Week 5. Alternative Methods Part 1 Total Physical Response The Silent Way Community Language...

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MATERIALS AND METHODSWeek 5

TODAY’S SCHEDULE

Alternative Methods Part 1 Total Physical Response The Silent Way Community Language Learning Suggestopedia

METHODS Grammar Translation Method The Direct MethodThe Audio-Lingual Method

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Students couldn’t transfer language outside classroom Noam Chomsky – language acquisition couldn’t take place through habit formation

Underlying, abstract rules allow us to speakCognitive Code Approach

ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES/METHODS PROJECT

Pretend you are a salesperson for the method.Individually or in groups of 2, pick one approach/method and try to convince the class it’ll be great for our students!

Presentations will be 5-7min Feel free to make a PPT, poster, make handouts, etc. Bonus points for creativity (make a skit, do an interview)

You must cover The method’s background and theory Design Procedure Any special notes (including it’s popularity and use today)

RUBRIC Content 30 points Visual Aids 10 points Preparedness 5 points Time (5-7 minutes) +5 points___

=50 points

SIGN UP SHEET (10 STUDENTS, 9 METHODS/APPROACHES )

Approach/Method Student(s)’ names

Total Physical Response Julie

The Silent Way Hana

Community Language Learning

Jessica. Erica

Suggestopedia Agnes

Whole Language Hannah

Multiple Intelligences Hee Jung Yoon(Helen), Jenny

Neurolingustic Programming

The Lexical Approach

Competency-Based L.T

TOTAL PHYSICAL RESPONSE

TPR Harold and Dorothy Palmer Speech directed to young children consists primarily of commands

grammar-based (inductive), stimulus-response view

TPRGoal: Teach oral proficiency from the start

Right brain learning Stress-free learning Activities include

Imperative drillsConversation dialogs

Wouldn’t use TPR exclusively

Raise your handRaise your handRaise your hand quicklyRaise your hand slowly Raise your right hand Raise both hands

THE SILENT WAYThe teacher is silent

FIDELCHARTFOR LEARNINGSPELLING

WORD CHART

CUISENAIRE RODS

COMMUNITY LANGUAGE LEARNING

CLL

Charles A. Curran, psych. prof. Teacher (counselor) students (clients)Humanistic, engages whole person Language alternation (L1 first, then L2) Explicit linguistic or communicative objectives not defined (topic based)

CLLLanguage as a social processSARD

SecurityAttention/aggression (show strength)Retention and reflectionDiscrimination (how things relate to each other)

CLLTeacher is like a nurturing parentResponds calmly, non judgmental Students arranged in a circlePair work, and group activities used

SUGGESTOPEDIA

SUGGESTOPEDIA Also called desuggestopedia Georgi Lozanov, Bulgarian psychiatrist-educator

Highly concerned with arrangement of classroom

Music, decorations, art, used No language theory, pseudo-science

SUGGESTOPEDIA Teacher should be authoritative parent-child relationship between teacher and student

Learner’s roles are carefully explained Learning activities include: Q&A, role play, listening activities

Focus on emotional texts

SUGGESTOPEDIA Procedure

1st – oral review section 2nd – new material presented and discussed 3rd – séance or concert session

WHOLE LANGUAGE

WHOLE LANGUAGE Arguably an approach, method or belief (book argues it’s an approach)

Reading and writing in the native language Importance of meaning and meaning makingLearn by doing

WHOLE LANGUAGE Authentic literatureReal and natural eventsWriting for a real audienceIntegration of four skills

WHOLE LANGUAGE Teacher is facilitator, learners are collaborators Focus on: use of literature, process writing, cooperative learning, students’ attitude

Criticism: rejection of ESL approach, applying native-language principles to ESL

MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES

MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES Howard Gardner All humans have all intelligences but people differ in their strengths

Eight native “intelligences”: linguistic, logical, spatial, musical, kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal, natural

MILanguage is to be integrated with music, bodily activity, interpersonal relationships

No linguistic goals of MI Basic sequence: awaken, amplify, teach with/for, transfer

MIIs applied to classrooms in a variety of ways (e.g. language corners, modifying activities)

Not prescriptive for teachers Helps students become more well-rounded