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Grammar Presentation

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Grammar Presentation & Practice Dr Desmond Thomas, University of Essex Issues to consider in teaching grammar (based on 1000s of written articles/books) Presentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Grammar Presentation


1
Grammar Presentation Practice
  • Dr Desmond Thomas,
  • University of Essex

2
Issues to consider in teaching grammar (based on
1000s of written articles/books)
  1. Presentation (1st time) vs re-presentation
  2. Presentation vs practice
  3. Types of presentation
  4. Types of practice
  5. How much grammar to include/exclude
  6. How to simplify complex grammar items
  7. Grammar in isolation vs grammar in context
  8. Teaching grammar vs testing grammar

3
Presenting new grammar items
  • THE FORM what part of speech/regular or
    irregular/spelling/pronunciation/word order
  • THE MEANING the exact meaning you are
    concentrating on (Gower et al. 2005)
  • THE USE in what contexts/by which people/ on
    what occasions
  • POTENTIAL PROBLEMS different from L1, many
    variants etc.

4
3 basic approaches
  • DEDUCTIVE
  • INDUCTIVE
  • A mix of Deductive and Inductive
  • Which teaching methods are associated?
  • Is one approach better than another?
  • It depends on ?
  • Advantages and disadvantages of each?

5
Contextualizing grammar presentation
  • Pictures or video (eliciting or oral presenting)
  • Mime or drama (eliciting)
  • Texts (oral or written)
  • Short dialogues (oral or written)
  • The grammar is presented in context students
    learn inductively and work out the rules
  • IS THIS ALWAYS A GOOD IDEA?

6
Teaching the rules
  • Recommended when
  • The meaning of the item is easy to understand but
    the structure is complex. Example comparatives
    and superlatives (Gower 2005)
  • The students have reached a level when they can
    talk about language in this way
  • Learners prefer it
  • A GOOD or a BAD IDEA?

7
Troubleshooting
  • Students dont understand the form
  • SOLUTIONS ?
  • Students dont understand the meaning
  • SOLUTIONS?
  • Students dont understand use (cf K. essay)
  • SOLUTIONS?
  • Students understand but motivation is low
  • SOLUTIONS?

8
Some words of advice
  • The aim of each presentation must be clear
  • Instructions must be clear (In English? In L1?)
  • The amount of new language must right
  • The context must be meaningful
  • Materials must be user-friendly/stimulating
  • The whiteboard, visuals and miming can help
  • The classroom atmosphere and the teacher's
    management should encourage participation

9
Indicated Reading (books)
  • Gower, R. et al. 2005, Teaching Practice a
    Handbook for Teachers in Training, Macmillan
  • Hall, N. Shepheard, J. 1991, The Anti-grammar
    Grammar Book, Longman
  • Rinvolucri, M. 1984, Grammar Games, CUP
  • Seymour, D. Popova, M. 2003, 700 Classroom
    Activities, Macmillan
  • Ur, P. 1993, Grammar Practice Activities, CUP
  • Ur, P. 1996, A Course in Grammar Teaching, CUP

10
Indicated Reading (articles)
  • Ellis, R. 2002, Grammar Teaching Practice or
    Consciousness-Raising. In Richards, J. (ed.),
    Methodology in Language Teaching, C.U. P.
  • Nitta, R. Gardner, S., 2005, Consciousness-rais
    ing and practice in ELT coursebooks, ELT Journal
    59/1
  • Nunan, D. 1998, Teaching Grammar in Context,
    ELT Journal 52/2
  • Swan, M. 2002, Seven Bad Reasons for Teaching
    Grammar. In Richards, J. Renandya, W. (eds.) ,
    Methodology in Language Teaching, C.U.P.

11
Grammar practice what is it?
  • The learner manipulates and tries out the new
    language by producing different examples
  • The teacher begins by exercising a lot of control
    which is gradually relaxed
  • Learning is consolidated by committing new
    material to the learner's long-term memory(Penny
    Ur 1993)
  • By and large these assumptions go unchallenged
    and have become part of the mythology of language
    teaching (Ellis 2005)

12
What is Consciousness-raising?
  • In CR there is an attempt to isolate grammar
  • Learners are supplied with data which illustrates
    the grammar and maybe a rule
  • Learners use intellectual effort to understand
    the target language
  • The main aim is to develop explicit knowledge of
    grammar but not metalingual knowledge. (Ellis
    2005).

13
Principle 1 Volume Opportunities
  • The more language learners are exposed to or
    produce, the more they are likely to learn this
    means devoting plenty of time to practice
    sessions and exploiting that time effectively"
    (Penny Ur)
  • Priorities in language learning (or any skill
    learning) Practice, practice, practice.

14
Principle 2 Drills Repetition
  • Important to get learners to perceive or practise
    examples over and over again, whether by drilling
    with the whole group, individuals repeating etc.
  • Repetition for pronunciation is important at this
    stage ...... let learners get used to the sounds
    as well

15
Principle 3 Dealing with Errors
  • This is the stage to monitor for errors and to
    intervene where necessary and correct.
  • It is also important to allow learners extra
    practice after they have perceived the errors
  • Awareness of a structure does not mean that
    its form, meaning and use have been learnt

16
Principle 4 Supporting Learners
  • Teachers do not only correct they also support,
    assist and encourage by giving extra time to
    think, paraphrasing or simplifying, suggesting
    hints, giving prompts
  • They also motivate. Practice shouldn't be purely
    mechanical. Grammar activities needn't be boring,
    they can be challenging. Examples?

17
Principle 5 Teacher Control
18
Very controlled controlled activities
  • Likes dislikes Do you like fish? Yes, I
    do, No, I dont I love/hate fish Does he
    .?
  • Sentence building each student becomes a word in
    a sentence
  • Sentence jigsaws students manipulate the
    language of a dialogue in groups
  • Grammar intonation He came yesterday, didnt
    he?, She will do the shopping, .

19
Guided activities (Seymour Popova)
  • Dictation (p.67)
  • Dictation of sentence endings (p.79)
  • Arriving late pairwork (p.91)
  • So and such (p.114)
  • Guided or semi-controlled activities provide a
    clear framework for practice with some room for
    creativity

20
Communicative practice (Seymour Popova)
  • Fishy stories (p.88)
  • Newspaper headlines for past continuous past
    simple (p.89)
  • Values board game (Keep Talking, F.Klippel)
  • Freer activities that focus on communicative aims
    rather than specific language items.
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