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PPP Procedure

Date post: 26-Oct-2015
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ELT Methodology
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Page 1: PPP Procedure
Page 2: PPP Procedure

Variation on audiolingualism

Began from structural-situational teaching

Began in 1960s (not called PPP procedure)

P – PRESENTATION

P – PRACTICE

P - PRODUCTION

Page 3: PPP Procedure

PRESENTATIONTeacher introduces a situation which

contextualises the language to be taught

Language is presented

Presentation involves the building of a situation requiring natural and logical use of the new language

 Use whatever English the students have

already learned or have some access to

Page 4: PPP Procedure

At lower levels use pictures and body language

As students progress, dialogues and text can be used  

Use meaningful, memorable and realistic examples; logical connection; context; clear models; sufficient meaningful repetition

PRESENTATION

Page 5: PPP Procedure

PRACTICEStudents practise the language using accurate

reproduction techniques

Practice activities need to be appropriate to the language being learned and the level and competence of the students

Usually involves moving the students from the individual drill stage into pair work (chain pair-work, closed pair-work and open pair-work)

Page 6: PPP Procedure

PRACTICE

Reproduction techniques:Choral repetitionIndividual repetitionCue-response drills

Cue-response drills have more meaning to students than simple substitution drills as they are contextualised by the situation

Page 7: PPP Procedure

PRODUCTION

Most important stage of communicative language teaching

Clear indication that the language learners have made the transition from "students" of key language to "users" of the language

Students use the language to produce their own sentences in written or oral form

Page 8: PPP Procedure

Students "produce" more personalized language

Trainers call this stage ‘immediate creativity’

Examples of effective production activities include situational role-plays, debates, discussions, problem-solving, narratives essays, descriptions, quizzes and games

PRODUCTION

Page 9: PPP Procedure

CRITICISM of PPP

Teacher-centred

Assumes that students learn in ‘straight lines’Start with no knowledge, followed by highly

restricted sentence-based utterances and to immediate production

Page 10: PPP Procedure

“… language is full of interlocking variables and systems”

- Woodward, 1993

PPP is inadequate because it reflected neither the nature of language nor the nature of learning

- Lewis, 1993

PPP is ‘fundamentally disabling not enabling’ - Scrivener, 1994

CRITICISM OF PPP

Page 11: PPP Procedure

ALTERNATIVES TO PPPDeep-end strategy (Johnson, 1982)

ESA: Engage, Study and Activate (Harmer, 2007)Straight arrows lesson procedureBoomerang lesson procedurePatchwork lesson procedure

Page 12: PPP Procedure

DEEP-END STRATEGYEncouraging the students into immediate production

Teacher can see where students have problems during production

Teacher goes to presentation or practice stage when necessary after production stage

Byrne (1986) joined the three stages into a circle where teacher and students can decide on which stage to begin with

Page 13: PPP Procedure

ESAE – Engage

Get students to be emotionally engaged

S – StudyTeaching and learning focus on form through

the teacher or students own noticing

A – Activate Students are encouraged to use all/the

language learnt through communicative tasks etc.

Page 14: PPP Procedure

Straight arrows procedure:

Teacher presents picture/situation

Study of meaning or form of language

Students activate the new language by using it

ESA LESSON PROCEDURES

Page 15: PPP Procedure

Boomerang procedure (EAS):

Teacher gets students engaged

Students do a written task, communicative games, role plays etc

Students study aspects of language which they lack/used incorrectly

ESA LESSON PROCEDURES

Page 16: PPP Procedure

Patch work procedure:

Lesson may follow a variety of sequences

E.g. Engage, activate followed by studying, followed by activating, engaging and then studying

ESA LESSON PROCEDURES


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