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Instructional Strategies for Teaching Speaking. Zolotonosha February 24, 2012 Presented by Carol Haddaway, Sr. English Language Fellow, Ukraine U.S. Department of State. “Speaking in a second or foreign language has often been viewed as the most demanding of the four skills.”.
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Instructional Strategies for Teaching Speaking Zolotonosha February 24, 2012 Presented by Carol Haddaway, Sr. English Language Fellow, Ukraine U.S. Department of State
“Speaking in a second or foreign language has often been viewed as the most demanding of the four skills.” (Bailey and Savage in Celce-Murcia, p. 103)
WHY? • Because we must do it instantaneously and interactively with another person or people. • Fluent speech contains reduced forms(what do you want?) • slang (cool), idioms (hit the road running), phrasal verbs (figure out) • stress, rhythm, and intonation; • During the interaction with another speaker one must monitor and understand the other person, think of one’s contribution, produce it, monitoring its effect… (Lazarton, p.103)
Implications for Teaching • Create a relaxed atmosphere • Use interesting topics and stimulating activities • Expose Ls to naturally pronounced speech and integrate pronunciation into your lesson • Get Ls used to combining listening and speaking in real time, in natural interaction. • Establish English as the main classroom language (Davies , 2000, p. 82)
“Talking classrooms” Create a classroom culture of speaking through the general use of English in the classroom. (Scott Thornbury in Harmer, p. 123)
Warm-up Find Someone Who Learners: motivate, involve, focus create expectations, introduce topic
Oral Skills Class Who are my learners?
Low Level Learners • Build on their experience • Share their expertise • Use realia to keep learning as concrete as possible • S1: Have you ever been to Lviv? • S2: No I haven’t . Have you? • S1: Yes. It’s wonderful • S2: How long did you stayed? • S1: One week • S2: The buildings are beautiful, yes? • S1: Yes, and the streets….the chocolates.. • S2: Ah, have you ever been to Kyiv?
Non-academic learners • BICS (Basic interpersonal Communication Skills) • Social language – interpersonal interactions • Repetitive – functional language (greetings, making requests, giving directions, sharinginformation). • Evidence of mastery: good TL pronunciation, ease of TL social interactions, use of TL expressions • Used primarily, though not exclusively in oral language – listening and speaking • Takes 2-3 years to master (Jim Cummings, 1970)
Academic Learners • CALP (Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency) • Language encountered in academic situations • Used primarily thought not exclusively in reading and writing • Not repetitive • Takes on average 7-9 years to become truly fluent • Participate in learning activities such as • Class participation • Discussions & Presentations • Interacting with peers and professors • Asking and answering questions • Interpersonal communication (Jim Cummings, 1970)
What makes an effective speaking class? Teacher, Learners, Atmosphere Error Correction, Activities
Balance Accuracy and Fluency Is it more important to be able to speak a language with accuracy (grammatically correct) or with fluency (communicatively correct, but not always grammatically correct)?
Accuracy • Practice typically involves focusing only in the new language structures (e.g. comparisons) • Focus on pronunciation, vocabulary, word formation, sentence formation • Errors are usually dealt with immediately
Accuracy example • L1: Is the Toyota bigger than the Chevy? • L2: Yes, it is. Is the Lexus cheap than…. • Teacher: Cheap…? • L2: Is the Lexus cheaper than the Chevy? • L3: No, it isn’t. Is the Lexus faster than the Toyota? • L4: Yes, it is. Is prettier the Toyota? • Teacher: Is the……..
Fluency • Likely to take place when speaking activities focus on meaning and its negotiation, when speaking strategies are used, and when overt correction is minimized. )
Speaking Activities Information Gap Think Pair Share Telling Stories
Information Gap Characteristics • To exchange information • Main attention is sharing information • Need to communicate to reach objective • Learners must ‘fill the gap’ to complete the activity/communication
Why information gap activities? • Allow for comprehensibleinput (i+1) • Input should be at the right level of difficulty to promote acquisition • Learners produce language – this output ‘pushes’ learners to undertake complete grammatical processing (M. Swain) • Help lower students’ affective filter
Cooperative Activity • Think • Pair • Share
Think-Pair-Share How: • Teacher presents a question or problem • Students are given “think/wait time” and write answers (1) • Students pair with a partner (2) • Pair share with another pair (4) • Group share their responses and ideas with another small group or with the entire class. Why: • Have time to think, plan, and rehearse, with feedback • Can practice before talking to whole group
Question/Problem 1 • Interaction is the key to improving EFL learners’ speaking ability. How do you promote this interaction in your classroom?
Question/Problem 2 • What types of speaking activities do you normally use in your classroom? Do they serve different purposes?
Question/Problem 3 • Your students are really shy and don’t say anything. How do you arouse in your learners a willingness and need or reason to speak?
Question/Problem 4 • Your students say they can’t talk because they’ll make lots of mistakes. What do/can you do to help them overcome this fear?
Question/Problem 5 • What are effective ways to give students feedback on their performance during oral activities?
Feedback and Error Correction • Self – Correction • Give learners the opportunity to correct themselves, helping as necessary • Peer – Correction • If learner cannot self-correct, invite other learners to make the correction • Teacher Correction • Recast, Error or Mistake, Accuracy or Fluency focus
Error Treatment • Should errors be treated?What errors should be treated? • How should they be treated? • Who and When? • “There is a French widow in every bedroom.” • “The different city is another one in the another two.”
Story telling Groups of 3
A successful speaking activity • Learners talk a lot • Student (STT) vs teacher (TTT) – wait time • Participation is even • discussion not dominated by a minority of talkative students • Motivation is high • learners are eager to speak; interested in topic • Language is of an acceptable level • utterances are easily comprehensible • acceptable level of accuracy UR, 1991, p. 120
“Communication derives essentially from interaction” (Rivers, 1987 in Richards & Renandyn, p.208)
References • Brown, H.D. (2001). Teaching by Principles. Longman • Davies, P. and Pearse, E. (2000). Success in English Teaching. Oxford University Press. • Farrell, T. (2006). Succeeding with English Language Learners. Corwin Press. • Harmer, J. (2007). How to teach English. Pearson Longman. • Lazaraton, A. (2001). Teaching Oral Skills. In Teaching English as a Second or Foreign Language 3rd Ed., edited by M. Celce-Mircia. Heinle & Heinle. • Richards, J.C. & Renandya, W.A. (2002). Methodology in Language Teaching. Cambridge. • Ur, P. (1996).. A Course in Language Teaching. Cambridge.