Unit 5 The Silent Way (1960-70).

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Strategies and Methods
Advertisements

The Silent Way Tell me and I forget Teach me and I remember
Chapter 5: The Silent Way
Review important principles
The Silent Way Lecture #10
Chapter 4: The Audio-Lingual Method
Chapter 3: The Direct Method
The Silent Way.
Silent Way By 蔡佳穎 林姚如 林伊莉.
Topic: Learning and teaching activities
The Audiolingual Method
TESL Methodology: An Overview Spring TESL Methodology: Values 1. For teachers to reflect that can aid teaching and to think what underlies their.
The Nature of Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching
14: THE TEACHING OF GRAMMAR  Should grammar be taught?  When? How? Why?  Grammar teaching: Any strategies conducted in order to help learners understand,
EFL Anthony’s model: Approach Method Technique
Grammar-Translation Approach Direct Approach
2013 Fall Semester- Week 8. Introduction 1. Goal of instruction: Language acquisition must be a procedure whereby people use their own thinking processes,
Community Language Learning (CLL) JUAN MONTERO MAY, 2012.
THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
Lecture 3 DESIGN AND PROCEDURE Prepared by: Ms. Mahaya Ahmad.
The Silent Way Tell me and I forget Teach me and I remember
CONSTRUCTIVISM & CONTINUOUS COMPREHENSIVE EVALUATION
Total Physical Response (TPR)
ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING (ELT) Applied Linguistics Lecture 4 March
Communicative Language Teaching
Methodology Lecture # 21. Review of the last lecture 1.Authentic language in real context: sports columns from a recent newspaper 2: Ability to figure.
THE AUDIOLINGUAL METHOD
The Silent Way. Outline: Peculiarities Language theory Silence Principles Teaching materials.
The Silent Way Method.
The Silent Way by Caleb Gattegno Presented by Plutus and Marina September 26, 2006 For TRED 251 L2 Instruction Presented by Plutus and Marina September.
This approach was developed by British applied linguists from 1930s to 1960s in Great Britain.
The Direct Method 1. Background It became popular since the Grammar Translation Method was not very effective in preparing students to use the target.
????????? Lecture # 9 Textbook: Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000). Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching. (2th ed.). Oxford University Press.
More ESL Methodologies
The Audio-Lingual Method
The Audio-Lingual Method(ALM) Goals and Techniques
Audio - Lingual Method Army Method.
Bruna Luiza Bruna Fontoura Giovana Perini Marina Garcia.
THE AUDIO -LINGUAL METHOD. Audio-lingual Method The theory behind this method is that learning a language means acquiring habits. There is much practice.
IDE 205 APPROACHES & METHODS IN ELT AYÇA YALÇIN SELİN HOMAN
Silent Way 穆國豪 (Howard) 賴詠真 (Janette) 藍中駿 (Peter) 廖宸妤 (Nadia) 楊博喩 (Brandy) 1.
TKT COURSE SUMMARY UNIT –14 Differences between l1 and l2 learning learners characteristics LEARNER NEEDS DIANA OLIVA VALDÉS RAMÍREZ.
KUMUTHA RAMAN P62352 Successful English Language Learning Inventory (SELL-In)
3. Nine-Twentieth-Century Approaches to Language Teaching
Textbook: Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000). Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching. (2th ed.). Oxford University Press. CHAPTER 5: THE SILENT WAY.
THE SILENT WAY Basic Principles of the Silent Way : Teaching should be subordinated to learning Teaching should be subordinated to learning Learning.
The Silent Way Tell me and I forget, teach me and I remember, involve me and I learn.
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
Language Teaching Methodology
Chapter 4: The Audio-Lingual Method
The Silent Way Ms. Rasha Ali.
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
The Silent Way Reporter: N98C0010 邱稚嵐.
The Silent Way.
ELT 213 APPROACHES TO ELT I Silent Way WEEK 6
The Silent Way Tell me and I forget, Teach me and I remember,
APPROACH AND METHOD YANUARTI APSARI, MPD.
ELT 213 APPROACHES TO ELT I Communicative Language Teaching Week 11
THE SILENT WAY.
Learning and Teaching Principles
THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
THE SILENT WAY.
Chapter 4 The Audiolingual Method
COMMUNICATIVE LANGUAGE TEACHING
THE SILENT WAY.
Chapter 4 Human Learning


Second-language teaching methods
Methods Week 6 Silent Way 1.
Presentation transcript:

Unit 5 The Silent Way (1960-70)

This method was devised by Caleb Gattegno to the teaching of initial reading in which sounds are coded by specific colors with cuisenaire rods (developed by Georges Cuisenaire, a European educator who used them to teach math). He believed that learning is best facilitated if the learner discovers and creates language rather than just remembering and repeating what has been taught. http://en.tp.edu.tw/teachmethod/silentway.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_silent_way http://sctlog.sctnet.edu.tw/post/109/2298 Origin

Origin The Audio-lingual Method has the problem that students are unable to transfer the habits they have mastered in the classroom to communicate use outside it. Furthermore, the idea that learning a language meant forming a set of habits was seriously challenged in the early 1960s, particularly by Linguist Noam Chomsky. He proposed that speakers have knowledge of underlying abstract rules, which allow them to understand and create new utterances.

Origin In addition, in the early 1970s, the emphasis on human cognition led to see learners in a more active role to formulate hypotheses to discover the rules of the target language. When errors occur, they are signs that learners are testing their hypotheses. The general objective of this method is to give beginners oral and aural facility in basic elements of the target language such as near-native fluency, correct pronunciation and mastery of the prosodic elements of the target language.

Origin It adopts a basically structural syllabus, with lessons planned around grammatical items and related vocabulary. Language items are introduced according to their grammatical complexity. The “function” because of their high utility such as numbers, prepositions, pronouns, quantifiers and so on is introduced early in the course. The Silent Way shares certain principles with the Cognitive Approach.

Teaching should be subordinated to learning= learning through self-reliance (key words- independence, autonomy and responsibility) Learning is a problem-solving, creative, discovering activity, in which learners are expected to become independent, autonomous and responsible. Learning is not primarily imitation or drill- The teacher’s strict avoidance of repetition forces alertness and concentration on the part of the learners: The teacher should be silent as much as possible to let the learners do the learning. So the teacher does not dominate learning processes. Each student has a retaining system. Principles:

Principles What students have experienced is recorded in their language systems. There is no need to repeat the language concept they have already gained from their L1. In silence, students concentrate on the task to be accomplished. Silence, as avoidance of repetition, is thus an aid to alertness, concentration, and mental organization. Students’ self-awareness leads to self-correction. When students are aware of how their learning is and become alert to it, they can try it and correct themselves at any time.

Characteristics of the method: The teacher silently monitors students’ interaction and creates an environment that encourages student risk taking. Special teaching aids are used such as a pointer, cuisenaire rods, sound-color chart, fidel charts and word charts to provide students physical foci for their learning and also create memorable images to facilitate student recall.

Influences: Teaching is subordinated to learning. (discovery learning, responsible learners) Language learning can also train students to be independent and responsible. Teachers don’t model pronunciation but direct and monitor students’ performance. It promotes the use of phonemic charts and points to objects and sounds and Cuisenaire rods as well as the use of discovery techniques.

Criticism It was too harsh a method and the teacher was distance. Some aspects of language can be taught directly instead of having students struggle for hours. The rods and charts wore thin after a few lessons. Other than those, it resembled any other language classroom.

Summary of the method a problem-solving approach to learning Discovery learning is facilitated by accompanying physical objects (Cuisenaire rods, wall charts) and problem-solving. In this way, learners develop independence, autonomy, and responsibility. Ss benefit from healthy doses of discovery learning and less teacher talk. However, it was too harsh a method and the teacher too distant. The rods and charts wear thin after a few lessons and other materials then must be introduced instead.

goals To enable students to express themselves and develop independence from the teacher and their own inner criteria for correctness

The role of the teacher Technician or engineer for learner autonomy

The role of the students Independent and responsible learner

Characteristics of the teaching/learning processes 1. a sound-color chart to associate sounds of the target language with particular colors 2. minimal spoken cues to produce structures in situations 3. feedback from students about the class

S-T or S-S interaction S->T, S-S verbal interaction

The feelings of the students 1. T observes students 2. S’s feedback to express how they feel 3. a relaxed, enjoyable learning environment by cooperation

View of culture & language 1. language universals and individual features 2. culture and language are interconnected

Emphasis of skills & areas 1. pronunciation and structures at the beginning 2. no fixed, linear, structural syllabus: recycle structures according to learning needs 3. integrate four skills but usually speaking and listening first

The role of L1 1. L1 only in instructions or during feedback sessions 2. L1 transfer

evaluation Assess students all the time but no praise or criticism

errors Self-correction or peer correction

techniques Sound-color chart, peer correction, teachers’ silence, rods, self-correction gestures, word chart, fidel charts, structured feedback