Rabu, 28 April 2010

How to Teach Writing

In learning English language, there are four skills that we have to learn and master, such as reading, writing, speaking, and listening. But, here we will only talk about writing and the 30 ideas for teaching it.
This ideas originated as full-lenght articles in NWP publications.

30 Ideas for teaching Writing :

1. Use the shared events of students' lives to inspire writing.

Debbie Rotkow, a co-director of the Coastal Georgia Writing Project, uses the real-life circumstances of her first grade students to help them compose writing that, in Frank Smith's words, is "natural and purposeful."
The inspirations for writing can come from everything that happen around us, such as :
  • When a child comes to school with a fresh haircut or a tattered book bag, it can inspire us to write a poem.
  • When Michael rode his bike without training wheels for the first time, this occasion provided a worthwhile topic to write about.
  • A new baby in a family, a lost tooth, and the death of one student's father were the playful or serious inspirations for student writing.
Rotkow says, "Our classroom reverberated with the stories of our lives as we wrote, talked, and reflected about who we were, what we did, what we thought, and how we thought about it. We became a community."


2. Establish an email dialogue between students from different schools who are reading the same book.

The high school teacher Karen Murar and college instructor Elaine Ware, teacher-consultants with the Western Pennsylvania Writing Project, discovered students were scheduled to read the August Wilson play Fences at the same time, they set up email communication between students to allow some " teacherless talk" about the text.
Rather than typical teacher-led discussion, the project fostered independent conversation between students. Formal classroom discussion of the play did not occur until students had completed all email correspondence. Though teachers were not involved in student online dialogues, the conversations evidenced the same reading strategies promoted in teacher-led discussion, including predication, clarification, interpretation, and others.

3. Use writing to improve relations among students.

Diane Waff, co-director of the Philadelphia Writing Project, taught in an urban school where boys outnumbered girls four to one in her classroom. This situation left girls feeling overwhelmed, and their voice faded into the background, overpowered by more aggressive male voices.

Determined not to ignore this unhealthy situation, Waff urged students to face the problem head-on, asking them to write about gender-based problems in their journals. She then introduced literature that considered relationships between the sexes, focusing on themes of romance, love, and marriage. Students wrote in response to works as diverse as de Maupassant's "The Necklace" and Dean Myers's Motown and DiDi.

There was a great dissonance between male and female responses in the beginning. According to Waff, "Girls focused on feelings; boys focused on sex, money, and the fleeting nature of romantic attachment." But as the students continued to write about and discuss their honest feelings, they began to notice that they had similar ideas on many issues. " By confroting these gender-based problems directly, the effect was to improve the lives of individual students and the social well-being of the wider school community."

4. Help student writers draw rich chunks of writing from endless sprawl.

Jan Matsuoka, a teacher-consultant with the Bay Area Writing Project ( California ), describes a revision conference she held with a third grade English language learner named Sandee, who had written about a recent trip to Los Angeles.
Matsuoka told Sandee to have more focus in her story. For avoid she feels confused, Matsuoka made rough sketches representing the events of her trip by made a small frame out of a piece of paper and placed it down on one of her drawings-a sketch she had made of a visit with her grandmother. According Matsuoka, focus means writing about the memorable details of the visit with her grandmother, not everything else she did on the trip. Now, her next draft was more deep than broad.

5. Work with words relevant to students' lives to help them build vocabulary.

Eileen Simmons, a teacher-consultant with the Oklahoma State University Writing Project, knows and says that the more relevant new words are to students' lives, the more likely they are to take hold. In her high school classroom, she uses a form of the children's ABC book as a community-building project. For each letter of the alphabet, the students find an appropriately descriptive word for themselves and elaborate on the word by writing sentences and creating an illustration. In the process, they make extensive use of the dictionary and thesaurus. One student describes her personality as sometimes 'caustic', illustrating the word with a photograph of a burning car in a war zone. Her caption explains that she understands the hurt her 'burning' sarcastic remarks can generate.

6. Help students analyze text by asking them to imagine dialogue between authors.

John Levine, a teacher-consultant with the Bay Area Writing Project ( California ), helps his college freshmen integrate the ideas of several writers into a single analytical essay by asking them to create a dialogue among those writers. For instance, one of his students are the moderator of a panel discussion on the topic those writers are discussing who consider the three writers and construct a dialogue among the four 'voices' (the three essayists plus them). Levin also tells students to format the dialogue as though it were a script. The essay follows from this preparation.

7. Spotlight language and use group brainstorming to help students create poetry.

The following is a group poem created by second grade students of Michelle Fleer, a teacher-consultant with the Dakota Writing Project ( South Dakota ).

Underwater
Crabs crawl patiently along the ocean floor
searching for prey.
Fish soundlessly weave their way through
slippery seaweed
Whales whisper to others as they slide
through the salty water.
And silent waves wash into a dark cave
where an octopus is sleeping.

Fleer helped her students get started by finding a familiar topic, for example : her students had been studying sea life. First, she asked them to brainstorm language related to the sea, allowing them time to list appropriate nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Then, they used these words to create phrases and used the phrases to produce the poem itself.
As a group, students put together words in ways Fleer didn't believe many of them could have done if they were working on their own, and after creating several group poems, some of them felt confident enough to work alone.

8. Ask students to reflect on and write about their writing.

Douglas James Joyce, a teacher-consultant with the Denver Writing Project, makes use of what he calls "metawriting" in his college writing classes. He sees metawriting (writing about writing) as a way to help students reduce errors in their academic prose.
Joyce explains one metawriting strategy : After reading each essay, he selects one error that occurs frequently in a student's work and points out each instance in which the error is made. He instructs the student to write a one page essay, comparing and contrasting three sources that provide guidance on the established use of that particular convention, making sure a variety of sources are available.
He wants the student to dig into the topic as deeply as necessary, to come away with a thorough understanding of the how and why of the usage, and to understand any debate that may surround the particular usage.

9. Ease into writing workshops by presenting yourself as a model.

Glorianne Bradshaw, a teacher-consultant with the Red River Valley Writing Project ( North Dakota ), decided to make use of experiences from her own life when teaching her first-graders how to write. For example, on an overhead transparency she shows a sketch of herself stirring cookie batter while on vacation. She writes the phrase 'made cookies' under the sketch. Then she asks students to help her write a sentence about this. She writes the words who, where, and when. Using these words as prompts, she and the students construct the sentence, "I made cookies in the kitchen in the morning."
Next, each student returns to the sketch he or she has made of a summer vacation activity and, with her help, answers the same questions answered for Bradshaw's drawing. Then she asks them, "Tell me more. Do the cookies have chocolate chips ? Does the pizza have pepperoni ?" These facts lead to other sentences. Rather than taking away creativity, Bradshaw believes this kind of structure gives students a helpful format for creativity.

10. Get students to focus on their writing by holding off on grading.

Stephanie Wilder found that the grades she gave her high school students were getting in the way of their progress. The weaker students stopped trying. Other students relied on grades as the only standard by which they judged their own work. Wilder decided to postpone her grading until the portofolios, which contained a selection of student work, were complete. She continued to comment on papers, encourage revision, and urge students to meet with her for conferences. But she waited to grade the papers.
It took a while for students to stop leafing to the ends of their papers in search of a grade, and there was some grumbling from students who had always received excellent grades. But she believes that because she was less quick to judge their work, students were better able to evaluate their efforts themselves.

11. Use casual talk about students' lives to generate writing.

Erin ( Pirnot ) Ciccone, teacher-consultant with the Pennsylvania Writing and Literature Project, found a way to make more productive the "Monday morning gab fest" she used as a warm-up with her fifth grade students. She conceived of "Headline News." As students entered the classroom on Monday morning, they wrote personal headlines about their weekends and posted them on the bulletin board. A headline might read "Fifth-Grader Stranded at Movie Theatre" or "Girl Takes on Responsibility as Mother's Helper." After the headlines had been posted, students had a chance to guess the stories behind them. The writes then told the stories behind their headlines. As each student had only three minutes to talk, they needed to make decisions about what was important and to clarify details as they proceeded. They began to rely on suspense and "purposeful ambiguity" to hold listeners' interest. On Tuesday, students committed their stories to writing. Because of the " Headline News" experience, her students have been able to generate writing that is focused, detailed, and well ordered.

12. Give students a chance to write to an audience for real purpose.

Patricia A. Slagle, high school teacher and teacher-consultant with the Louisville Writing Project ( Kentucky ), understands the difference between writing for a hypothetical purpose and writing to an audience for real purpose. She illustrates the difference by contrasting two assignments. She asks her students to imagine if they are the drama critic for their local newspaper, write a review of an imaginary production of the play they have just finished studying in class. This prompt asks students to assume the contrived role of a professional writer and drama critic. They must adapt to a voice that is not theirs and pretend to have knowledge they do not have.
Slagle developed a more effective alternative by asks them to write a letter to the director of their local theater company in which they present arguments for producing the play that they have just finished studying in class. This prompt allows the writer her own voice, building into her argument concrete references to personal experience. This prompt would constitute authentic writing only for those students who, in fact, would like to see the play produced.

13. Practice and play with revision techniques.

Mark Farrington, college instructor and teacher-consultant with the Northern Virginia Writing Project, believes teaching revision sometimes means practicing techniques of revision. An exercise like 'find a place other than the first sentence where this essay might begin' is valuable because it shows student writers the possibilities that exist in writing.

For Farrington's students, practice can sometime turn to play with directions to :
  • add five colors
  • add four action verbs
  • add one methapor
  • add five sensory details.
In his college fiction writing class, Farrington asks student to choose a spot in the story where the main character does something that is crucial to the rest of the story. At the moment, Farrington says, they must make the character do the exact opposite.
According to Farrington, playing at revision can lead to insightful surprises.

14. Pair students with adult reading / writing buddies.

Bernadette Lambert, teacher-consultant with the Kennesaw Mountain Writing Project ( Georgia ), wondered what would happen if she had her sixth-grade students pair to read a book with an adult family member. She asked the students about the kinds of books they wanted to read (mysteries, adventure, ghost stories ) and the adult about the kinds of books they wanted to read with the young people (character-building values, multiculturalism, no ghost stories ). Then, using these suggestions for direction, he developed a list of 30 books where from it, each student-adult pair chose one and committed themselves to read and discuss the book and write separate reviews. Most of the students were proud to share a piece of writing done by their adult reading buddy and several admitted that they had never before had this level of intellectual conversation with an adult family member.

15. Teach "tension" to move students beyond fluency.

Suzanne Linebarger, a co-director of the Northern California Writing Project, recognized that one element lacking from many of her students' stories was tension. One day, in front of the class, she demonstrated tension with a rubber band. Looped over her finger, the rubber band merely dangled. However, when she stretches it out and point it ( not at a student ), the rubber band suddenly becomes more interesting. It's the tension, the potential energy, that rivets your attention. It's the same in writing.

Linerbarger revised a generic writing prompt to add an element of tension. The initial prompt read, think of a friend who is special to you. Write about something your friend has done for you, you have done for your friend, or you have done together. Because, Linerbarger didn't want responses that settled for "my best friend was really good to me", so during the rewrite session we talked about how hard it is to stay friends when met with a challenge. Students talked about times they had let their friends down or times their friends had let them down, and how they had managed to stay friends in spite of their problems. In other words, we talked about some tense situations that found their way into their writing.

16. Encourage descriptive writing by focusing on the sounds of words.

Ray Skjelbred, middle school teacher at Martin Country Day School, wants his seventh grade students to listen to language. He wants to begin to train their ears by asking them to make lists of wonderful sounding words. This is strictly a listening game, they shouldn't write lunch just because they're hungry. After the collective list is assembled, Skjelbred asks students to make sentences from some of the words they've collected. They may use their own words, borrow from other contributors, add other words as necessary, and change word forms.
Among the words on one student's list : tumble, detergent, sift, bubble, syllable, creep, erupt, and volcano. The student writes :
  • A man loads his laundry into the tumbling washer, the detergent sifting through the bubbling water.
  • The syllables creep through her teeth.
  • The fog erupts like a volcano in the dust.
Unexpected words can go together, creating amazing images.

17. Require written response to peers' writing.

Kathleen O'Shaughnessy, co-director of the National Writing Project of Acadiana ( Louisiana ), asks her middle school students to respond to each others' writing on Post-it Notes. Students attach their comments to a piece of writing under consideration.
She has found that when she requires a written response on a Post-in instead of merely allowing students to respond verbally, the responders take their duties more seriously and, with practice, the quality of their remarks improves.
One student wrote :
While I was reading your piece, I felt like I was riding a roller coaster. It started out kind a slow, but you could tell there was something exciting coming up. But then it moved real fast and stopped all of a sudden. I almost needed to read it again the way you ride a roller coaster over again because it goes too fast.

According O'Shaughnessy, this response is certainly more useful to the writer than the usual 'I think you could, like, add some more details, you know ?' that I often overheard in response meetings.

18. Make writing reflection tangiable.

Anna Collins Trest, director of the South Mississippi Project, finds she can lead upper elementary school students to better understand the concept of "reflection" if she anchors the discussion in the concrete and helps students establish categories for their reflective responses. She decided to use mirrors to teach the reflective process. Each student had one. As the students gazed at their own reflections, she asked this question : " What can you think about while looking in the mirror at your own reflection ? " As they answered, she categorized each response :

I think I'm a queen - pretending/imagining
I look at my cavities - examining/observing
I think I'm having a bad hair day - forming opinions
What will I look like when I am old ? - questioning
My hair is parted in the middle - describing
I'm thinking about when I broke my nose - remembering
I think I look better than my brother - comparing
Everything on my face looks sad today - expressing emotion.

Trest talked with students about the categories and invited them to give personal examples of each. Then she asked them to look in the mirrors again, reflect on their images, and write. According Trest, Elementary students are literal in their thinking, but that doesn't mean they can't be creative.

19. Make grammar instruction dynamic.

Philip Ireland, teacher-consultant with the San Marcos Writing Project ( California ), believes in active learning. One of his strategies has been to take his seventh-graders on a "preposition walk" around the school campus. Walking in pairs, they tell each other what they are doing :

I'm stepping off the grass. I'm talking to my friend.

Students soon discover that everything they do contains prepositional phrases. He walks among his students prompting answers.
One of his student, Amanda proclaims from her hands and knees, " I'm crawling under the tennis net, the prepositional phrase is under the net. "
Ireland asks, " The preposition ? "
" Under. "

20. Ask students to experiment with sentence length.

Kim Stafford, director of the Oregon Writing Project at Lewis and Clark College, wants his students to discard old notions that sentences should be a certain length. He explains to his students that a writer's command of long and short sentences makes for a " more pliable " writing repertoire. He describes the exercise he uses to help students experiment with sentence length.
Stafford invites writers to compose a sentence that goes on for at least a page - and no fair cheating with a semicolon. Just use 'and' when you have to, or a dash, or make a list, and keep it going. After years of being told not to, they take pleasure in writing the greatest run-on sentences they can.
Then they shake out their writing hands, take a blank page, and write from the upper left to the lower right corner again, but this time letting no sentence be longer than four words, but every sentence must have a subject and a verb.
Stafford compares the first style of sentence construction to a river and the second to a drum. Writers need both. Rivers have long rhythms and drums roll.

21. Help students ask questions about their writing.

Joni Chancer, teacher-consultant of the South Coast Writing Project ( California ), has paid a lot of attention to the type of questions she wants her upper elementary students to consider as they re-examine their writing, reflecting on pieces they may make part of their portofolios. Here are some of the questions :

Why did I write this piece ? Where did I get my ideas ?
Who is the audience and how did it affect this piece ?
What skills did I work on in this piece ?
Was this piece easy or difficult to write ? Why ?
What parts did I rework ? What were my revisions ?
Did I try something new ?
What elements of writer's craft enhanced my story ?
What might I change ?
Did something I read influence my writing ?
What did I learn or what did I expect the reader to learn ?
Where will I go from here ? Will I publish it ? Share it ?
Expand it ? Toss it ? File it ?

Chancer cautions that these questions should not be considered a "reflection checklist," rather they are questions that seem to be addressed frequently when writers tell the story of a particular piece.

22. Challenge students to find active verbs.

Nancy Lilly, co-director of the Greater New Orleans Writing Project, wanted her fourth and fifth grade students to breathe life into their nonfiction writing. She thought the student who wrote this paragraph could do better :

The jaguar is the biggest and strongest cat in the rainforest. The jaguar's jaw is strong enough to crush a turtle's shell. Jaguar also have very powerful legs for leaping for branch to branch to chase prey.

Building on an idea from Stephanie Harvey ( Nonfiction Matters, Stenhouse,1998) Lilly introduced the concept of "nouns as stuff" and verbs as "what stuff does."
In a brainstorming session related to the students' study of the rain forest, the class supplied the following assistance to the writer :

Stuff/Nouns : What Stuff Does/Verbs
jaguar : leaps, pounces
jaguar's : legs pump
jaguar's : teeth crush
jaguar's : mouth devours

This was just the help the writer needed to create the following revised paragraph :

As the sun disappears from the heart of the forest, the jaguar leaps through the underbrush, pumping its powerful legs. It spies a gharial gliding down the river. The jungle cat pounces, crushing the turtle with his teeth, devouring the reptile with pleasure.

23. Require students to make a persuasive written argument in support of a final grade.

For a final exam, Sarah Lorenz, a teacher-consultant with the Eastern Michigan Writing Project, asks her high school students to make a written argument for the grade they think they should receive. Drawing on work they have done over the semester, students make a case for how much they have learned in the writing class.
According to Lorenz, the key to convincing is the use of detail, they can't simply say they have improved as writers-they have to give examples and even quote their own writing..They can't just say something was helpful-they have to tell me why they thought it was important, how their thinking changed, or how they applied this learning to everyday life.

24. Ground writing in social issues important to students.

Jean Hicks, director, and Tim Johnson, a co-director, both of the Louisville Writing Project ( Kentucky), have developed a way to help high school students create brief, effective dramas about issues in their lives. The class, working in groups, decides on a theme such as jealousy, sibling rivalry, competition, or teen drinking. Each group develops a scene illustrating an aspect of this chosen theme.
Considering the theme of sibling rivalry, for instance, students identify possible scenes with topics such as " I Had It First " (competing for family resources) and " Calling in the Troops" (tattling). Students then set up the circumstances and characters.
Hicks and Johnson give each of the "characters" a different color packet of Post-it Notes. Each student develops and posts dialogue for his or her character. As the scene emerges, Post-its can be added, moved, and deleted. They remind students of the conversations of drama such as conflict and resolution. Scenes, when acted out, are limited to 10 minutes. According Hicks and Johnson, It's not so much about the genre or the product as it is about creating a culture that supports the thinking and learning of writers.

25. Encourage the" framing device " as an aid to cohesion in writing.

Romana Hillebrand, a teacher-consultant with the Northwest Inland Writing Project (Idaho), asks her university students to find a literary or historical reference or a personal narrative that can provide a fresh way into and out of their writing, surrounding it much like a window frame surrounds a glass pane.
Hillebrand provides this example :
A student in her research class wrote a paper on the relationship between humans and plants, beginning with a reference to the nursery rhyme, 'Ring around the rosy, a pocket full of posies...'
She explained the rhymes as originating with the practice of masking the stench of death with flowers during the Black Plague. The student finished the paper with the sentence, "Without plants, life on Earth would cease to exist as we know it; ashes we all fall down."
Hillebrand concludes that linking the introduction and the conclusion helps unify a paper and satisfy the reader.

26. Use real world examples to reinforce writing conventions.

Suzanne Cherry, director of the Swamp Fox Writing Project ( South Carolina ), has her own way of dramatizing the comma splice error. She brings to class two pieces of wire, the last inch of each exposed. She tells her college students that we need to join these pieces of wire together right now if we are to be able to watch our favorite TV show. We could use some tape, but that would probably be a mistake as the puppy could easily eat through the connection. By splicing the wires in this way, we are creating a fire hazard.
A better connection, the students usually suggest, would be to use one of those electrical connectors that look like pen caps.
Cherry says to her students to turn these wires into sentences. If we simply splice them together with a comma, the equivalent of a piece of tape, we create a weak connection, or a comma splice error. Then would be the grammatical equivalent of the electrical connector is think conjunction -and, but,or. Or try a semicolon. All of these show relationships between sentences in a way that the comma, a device for taping clauses together in a slapdash manner.
According to Cherry, the more able we are to relate the concepts of writing to 'real world' experience, the more successful we will be.

27. Think like a football coach.

In addition to his work as a high school teacher of writing, Dan Holt, a co-director with the Third Coast Writing Project ( Michigan), spent 20 years coaching football. While doing the latter, he learned quite a bit about doing the former. Here is some of what he found out :
The writing teacher can't stay on the sidelines. " When I modeled for my players, they knew what I wanted them to do." The same involvement, he says, is required to successfully teach writing.
Like the coach, the writing teacher should praise strong performance rather than focus on the negative. Statements such as "Wow, that was a killer block," or "That paragraph was tight" will turn "butterball" ninth-grade boys into varsity linemen and insecure adolescents into aspiring poets.
The writing teacher should apply the KISS theory : Keep it smile stupid. Holt explains for a freshman quarterback, audibles (on-field commands) are best used with care until a player has reached a higher skill level. In writing class, a student who has never written a poem needs to start with small verse forms such as a chinquapin or haiku.
Practice and routine are important both for football players and for writing students, but football players and writers also need the " adrenaline rush " of the big game and the final draft.

28. Allow classroom writing to take a page from yearbook writing.

High school teacher Jon Appleby noticed that when yearbooks fell into students' hands, "my curriculum got dropped in a heartbeat for spirited words scribbled over photos." Appleby wondered, "How can I make my classroom as facinating and consuming as the yearbook ? "

Here are some ideas that yearbook writing inspired :

Take pictures, put them on the bulletin boards, and have students write captions for them. Then design small descriptive writing assignments using the photographs of events such as the prom and homecoming. Afterwards, ask students to choose quotes from things they have read that represent what they feel and think and put them on the walls.
Check in about students' lives. Recognize achievements and individuals the way that yearbook writers direct attention to each other. Ask students to write down memories and simply, joyfully share them. As yearbook writing usually does, insist on a sense of tomorrow.

29. Use home language on the road to Standard English.

Eileen Kennedy, special education teacher at Medger Evers College, works with native speakers of Caribbean Creole who are preparing to teach in New York City. Sometimes she encourages her students to draft writing in their native Creole. The additional challenge becomes to redraft this writing, rendered in patois, into Standard English.
She finds that narratives involving immigrant Caribbean natives in unfamiliar situations - buying a refrigerator, for instance - lead to inspired writing. In addition, some students expressed their thoughts more proficiently in Standard English after drafting in their vernaculars.

30. Introduce multi - genre writing in the context of community service.

Jim Wilcox, teacher-consultant with the Oklahoma Writing Project, requires his college students to volunteer at a local facility that serves the community, any place from the Special Olympics to a burn unit. Over the course of their tenure with the organization, students write in a number of genres : an objective report that describes the appearance and activity of the facility, a personal interview/profile, an evaluation essay that requires students to set up criteria by which to assess this kind of organization, an investigative report that includes information from a second source, and a letter to the editor of a campus newspaper or other publication.

He says that besides improving their researching skills, students learn that their community is indeed full of problems and frustrations. They also learn that their own talents and time are valuable assets in solving some of the world's problems - one life at a time.














Minggu, 18 April 2010

Total Physical Response

INTRODUCTION

A general approach to foreign language instruction which has been named 'the Comprehension Approach.' It is called this because of the importance it gives to listening comprehension. In the 1960s and 1970s research gave rise to the hypothesis that language learning should start first with understanding and later proceed to production (Winitz 1981).

After the learner internalizes an extensive map of how the target language works, speaking will appear spontaneously. Of course, the student's speech will not be perfect, but gradually speech will become more target-like. Notice that this is exactly how an infant acquires its native language. For example, a baby spends many months listening to the people around it long before it ever says a word. The child has the time to try to make sense out of the sounds it hears. No one tells the baby that it must speak. The child chooses to speak when it is ready to do so.

There are several methods being practiced, an attempt to apply these observations to foreign language instruction :
  • Krashen and Terrel's Natural Approach. It shares certain features with the Direct Method. Emphasis is placed on students' developing basic communication skills and vocabulary through their receiving meaningful exposure to the target language. The students listen to the teacher using the target language communicatively from the beginning of instruction. They do not speak at first. The teacher helps her students to understand her by using pictures and occasional words in the students'native language and by being as expressive as possible.
  • Another method that fits within the Comprehension Approach is Winitz and Reed's self-instructional program and Winitz' The Learnables. Students listen to tape-recorded words, phrases, and sentences while they look at accompanying pictures. The meaning of the utterance is clear from the context the pictures provides. The students are asked to respond in some way, such as pointing to each picture as it is described, to show that they understand the language to which they are listening, but they do not speak. Stories illustrated by pictures are also used as a device to convey abstract meaning.
  • A new method, called the Lexical Approach, also fits within the Comprehension Approach. Developed by Michael Lewis, the Lexical Approach is less concerned with student production and more concerned that studentsreceive abundant comprehensible input. Especially at lower levels, teachers talk extensively to their students, while requiring little or no verbal response from them. Instead, students are given exercises and activities which raise their awareness about lexical features of the target language.
  • James Asher's Total Physical Response (TPR). On the basis of his research, Asher reasoned that the fastest, least stressful way to achieve understanding of any target language is to follow directions uttered by the instructor (without native language translation).
TPR => one of the English teaching approaches and methods developed by Dr. James J Asher. It has been applied for almost thirty years. This method attempts to center attention to encouraging learners to listen and respond to the spoken target language commands of their taechers. In other words, TPR is a language teaching method built around the coordination of speech and action; it attempts to teach language through physical (motor) activity.

THE TECHNIQUES

Using commands to direct behavior
The use of commands is the major teaching technique of TPR. The commands are given to get students to perform an action that makes the meaning of the command clear.

Role reversal
Students command their teacher and classmates to perform some actions. Asher says that students will want to speak after ten to twenty hours of instruction, although some students may take longer. Students should not be encouraged to speak until they are ready.

Action sequence
At one point the teacher give three connected commands. For example, the teacher told the students to point to the door, walk to the door, and touch the door. As the students learn more and more of the target language, a longer series of connected commands can be given, which together comprise a whole procedure. A little later on students might receive the following instructions :

Take out a pen.
Take out a piece of paper.
Write a letter. (imaginary)
Fold the letter.
Put it in an envelope.
Seal the envelope.
Write the address on the envelope.
Put a stamp on the envelope.
Mail the letter.

This series of command is called an action sequence, or an operation. Many everyday activities, like writing a letter, can be broken down into an action sequence that students can be asked to perform.


Minggu, 11 April 2010

The Community Language Learning

This method advises teachers to consider their students as ‘whole persons.’
Whole person learning : teachers consider not only their students’ intellect, but also have some understanding of the relationship among students’ feelings, physical reactions, instinctive protective reactions, and desire to learn.

The Community Language Learning Method takes its principles from the more general Counseling-Learning approach developed by Charles A. Curran, a professor of psychology at Loyola University. He studied adult learning for many years and also influenced by Carl Rogers’ humanistic psychology ( Rogers 1951; Brown 1994), he found that adults often feel threatened by a new learning situation. They are threatened by the change inherent in learning and by the fear that they will appear foolish.
This method refers to two roles: that of the knower (teacher) and student (learner). Also the method draws on the counseling metaphor and refers to these respective roles as a counselor and a client. Because Currant believed that a way to deal with the fears of students is for teachers to become ‘language counselors.’ It does not mean someone trained in psychology, but someone who is a skillful understander of the struggle students face as they attempt to internalize another language. The teacher who can ‘understand’ can indicate his acceptance of the student, so by understanding their fears and being sensitive to them, he can help they overcome their negative feelings and turn them into positive energy to further their learning.


Community language learning (CLL) : an approach in which students work together to develop what aspects of a language they would like to learn. The teacher acts as a counsellor and a paraphraser, while the learner acts as a collaborator, although sometimes this role can be changed.

Sabtu, 03 April 2010

The Summary of The Desuggestopedia

INTRODUCTION

Celce-Murcia calls this method as an affective-humanistic approach => an approach in which there is respect for students' feelings.

The originator of this method : Dr. Georgi Lozanov in 70s, Bulgaria.

According to Lozanov : Language learning can occur at a much faster rate than ordinarily transpires.
The reason for our inefficiency, is that we set up psychological barriers to learning :
  • we fear that we will be unable to perform.
  • then, we will be limited in our ability to learn.
  • then, we will fail.
  • The result is we do not use the full mental powers that we have. We may be using only 5-10 % of our mental capacity.
In order to make better use of our reserved capacity, the limitations we think we have need to be 'desuggested'.

Desuggestopedia : desuggesting limitation on learning / the application of the study of suggestion to pedagogy, has been developed to help students eliminate the feeling that they cannot be successful or the negative association they may have toward studying and to help them overcome the barriers to learning.

One of the ways the students' mental reserves are stimulated is through integration of the fine arts, an important contribution to the method made by Lozanov's colleague Evelyna Gateva.

Suggestopedia : apply suggestology to teaching.
Tebal
Charateristics :

Stimulates the whole person.

Undoes blocks

Goes rapidly forward

Gives creative solution

Encourages relaxation

Strengthens self-image

Talks to all the senses

Optimizes learning

Propagates talent

Enhances learning

Dramatises material

Includes pictures, music and movement

Addresses the whole person

According to Lozanov :

  • Learning => the process of consciousness and unconsciousness.
  • Authority
  • Infantilisation
  • Double-planeness (direct/indirect influences)
  • Intonation and rhythm
  • Concert pseudo-passiveness
  • Relaxed attention

THINKING ABOUT THE EXPERIENCE

1. Observation => The classroom is bright and colorful.
Principle => Learning is facilitated in a cheerful environment.

2. Observation => among the posters hanging around the room are several containing grammatical information.
Principle => Students can learn from what is present in the environment, even if their attention is not directed to it ('Peripheral learning').

3. Observation => The teacher speaks confidently. Principle => If students trust and respect the teacher's authority, they will accept and retain information better.

4. Observation => The teacher gives the students the impression that learning the target language will be easy and enjoyable.
Principle => The teacher should recognize that learners bring certain psychological barriers with them to the learning situation. She should attempt to'desuggest' these.

5. Observation => The students choose new names and identities. Principle => Assuming a new identity enhances students' feeling of security and allows them to be more open. They feel less inhibited since their performance is really that of a different person. 6. Observation => The students introduce themselves to the teacher. Principle => The dialog that the students learn contains language they can use immediately.
7. Observation => The play rhythmic instruments as they sing a song. Principles => Songs are useful for 'freeing the speech muscles' and evoking positive emotions.

8. Observation => The teacher distributes a lengthy handout to the class. The title of the dialog is 'To want to is to be able to.' Principle => The teacher should integrate indirect positive suggestions ('there is no limit to what you can do') into the learning situation.

9. Observation => The teacher briefly mentions a few points about English grammar and vocabulary. These are in bold print in the dialog.
Principle => the teacher should present and explain the grammar and vocabulary, but not dwell on them. The bold print allows the students' focus to shift from the whole text to the details before they return to the whole text again. The dynamic interplay between the whole and the parts is important.

10. Observation => There are reproductions of classical paintings throughout the text.
Principle => Fine art provides positive suggestions for students.

11. Observation => In the left column is the dialog in the target language. In the right column is the native language translation.
Principle => One way that meaning is made clear is through native language translation.

12. Observation => The teacher reads the dialog with a musical accompaniment. She matches her voice to the rhythm and intonation of the music.
Principle => Communication takes place on 'two planes': on one the linguistic message is encoded; and on the other are factors which influence the linguistic message. On the conscious plane, the learner attends to the language; on the subconscious plane, the music suggest that learning is easy and pleasant. When there is a unity between conscious and subconscious, learning is enhanced.

13. Observation => The teacher reads the script a second time as the students listen. This is done to different music.
Principle => A calm state, such as one experiences when listening to a concert, is ideal for overcoming psychological barriers and for taking advantage of learning potential.

14. Observation => For homework, the students are to read the dialog at night and in the morning.
Principle => At these times, the distinction between the conscious and the subconscious is most blurred and therefore, learning can occur.

15. Observation => The teacher gives the students hats to wear for the different characters in the dialog. The students take turns reading portions of the dialog.
Principle => Dramatization is a particularly valuable way of playfully activating the material. Fantasy reduces barriers to learning.

16. Observation => The teacher tells the students that they are auditioning for a play.
Principle => The fine arts (music, art,and drama) enable suggestions to reach the subconscious. The arts should, therefore, be integrated as much as possible into the teaching process.

17. Observation => The teacher leads the class in various activities involving the dialog, for example,question-and-answer, repetition, and translation.
Principle => The teacher should help the students 'activate' the material to which they have been exposed. The means of doing this should be varied so as to avoid repetition as much as possible. Novelty aids acquisition.

18. Observation => She teaches the students a children's song.
Principle => Music and movement reinforce the linguistic material. It is desirable that students achieve a state of 'infantilization' so that they will be more open to learning. If they trust the teacher, they will reach this state more easily.

19. Observation => The teacher and students play a question-and-answer game.
Principle => In an atmosphere of play, the conscious attention of the learner does not focus on linguistic forms, but rather on using the language. Learning can be fun.

20. Observation => The student makes an error by saying, ' How you do ?' The teacher corrects the error in a soft voice.
Principle => Errors are corrected gently, not in a direct, confrontational manner.

REVIEWING THE PRINCIPLES

1. The goals of teachers who use Desuggestopedia :
To accelerate the process by which students learn to use a foreign language for everyday communication. More of the students' mental powers must be tapped by desuggesting the psychological barriers learners bring with them to the learning situation and using techniques to activate the 'paraconscious' part of the mind, just below the fully-conscious mind.

2. The teacher is the authority in the classroom. For the method to be successful, the students must trust and respect her. The students will retain information better from someone in whom they have confidence since they will be more responsive to her 'desuggesting' their limitations and suggesting how easy it will be for them to succeed.
Once the students trust the teacher, they can feel more secure, so they can be more spontaneous and less inhibited.

3. Some characteristics of the teaching / learning process :
A Desuggestopedia course is conducted in a classroom which is bright and cheerful because posters displaying grammatical information about the target language are hung around the room to take advantage of students' peripheral learning. The posters are changed every few weeks to create a sense of novelty in the environment.
  • Students select target language names and choose new occupations.
  • During the course they create whole biographies to go along with their new identities.
  • The texts students work from are handouts containing lengthy dialogs (as many as 800 words) in the target language. Next to the dialog is a translation in the students' native language. There are also some notes on vocabulary and grammar which correspond to bold-faced items in the dialog.
The teacher presents the dialog during two concerts which comprise the first major phase (the receptive phase).
  • The first concert (the active concert) => the teacher reads the dialog, matching her voice to the ryhthm and pitch of the music, so the 'whole brain'(both the left and the right hemispheres) of the students become activated. The students follow the target language dialog as the teacher reads it out loud. They also check the translation.
  • During the second concert (the passive concert), the students listen calmly while the teacher reads the dialog at a normal rate of speed. For homework the students read over the dialog just before they go to sleep, and again when they get up the next morning.
What follows is the second major phase (the activation phase), in which students engage in various activities designed to help them gain facility with the new material. The activities include dramatizations, games, songs, and question-and-answer exercises.

4. The teacher initiates interactions with the whole group of students and with individuals right from the beginning of a language course. Initially, the students can only respond nonverbally or with a few target language words they have practiced. Later the students have more control of the target language and can respond more appropriately and even initiate interaction themselves.

5. The feeling of the students dealt with :
A great deal of attention is given to students' feelings. One of the fundamental principles is that if students are relaxed and confident, they will not need to try hard to learn the language. It will just come naturally and easily. It is considered important that the psychological barriers that students bring with them be desuggested. Indirect positive suggestions are made to enhance students' self-confidence and to convince them that success is obtainable. Students also choose target language names on the assumption that a new identity makes students feel more secure and thus more open to learning.

6. Language is the first of two planes in two-plane process of communication. In the second plane are the factors which influence the linguistic message. For example, the way one dresses or the nonverbal behavior one uses affectshow one's linguistic message is interpreted.
The culture which students learn concerns the everyday life of people who speak the language. The use of the fine arts is also important in Desuggestopedic class.

7. Vocabulary is emphasized. Grammar is dealt with explicitly but minimally. In fact, it is believed that students will learn best if their conscious attention is focused not on the language forms, but on using the language. The 'paraconscious' mind will then absorb the linguistic rules. Speaking communicatively is emphasized. Students also read in the target language (for example, dialogs) and write (for example, imaginative compositions).

8. The role of the students' native language :
Native-language translation is used to make the meaning of the dialog clear. The teacher also uses the native language in class when necessary. As the course proceeds, the teacher uses the native language less and less.

9 Evaluation accomplished :
Evaluation usually is conducted on students' normal in-class performance and not through formall tests.

10. The teacher respond to student errors :
Errors are corrected gently, with the teacher using a soft voice.

REVIEWING THE TECHNIQUES AND THE CLASSROOM SET-UP

Classroom set-up
The teacher is challenged to create a classroom environment which is bright and cheerful by decorated the classroom with scenes (holidays, festival) from a country where the target language is spoken. The teacher should try to provide as positive an environment as possible.

Peripheral learning
This technique is based upon the idea that we perceive much more in our environment than that to which we consciously attend. By putting posters containing grammatical information about the target language on the classroom walls, students will absorb the necessary facts effortlessly. They are changed from time to time to provide grammatical information that is appropriate to what the students are studying.

Positive suggestion
The teacher's responsibility to orchestrate the suggestive factors in a learning situation, thereby helping students break down the barriers to learning that they bring with them through direct suggestion appeals to the students' consciousness : A teacher tells students they are going to be successful. But indirect suggestion, which appeals to the students' subconscious, is actually the more powerful of the two. Indirect suggestion is accomplished through the choice of a dialog entitled, 'To want to is to be able to.'

Choose a new identity
The students choose a target language name and a new occupation. As the course continues, the students have an opportunity to develop a whole biography about their fictional selves. For instance, later on they may be asked to talk or write about their fictional hometown, childhood, and family.

Role play
Students are asked to pretend temporarily that they are someone else and to perform in the target language as if they were that person and often asked to create their own lines relevant to the situation.

First concert (active concert)
The two concerts are components of the receptive phase of the lesson. After the teacher has introduced the story as related in the dialog and called students' attention to some particular grammatical points that arise in it, she reads the dialog in the target language. The students have copies of the dialog in the target language and their native language and refer to it as the teacher is reading. Music is played accompanied with a dramatic reading (the teacher's voice rises and falls with the music) in target language, synchronized in intonation with the music. The music is classical; the early Romantic period is suggested.

Second concert (passive concert)
At here, the students are asked to put their scripts aside. They simply listen as the teacher reads the dialog at a normal rate of speed. The teacher is seated and reads with musical accompaniment. The content governs the way the teacher reads the script, not the music, which is pre-Classical or Baroque.

Primary activation
This technique and the one that follows are components of the active phase of the lesson. The students playfully reread the target language dialog out loud, as individuals or in groups.

Creative adaptation
The students engage in various activities designed to help them learn the new material and use it spontaneously. For example : singing, dancing, dramatizations, and games. The important thing is that the activities are varied and do not allow the students to focus on the form of the linguistic message, just the communicative intent.

Conclusion

Learning will be facilitated in relaxed and comfortable environment.

Learning should be as enjoyable as possible.