Title: Communicative Approaches to Language Teaching
1Communicative Approaches to Language Teaching
-
- From Principles to Practice
2What is Communicative Competence?
- First introduced by Dell Hymes, the concept of
Communicative Competence suggests that there is
more to language than mere grammatical
competence. To be successful in language
learning, students need to know how language is
used by members of a speech community and how
language structures can be used functionally
within that community. -
3Flint ESL Content Standards
(standards link).
- The Flint ESL Content Standards are
communicatively based, outlining the - A. Social Language
- Academic Language
- Sociocultural Language
- Which students need to acquire in order to use
English to communicate in social settings, to
achieve academically, in socially and culturally
appropriate ways.
4Preview QuestionsPrinciples of Communicative
Competence
- What ideas do you have for application of
communicative principles within Flint Community
Schools contexts? - How are you already putting these principles into
practice? - Share your ideas for making language learning fun
an communicative-based at the Teacher Shareware
station ! ! !
5For each principle, write down . . .
- An activity carried out or observed
- Any questions.
- Any comments.
6Principle 1 Exposure to, and interaction in
diverse situations
- Bringing the outside world into the classroom
using . . . - Role play
- Simulation
- Problem solving activities
- Language rich experiences.
7Principle 2 Authentic Language
- Naturally occurring language when possible.
- Simulated language which approximates natural
language.
8Principle 3 Emphasis on Meaning
- Language input that is meaningful.
- Krashens i (input) 1. Input at a level just
above the students current level (a stretching
experience). - Meaning negotiation.
- Negotiated language acquisition/Pushed Output
(Nunan 1999).
9Principle 4 Involvement in Real Communicative
Activities (with a purpose)
- Going to the store.
- Filling out a form.
- Saying Im sorry.
- Expressing needs, feelings, desires (politely, in
socially appropriate ways) - Making a friend.
10Principle 5 Opportunities for Expression
- Ideas
- Opinions
- Needs
- Agreement
- Disagreement
- ???
11Principle 6 Cooperative Learning
Maximization of Communicative Involvement
- Cooperative learning groups.
- Shy/vocal students.
- Solving language puzzle together
- Silent period breakouts.
12With your group, share
- Your activities, comments, and questions for each
principle. - Then pick one principle to discuss with another
table. - Add new ideas to your toolbox ! ! !
13Principles in Practice
- Picture Bingo (using pictures to communicate
meaning), other Bingo v. - Video Jigsaw (cooperative learning, real
communication with a purpose, auth. Lang.) - Using clip art in stories (meaning negotiation).
- Magnetic poetry.
- TPR (total physical response) for classroom
commands. - Songs and cloze exercises (Hot Pot).
- Available resources
14Ideas
- Menuinvite another class
- Politeness practicetelephone etiquette
- Thank you letters
- Application forms
- Cross-age tutoring, educational boardgames
15Something Unexpected
- The thirty-first of April Make room for
un-planned - Is a funny time of year, visitors
- When something unexpected Re-entering by chair,
- May suddenly reappear Such unexpected visitors
- As the wibbily-wobbily bears.
- Watch out for flying teapots
- Returning from Bombay. Dont let
- If you recall, that is the time The thirty-first
of April - When teaspoons fly away. Catch you unaware!
16Tools of the Trade and Re-Tooling
- Tools get old.
- New tools are developed.
- Tools we dont even know exist are available.
- Re-using old tools.
- Integrating new technology.
- Developing our own toolbox of favorites.
Get the job done!
Tool up !
Re-tool
Right tool for the job?
17Links and Resources
- Hot Potatoes Overview
- Hot Potatoes Site
- The ESL Café
18References
- Nunan, D.H. (1999). Second Language Teaching and
Learning. Boston Heinle and Heinle.
19The Box