Title: KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA SANGATHAN
1KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA SANGATHAN
THREE DAY WORKSHOP
ON
COMMUNICATIVE ENGLISH
6 MAY 07 TO 8 MAY 207
Venue KV PARADIP PORT
2- What is communicative approach in English
teaching?
It does not mean teaching conversation based
English
- Laying emphasis upon language meaning and not
language form.
- How to use English as a tool for communication
-and the rules or principles that represent it
3- A Teacher may teach structural content and how
to learn in English. But the teacher should not
restrict himself only in to that activity
4- Communication is a process for exchanging
information.
- True communication A transmission of thoughts,
ideas and feelings from one mind to another gt
Information
5Core skills
listening
speaking
decoder
encoder
receiver
O
ƒ
sender
Information
LANGUAGE
Listening
Hearing
produce voice
voluntary
Involuntary
Ability to detect
6Input
Out put
From
To understand topics and main points
INFORMATION
- Spoken discourse
- Familiar social situation
- Inter-personal messages conveyed through person
or telephone
Distinguish main points from supporting details
To respond to directive lanuages
To interpret what is heard key words,
intonation, gesture, background noises and stress
Non-verbal
Verbal
7Aim and objective of this workshop
- We have certain invisible enemies because of
globalization - This has impact on education
- Hence, we have to deliver superior services
relative to customers expectation.
Dimension of quality
- Reliability Accuracy
- Responsiveness
- Assurance To inspire trust and confidence
- Empathy Feeling difficulties for others
- Tangibility Visible evidence
8How to maintain quality
- SWOT analysis Strength gt Weakness gt
Opportunities and Threats
9How to implement in schools
10 Bilingual Education
- Bilingualism in two senses
- receptive bilingualism read and listen to
English - Reading of literature, listen to lectures in
English - Monolingual standard, i.e. to master English as a
native speaker as an aim - Courses given in English, substitute courses
previous given in Hindi - No alternatives to English in the
study/programms/courses. - Conclusion bilingualism at an interaction level
- English supplies and sometimes substitutes Hindi.
11Foundation Stage
- Voluntary (the law only requires that children
should begin full time education on the term
after their fifth birthday)
Our Target is Teaching Communicative English
through English for enhancing life skills such as
- Personal, social and emotional development
- Communication, language and literacy
- Mathematical development
- Knowledge and understanding of the world
- Physical development
- Creative development
- Decision making and critical thinking
- Strong interpersonal relationship
12Diversity of Indian Students
- Degree of acculturalation, language fluency, and
geographical location are some determining
factors - Language fluency
- -Monolingual in Native language
- -Monolingual in English
- -Bilingual
- -More Native language and less English
- -More English and less Native, etc.
- Each has an impact on student readiness skills
and requires different teaching skills
RESULT
Poor communication
Fear
Poor comprehension
Poor Listening
Poor Vocabulary
Poor Expression
13Activities to be undertaken
- Pronouncing new sound
- Carefully chosen vocabulary items producing
grammatical structure - Using devices for managing conversation
- Creating real life situations
- Expressing views, reaction
- Giving instructions
- Talking over phones
Classroom situation
- Asking and answering questions
- Narrating events
- Describing people
14Classroom situation
- Describing place
- Making extempore speech
- Debating and anchoring
- Talking about a topic of interest
- Expressing need for something
Outside Classroom situation
- Greetings Formal and informal
- Taking leave
- Exchanging news
- Sharing opinion, Jokes and likes and dislikes
- Personal pleasure and plain (Emotional feelings)
- Carrying out a friendly conversation
- Accepting, extending and rejecting invitation.
15How to catch the attention
- Body language Eye contact
- Smile and expression
- Pace and speed of delivery of speech
- Totally democratic approach- no threat
- Moving around the class room
- Working in pair, Group of 4 and group of 6
- Posture of the body
- Pleasing personality Hide restlessness and
emotions of anger
16Characteristics of an Effective Teacher of Indian
Students
- Abilities to use non-verbal communication to
establish positive learning environments in the
classroom. These are not emphasized in most
teacher training programs in terms of its impact
on Indian students. - - Proximity teachers who stand in front of the
classroom and lecture to their students often
establish barriers to learning. In contrast,
teachers who move about the room among their
students tend to be much more effective. - - Smile teachers who are personable and
friendly put their students at ease, which
facilitates learning.
17Effective Teacher
- - Warmth caring Indian students almost
always respond to teachers who are warm and
caring. Studies indicate that the absence of
warmth causes emotional distance and hostility
from Indian students. - - Emotional Closeness Indian students must
often be close to their teachers before they are
willing to respond to instruction. Studies
indicate that students will more likely learn to
please the teacher than to learn for themselves
18Effective Teacher
- - Out of class relationships Teachers who
welcome out-of-class interactions tend to be more
effective than teachers who insist on
professional distance. The implication for
students I can trust this teacher. - - Embarrassment When teachers use
embarrassment as a motivational or disciplinary
tactic, many Indian students withdraw. Rather
than embarrass, while requiring overt behavior
from students so as to encourage participation
and promote learning, teachers must explain to
students who do not get it right away that I
will come back to you, and move to other
students for answers.
19Effective Teacher
- - High expectations The most consistent
characteristic of effective teachers of Indian
learners is having high personal and academic
expectations. At the same time, teachers must
make sure students clearly understand what those
expectations are, and what is expected of them. -
- - Personal vs. task orientation Teachers are
much more effective with Indian students when
they encourage students to learn for them then
when they use task-oriented approaches. Students
feel valued and respected.
20Let us be more successful as a teacher
- All forms of cultural responsiveness teaching
- Multiple approaches to teaching reading
specifically language development - Accuracy in diagnosing learning skills
- How to promote student interaction
responsibility - Personal counseling
- How to recognize mismatches between curriculum,
standardized tests and student abilities - Classroom management and all forms of rewards and
praises