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Integrating the four skills - brown 2007

Date post: 28-Oct-2014
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A short presentation on the five methods proposed by Professor Brown (2007) to integrate language skills in the ESL/EFL classroom.
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INTEGRATING THE FOUR LANGUAGE INTEGRATING THE FOUR LANGUAGE SKILLS SKILLS Yamith J. Fandiño La Salle University Bogotá, Colombia
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Page 1: Integrating the four skills - brown 2007

INTEGRATING THE FOUR LANGUAGE INTEGRATING THE FOUR LANGUAGE SKILLSSKILLS

Yamith J. FandiñoLa Salle UniversityBogotá, Colombia

Page 2: Integrating the four skills - brown 2007

WHY INTEGRATED SKILLS?WHY INTEGRATED SKILLS?SEGREGATION- Focus on the forms of language predisposed curriculum designers to

segment courses into the separate language skills.- Administrative considerations still make it easier to program separate

courses.- Certain specific purposes for which students are studying English may best

be labeled by one of the four skills, especially at the high intermediate to advanced levels.

INTEGRATION- Production and reception are two sides of the same coin.- Often one skill will reinforce another.- Written and spoken language bear a relationship to each other.- Most of natural performance involves not only the integration of one or

more skills, but connections between language and the way we think , feel and act.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

Content-based instruction

- It integrates the learning of some specific subject matter content with the learning of a second language.

- The overall structure of the curriculum is dictated by the nature of the subject matter than by language forms and sequences.

- The second language is simply the medium to convey informational content of interest and relevance to the learner.

- Learners are focused on useful, practical non-language objectives as the subject matter is perceived to be relevant to long-term goals.

- As you plan a lesson around a particular subtopic of your subject-matter area, students integrate all four skills as they read, discuss, solve problems, analyze data, and write opinions and reports.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

Task-based language teaching

- The priority is not the forms of language, but rather the functional purposes for which language must be used such as exchanging opinions, expressing feelings, asking for permission, etc.

- The importance of organizing a course around real world communicative tasks that learners need to engage in outside the classroom: a job interview, a recipe, public announcements, e-mails, invitations, etc.

- The course goals center on learners’ pragmatic language competence by maintaining appropriateness according to purposes and contexts as the center of attention.

- Principles of listening, speaking, reading, and writing become appropriately considered under the rubric of what it is our learners are going to do with this language.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

Theme-based teaching

- Courses focus on topics, situations, or "themes" as one of their organizing parameters.

- It places an equal value on content and language objectives. - Language skills are enhanced, but through focal attention to topic and

peripheral attention to language. - Challenging topics engage the curiosity and increase motivation of

students as they grapple with an array of real-life issues ranging from simple to complex.

- Theme-based curricula can serve the multiple interests of students in a classroom and can offer a focus on content while still adhering to institutional needs for offering a language course per se.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

Experiential learning

- Experiential learning gives students concrete experiences through which they "discover" language principles by trial and error, by processing feedback and by building hypotheses about language.

- Teachers do not simply tell students about how language works; instead, they give students opportunities to use language as they grapple with the problem-solving complexities of a variety of concrete experiences.

- Experiential learning techniques tend to be learner-centered such as hands-on projects, field trips and other “on-site” visits, role plays and simulations, cross-cultural experiences (camps, dinner groups, etc.), etc.

- Experiential learning tends to put an emphasis on the psychomotor aspects of language learning by involving learners in physical actions in which language is subsumed and reinforced.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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The episode hypothesis

- Language presentation is enhanced if students receive interconnected sentences in an interest-provoking episode rather than in a disconnected series of sentences.

- Language learning material presented in episodes can appeal to learners since it stands a good chance of intriguing or captivating learners.

- Most of our textbooks have many communicative dialogs, which illustrate certain grammatical or discourse features in meaningful ways, but they do not always grip the learner with suspense.

- Episodes can be presented in either written or spoken form and students, in turn, can respond to them by speaking or writing.

- Students can be encouraged to write their own episodes, complete an episode whose resolution or climax is not presented, or dramatize written episodes.

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MODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATIONMODELS OF SKILLS INTEGRATION

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References

Brown, H. D. (2007). Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy (3rd edition). USA: Pearson Longman.


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