, cars, meet, hope, path, skipping or uttering plosives
Final sounds
... without ospiration
Long – short vowels ɪ-iː, ɒ-ɔː, ʊ-uː, ə-ɜː/ɜr using a medium sound (i, ɔ, u, ɜ)
B.E. eə, ɪə, ʊə, aʊ, əʊ, ɔɪ, eɪ,
using nearest equivalents or
Diphthongs aɪ
single sounds
A.E. ɑʊ, oʊ, ɔɪ, eɪ, ɑɪ
əm (am), ə/ɜr (are), using strong forms in all
Weak forms
kən (can), ʃəd (should)... situations (æm, ɑr, kæn, ʃʊd...)
My 'sister is a university giving some stress (force,
Sentence stress
'student. strength) to every syllable
- Is she a student?
- Although he was very using falling tune where a rising
Intonation
tired, he decided to go to tune or fall-rise is required
work.
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Ideas for improving learners' pronunciation
● Varied repetition drills (speed, volume, mood)
● Ear-training with minimal pairs
● Observation of mechanics
● Tapping on a phonemic chart
● Learning and performing dialogues
● Chanting and songs
● Tongue twisters
● Recording
● Phonemic bingo / crosswords / dominoes
● Sound maze
● Imitation / Drilling
● Games: stepping stones, board game
LESSON 6
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TEACHING LISTENING
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Types of activities
- No overt response: stories, songs, film, video
- Short responses:
● obeying instructions
● checking items
● ordering items
● matching
● completion
● true / false
● multiple choice
● detecting mistakes
- Long responses:
● answering questions
● note-taking
● paraphrasing & translating
● summarizing
● long gap-filling
- Extended responses: problem-solving, interpretation
LESSON 7
TEACHING READING
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The importance of developing reading skills
● Enlarge knowledge
● Provide students with experience
● Master language materials and skills
● Develop students' reading habits
Task types
● Answering questions
● True/False statement
● Completion
● Matching
● Fill-in-the-blank
● Jumble paragraphs or sentences
● Cloze reading
● Checking items
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Four reading sub-skills
Sub-skills Analysis Examples (TA9, Unit 2, Read, p.17)
* Choose the best title for the reading passage:
to get general A. Why people wear jeans?
1) skimming information or main B. The history and development of jeans
ideas C. Different kinds of jeans
Answer: B
to get specific * Fill in the missing dates and words. (Task a in
2) scanning
information or details the course book, p.17)
* Can jeans be in use for a long time? Are they
durable?
Answer: Yes, the material to make them is
to tackle unfamiliar strong and does not wear out easily.
lexical items by using
morphological * In the 1980s, did the sales of jeans increase or
3) word-attack information (word decrease?
formation, word class, Answer: Increased – went up and up.
synonyms, antonyms,
hyponyms, ...) * In the 1990s, whose economic situation got
worse?
Answer: All over the world – worldwide
(world + wide).
* What were the 1960s' fashions?
Answer: Embroidered jeans, painted jeans
to interpret the text by
(The explanation is given after the colon ":")
using all the clues
4) text-attack available: cohesion,
* What do "their" and "them" in "with their
coherence, structures,
own labels on them" (line 41) refer to?
etc.
Answer: Famous designers (their); jeans
(them).
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3) When you are in the dentist's waiting room, you see an article about your
favorite singer in a magazine. Reading for pleasure
4) You've heard about the singer / artist and you are mildly interested in their life.
You look them up on the Internet when you don't have much else to do. Skimming
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5) Tasks to focus on meaning (general points), e.g. make sure of information in the
text to do something (fill out a form, find out which picture is being described, etc.).
6) Tasks to focus on meaning (finer points, more extensive comprehensive
understanding).
7) Tasks to focus on individual language item, e.g. vocabulary or grammar
exercises.
Post-text:
8) Follow-on tasks, e.g. role play, debate, writing tasks (e.g. write a letter in reply),
personalization.
9) Closing, e.g. draw a lesson to a conclusion, tie up loose ends.
Reading suggestions
● Jigsaw reading
● Reading puzzles
● Finding mistakes
● Poetry
● Play extracts
● Predicting from words and pictures
● ...
LESSON 8
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TEACHING SPEAKING
What is speaking?
- Speaking is "the process of building and sharing meaning through the use of
verbal and non-verbal symbols, in a variety of contexts." (Chaney, 1998, p.13)
- Speaking is an interactive process of constructing meaning that involves
producing and receiving and processing information. (Brown, 1994. Burns & Joyce,
1997)
❖ Lead-in
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❖ Activity route map
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Some common communicative activities
● Role play ● List sequencing
● Surveys ● Pyramid discussion
● Picture differences ● Board games
● Group planing ● Puzzles and problem
Pyramid discussions
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LESSON 9
TEACHING WRITING
Techniques
Controlled writing Free & guided writing
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● Copying ● Book report
● Re-ordering ● Narrative
● Gap-filling ● Describing a scene / process
● Substitution ● Writing letters
● Dictation ● Writing an essay
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8) Plan.
9) Write the draft.
Drafting stages
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LESSON 10
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
2) Rapport
- Recognizing students: knowing their names
● ask students to put name cards
● draw up a seating plan
● use register
- Listening to students
● be interested
● listen to students' comments
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- Respecting students
● be NOT too critical
● be NOT constantly praising students
● see students' positive light
- Being even-handed: treat students equally
3) Teacher tasks
- Preparation (subject, skills of teaching, thoughts in advance)
- Keeping record
● look back at what we have done next
● evaluate how successful an activity has been
4) Teacher skills
● Managing class
● Variety
● Destinations outcomes
5) Teacher knowledge
● The language system
● Materials and resources
● Classroom equipment
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- Teacher Talking Time (TTT)
- Using L1
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