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Center for Second Language Studies
Orientation Session Presentation August 21, 2012 Virginia Scott
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Rethinking Grammar Teaching
INPUT PROCESSING
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THE Questions WHEN should I teaching grammar? Every day? At the beginning of the lesson? HOW should I teach grammar? Deductive lesson (rule example) Inductive lesson (example rule) Should I use L1 or L2 to teach grammar?
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Definition & Principles Input Processing
Input processing is an approach to grammar instruction that guides learners to process what they see or hear. This approach helps learners connect language forms with their intended meanings. Learners must DO something with the input they see or hear.
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input developing system output
Traditional approach Traditional approach: input developing system output focused practice a) Learners see or hear input. b) They think about it … (?) c) They practice during output.
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Input processing approach
IP approach: input developing system output focused practice a) Learners see or hear input. b) They DO something with what they see or hear. c) They produce the word or structure.
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Traditional / Input processing: A review
1) Traditional approach: input developing system output focused practice 2) IP approach:
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NOTE For BOTH the traditional approach and the input processing approach teaching grammar includes three main phases: 1) providing input 2) fostering learners’ developing language system 3) encouraging output
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Structure: verbs with “ing” Topic: leisure activities
Going to the movies Shopping at the mall Eating pizza at Mafiosa’s Watching TV Talking to friends Riding a bike Dancing at a club Hiking at Radnor Lake Park Reading a book Sleeping late
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Four kinds of IP activities:
1) Binary options 2) Matching 3) Selecting alternatives 4) Supplying information **Reminder: Students are listening OR reading and DOING something with what they hear/see. They are NOT speaking.
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1. Binary options Indicate if you think the statements are TRUE or FALSE: TRUE FALSE I like eating pizza. _____ _____ I enjoy going to the movies. _____ _____ I do not like hiking. _____ _____ I hate watching TV. _____ _____ I really like reading books. _____ _____ I do not like riding a bike. _____ _____ I like hiking. _____ _____ I love dancing. _____ _____ (ORAL or WRITTEN input?)
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2. Matching What do you like? I like … books. movies. music. nature.
pizza. jokes. new clothes. (ORAL or WRITTEN?) I like … hiking. shopping. eating. laughing. reading. dancing. watching TV.
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3. Selecting alternatives
When I have free time I enjoy ___ watching TV. ___ reading a book. ___ talking to friends. When I am hungry I prefer ___ going out to a restaurant. ___ cooking dinner at home. ___ getting fast food. When I go out with my friends we like ___ going to the movies. ___ sitting in a bar. ___ dancing in a club. (ORAL or WRITTEN?)
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4. Supplying information
Fill in the blanks below and be prepared to share the information. Name ____________________ I like eating _______________________________. I love drinking _____________________________. I enjoy watching ___________________________. I prefer reading _____________________________. I do not like going _____________________________.
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Elicit the rule State the rule clearly
You can add “ing” to verbs. You can state preferences before the “ing” verb: I like going / I hate eating / I prefer dancing “ing” verbs are preceded by a helping verb: to be (I am reading) to like (I like shopping) eat + ing drink + ing dance + ing
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Guiding principles for input processing:
Use both oral and written input. Focus on meaning before form. Have learners DO something with input. Design activities that require both discrete (one answer) and open-ended (personal opinion) answers. Have learners state the rule as final phase of the lesson.
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References Farley, Andrew Structured Input: Grammar Instruction for the Acquisition-Oriented Classroom. New York: McGraw Hill. Lee, James and Bill VanPatten Making Communicative Language Teaching Happen (2nd ed.). New York: McGraw Hill. Wong, Wynne Input Enhancement: From Theory and Research to the Classroom. New York: McGraw Hill.
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