METHODS OF LANGUAGE TEACHING�
Kiarie Wa’Njogu
Yale University
Methods of language teaching include:
1) Grammar-translation approach
2) Direct approach
3) Reading approach
4) Audiolingual method
5) Community language learning
6) Suggestopedia
7) The silent way
8) Total physical response
9) The natural way
10) Communicative language teaching
Grammar-Translation Approach
Direct Approach
Reading Approach
Audiolingual Method
Hints for Using Audio-lingual Drills in L2 Teaching
2. Drills should be conducted as rapidly as possibly so as to insure automaticity and to establish a system.
3. Ignore all but gross errors of pronunciation when drilling for grammar practice.
4. Use of shortcuts to keep the pace of drills at a maximum. Use hand motions, signal cards, notes, etc. to cue response.
5. Drill material should always be meaningful. If the content words are not known, teach their meanings.
6. Intersperse short periods of drill (about 10 minutes) with very brief alternative activities to avoid fatigue and boredom.
7. Don’t stand in one place; move about the room standing next to as many different students as possible to check their production. Thus you will know who to give more practice to during individual drilling.
Community language learning (CLL)
STAGE 1
Suggestopedia
-This method developed out of believe that human brain could process great quantities of material given the right conditions of learning like relaxation.
The natural approach
The Silent Way
1)To avoid the use of the vernacular.
2)To create simple linguistic situations that remain under the complete control of the teacher .
3)To pass on to the learners the responsibility for the utterances of the descriptions of the objects shown or the actions performed.
4)To let the teacher concentrate on what the students say and how they are saying it, drawing their attention to the differences in pronunciation and the flow of words.
5) To generate a serious game-like situation in which the rules are implicitly agreed upon by giving meaning to the gestures of the teacher and his mime.
6) To permit almost from the start a switch from the lone voice of the teacher using the foreign language to a number of voices using it.
7) To provide the support of perception and action to the intellectual guess of what the noises mean, thus bring in the arsenal of the usual criteria of experience already developed and automatic in one's use of the mother tongue.
8) To provide a duration of spontaneous speech upon which the teacher and the students can work to obtain a similarity of melody to the one heard.
Materials
Total Physical Response (TPR)
Total Physical Response (TPR) method as one that combines information and skills through the use of the kinesthetic sensory system.
Procedure:
Step I The teacher says the commands as he himself
performs the action.
Step 2 The teacher says the command as both the
teacher and the students then perform the action.
Step 3 The teacher says the command but only
students perform the action
Step 4 The teacher tells one student at a time to do
commands
Step 5 The roles of teacher and student are reversed.
Students give commands to teacher and to other
students.
Step 6 The teacher and student allow for command
expansion or produces new sentences.
Communicative language Teaching