The Audio-lingual Method

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Review important principles
Advertisements

Chapter 4: The Audio-Lingual Method
The Direct Method Group 2 Members: Julie Huang
The Audio-Lingual Method
THE GRAMMAR TRANSLATION METHOD & THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
Topic: Learning and teaching activities
The Audiolingual Method
Language Teaching Methods/ Approaches
1 Author unknown… Why do we teach children a new language ?
FALL ’14 Faculty of Education, Department of Foreign Language Education.
The Audio-Lingual Method
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,
THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
2014 Fall Semester- Week 2. Introduction 1. Goal of instruction: leaning how to use another language to communicate 2. The very basic rule: No translation.
GSE Materials and Methods
LANGUAGE TEACHING PRACTICE Spring 2015 Introduction to the Course.
The Audiolingual Method - Claudio Cheuquén O. - Javiera Iturra S. - Laura Roa S.
THE GRAMMAR TRANSLATION METHOD
The Grammar-Translation Method Introduction. Objectives of GTM  To be able to read literature written in the target language  To be able to translate.
 There must be a coherent set of links between techniques and principles.  The actions are the techniques and the thoughts are the principles.
Nguyễn Văn Giang Đỗ Văn Hưng Nguyễn Tấn Huy Kon Sa Ha Yên
Total Physical Response (TPR) 1. "Babies don't learn by memorizing lists; why should children or adults?" James J. Asher an emeritus professor of psychology.
What is Communicative Language Teaching??. Communicative Language: Blends listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Is the expression, interpretation,
The Audiolingual Method
The Audio-Lingual Method
The Audio-Lingual Method(ALM) Goals and Techniques
GSE Materials and Methods
The Audio-Lingual Method(ALM) Lecture # 7
Audio - Lingual Method Army Method.
2014 Fall Semester- Week 6. Introduction (1) 1. James Asher (1960) hypothesis: Language learning starts first with understanding and ends with production.
. Principles language learning is habit-formation mistakes are bad and should be avoided, as they make bad habits language skills are learned more effectively.
THE AUDIO -LINGUAL METHOD. Audio-lingual Method The theory behind this method is that learning a language means acquiring habits. There is much practice.
Introduction to Language Teaching The Grammar-Translation Method.
Lesson 4 Grammar - Chapter 13.
Language Teaching Approaches on twenty century. Grammar-translation The approach was generalized to teaching modern languages. Classes are taught in the.
IDE 205 APPROACHES & METHODS IN ELT AYÇA YALÇIN SELİN HOMAN
3. Nine-Twentieth-Century Approaches to Language Teaching
T H E D I R E C T M E T H O D DM. Background DM An outcome of a reaction against the Grammar- Translation Method. It was based on the assumption that.
Chapter 5 The Oral Approach.
Popular Methods Approach – describes how language is used and how its constituent parts interact. With other words it offers a model of language competence.
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
The Audio-Lingual Method
Chapter 4: The Audio-Lingual Method
Lecture 7 Teaching Grammar
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
The Audio-Lingual Method
The Audio-Lingual Method
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
Approach, Design, & Procedure The Weakness & Strength
ELT 213 APPROACHES TO ELT I The Audio-Lingual Method WEEK 5
The Grammar – Translation Method /Classical Method
The Audio-Lingual Method
APPROACH AND METHOD YANUARTI APSARI, MPD.
THE DIRECT METHOD.
THE AUDIO-LINGUAL METHOD
Chapter 4 The Audiolingual Method
Chapter 5.
The Audio-Lingual Method
THE GRAMMAR TRANSLATION METHOD


WHAT IS A LANGUAGE TEACHING APPROACH, METHOD AND TECHNIQUE ?
The Grammar-Translation Method
Classical Method (17th-19th centuries)
Presentation transcript:

The Audio-lingual Method 2013 Fall Semester- Week 6

Introduction 1. Goal of instruction: The method drills students in the use of grammatical sentence patterns. 2. It has a strong theoretical base in linguistics and psychology. 3. Charles Fries led the way in applying principles from structural linguistics in developing the method.

Experience (1) 1. A conversation between two people is presented to students. 2. All of the teacher’s instructions are in English. 3. The teacher never uses students’ native language. 4. The teacher uses actions to convey meaning.

Experience (2) 5. The teacher repeats the conversation. 6. The teacher asks students to repeat each of the lines of the dialogue after her model. 7. Students are asked to repeat each line for several times. 8. The teacher demonstrate different drills: expansion drill, repetition drill, chain drill, single-slot substitution drill, transformation drill, question-and-answer drill

Experience (3) 9. Review the dialogue 10. Expand upon the dialogue 11. Drill the new lines and introduce some new vocabulary items 12. Work on the difference between mass and count nouns 13. A contrastive analysis 14. the teacher leads students to play a game

Thinking about the experience(1) Principles: 1. Language forms do not occur by themselves; they occur most naturally within a context. 2. The native language and the target language have separate linguistic systems. They should be kept apart so that the students’ native language interferes as little as possible with the students’ attempts to acquire the target language. 3. One of the language teacher’s major roles is that of a model of the target language. Teachers should provide students with a good model. By listening to how it is supposed to sound, students should be able to mimic the model.  

Thinking about the experience (2) 4. Language learning is a process of habit formation. The more often something is repeated, the stronger the habit and the greater the learning.  5. It is important to prevent learners from making errors. Errors lead to the formation of bad habits. When errors do occur, they should be immediately corrected by the teacher.   6. The purpose of language learning is to learn how to use the language to communicate.

Thinking about the experience (3) 7. Particular parts of speech occupy particular ‘slots’ in sentences. In order to create new sentences, students must learn which part of speech occupies which slot. 8. Positive reinforcement helps the students to develop correct habits. 9. Students should learn to respond to both verbal and nonverbal stimuli. 10. Each language has a finite number of patterns. Pattern practice helps students to form habits which enable the students to use the patterns.  

Thinking about the experience (4) 11. Students should “overlearn,” i.e. learn to answer automatically without stopping to think. 12. The teacher should be like an orchestra leader – conducting, guiding, and controlling the students’ behavior in the target language. 13. The major objective of language teaching should be for students to acquire the structural patterns; students will learn vocabulary afterward. 14. The learning of a foreign language should be the same as the acquisition of the native language. We do not need to memorize rules in order to use our native language. The rules necessary to use the target language will be figured out or induced from examples.

Thinking about the experience (5) 15. The major challenge of foreign language teaching is getting students to overcome the habits of their native language. A comparison between the native and target language will tell the teacher in what areas her students will probably experience difficulty.   16. Speech is more basic to language than the written form. The ‘natural order’ – the order children follow when learning their native language – of skill acquisition is: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. 17. Language cannot be separated from culture. Culture is not only literature and the arts, but also the everyday behavior of the people who use the target language. One of the teacher’s responsibilities is to present information about that culture.

Review the principles and techniques Answer the 10 questions based on the observation of techniques and principles. 11techniques are reviewed.

Conclusion and Activities Conclusion: do you agree that language acquisition results from habit formation? Activities: 1. Check your understanding of the Audio-Lingual Method? 2. Apply What you have understood about the Audio-Lingual Method.