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TEACHING TECHNIQUES
Tell me, I forget. Show me, I remember. Involve me, I understand.
Ancient Chinese Proverb
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TEACHING TECHNIQUES THE NATURAL APPROACH IN THE CLASSROOM The Natural Approach is designed to develop basic communication skills. The development stages are: (1) Comprehension (preproduction), (2) Early Production, and (3) Speech Emergence. Thisapproach to teaching language has been proven to be particularly effective with limited English proficient students. STAGE I COMPREHENSION
In order to maximize opportunities for comprehension experiences. Natural Approach instructors (1) create activities designed to teach students to recognize the meaning in words used in meaningful contexts, and (2) teach students to guess at the meaning ofphrases without knowing all of the words and structures of the sentences. a. b. ALWAYS USE VISUAL AIDS (pictures, realia, gestures). MODIFY YOUR SPEECH to aid comprehension, speak more slowly, emphasize key words, simplify vocabulary and grammar, use related ideas, do not talk out of context. DO NOT FORCE PRODUCTION. Students will use English when they are ready. They sometimes experience a“silent period” which can last days or weeks. FOCUS ATTENTION ON KEY VOCABULARY.
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Teacher Activities in the Comprehension Stage. a. Total Physical Response (TPR). The teacher gives commands to which the students react with their bodies as well as their brains. Supplying meaningful input based on items in the classroom or brought to class. (Who has the ________ ? Who is wearing a ________ ?)Supplying meaningful input based on pictures.
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Student Responses in the Comprehension Stage. a. b. c. d. e. f. An action (TPR). The name of a fellow student (from b., c. above). Gestures Students say yes/no in English. Students point to an item or picture. Children do not initially make many attempts to communicate using words, rather they indicate their comprehension nonverbally. 95TEACHING TECHNIQUES THE NATURAL APPROACH IN THE CLASSROOM Stage 2 EARLY SPEECH
In non-threatening environments, students move voluntarily into Stage 2. Stage 2 begins when students begin using English words to give: a. b. c. d. yes/no answers one-word answers lists of words two word strings and short phrases
The following are instructor question techniques to encourage the transitionfrom Stage I to Stage 2. a. b. c. d. e. Yes/no questions (Is Jimmy wearing a sweater today?) Choice questions (Is this a pencil or an eraser?) Questions which can be answered with a single word. (What does the woman have in her hand? Book. Where? When? Who?) General questions which encourage lists of words. (What do we see on the table now?) Open sentence with pause for student response. (Mike iswearing a blue shirt, but Ron is wearing a _____ shirt.)
During the Early Speech Stage, the instructor must give a meaningful and understandable input which will encourage the transition to Stage 3. Therefore all student responses should be expanded if possible. Here is a sample exchange between the teacher and the class: Instructor: Class: Instructor: Class: Instructor: Class: Instructor: Class:Instructor: What do we see in this picture? Woman. Yes, there is a woman in this picture. Is there a man? Yes. Yes, there is. There is a man and a woman. Where is the man? Car. Yes that’s right. The man is in a car. Is he driving the car? Yes. Yes, he is. He’s driving the car.
Other sorts of activities which can be used in Early Speech Stage: a. b. c. d. e. open dialogues guided interviewsopen-ended sentences charts, tables, graphs newspaper ads
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TEACHING TECHNIQUES THE NATURAL APPROACH IN THE CLASSROOM Stage 3 SPEECH EMERGENCE\
In the Speech Emergence Stage, speech production will normally improve in both quatntity and quallity. The sentences that the students produce become longer, more complex and tehy use a wider range of vocabulary. Finally, the number of errors...
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