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Unit 14 Evaluating and Adapting Textbooks

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Title: Unit 14 Evaluating and Adapting Textbooks


1
Unit 14 Evaluating and Adapting
Textbooks
Welcome
2
Teaching Objectives
  • 1.Why what do teachers evaluate and adapt?
  • 2.How do teachers evaluate textbooks?
  • 3.How do teachers select textbooks?
  • 4.How do teachers adapt textbooks?

3
I. Why what do teachers evaluate and adapt?
  • With the rapid ELT development in China, more
    and more textbooks have made their way to the
    market. Choosing the right textbook is becoming
    more and more important at all levels of ELT in
    schools.

4
  • With the effort from textbook writers, ELT
  • researchers and classroom teachers,
  • textbook evaluation and selection have
  • evolved from ad hoc (???)to
  • systematic action. Although most
  • classroom teachers will not
  • be involved in the production of textbooks,
  • all teachers have the responsibility for
  • textbook evaluation, selection and
  • adaptation.

5
  • So far we have been using the term textbook.
    However, the focus of this unit is far more than
    just textbooks. Nowadays, textbooks in
    traditional pedagogy have evolved into a great
    variety of resources used in language classroom
    such as audio cassettes, videos, CD-ROMs,
    dictionaries, grammar book, readers, workbook,
    teachers books, photocopied materials,
    flashcards, and other authentic materials, such
    as newspapers, photographs, advertisements,
    radio/TV programmes, etc.

6
  • In many cases the term materials is used in
    place of textbooks, which refers to anything
    that is used by teachers or students to
    facilitate the learning of a language. The term
    textbooks is still widely used, but its
    reference has expanded from books to all the
    materials used around or independent of the
    books.

7
II. Evaluating textbooks
  • Good textbooks should have the following
    features.
  • 1. Good textbooks should attract the students
    curiosity, interest and attention. In order to do
    this, textbooks should have novelty, variety,
    attractive layout, appealing content, etc. Of
    course they should also make sure that learning
    really takes place when the students use the
    textbooks. It is not necessarily enough that
    students enjoy the textbooks.

8
  • 2. Textbooks should help students to feel at
    ease. The layout of presentation, tasks and
    activities, and texts and illustrations should
    all look friendly to the students so that they
    feel relaxed when seeing them.

9
  • 3.Textbooks should help students to develop
    confidence. Good textbooks help to build up
    students confidence by providing tasks or
    activities that students can cope with.
  • 4.Textbooks should meet students needs. What is
    covered in the textbooks should be relevant and
    useful to what the students need to learn and
    what they want to learn.

10
  • 5.Textbooks should expose the students to
    language in authentic use. Generally speaking,
    textbooks written in authentic language are more
    motivating and challenging.
  • 6.Textbooks should provide the students with
    opportunities to use the target language to
    achieve communicative purposes.

11
  • 7.Textbooks should take into account that the
    positive effects of language teaching are usually
    delayed. Research into SLA shows that it is a
    gradual rather than an instantaneous process and
    that this is equally true for instructed learning
    (formal learning). So it is important for
    textbooks to recycle instruction and to provide
    frequent and ample exposure to the instructed
    language features in communicative use.

12
  • 8.Textbooks should take into account that
    students differ in learning styles. Tasks and
    activities should be variable and should cater
    for a range of learning styles so all students
    can benefit.
  • 9.Textbooks should take into account that
    students differ in affective factors. Good
    textbooks should accommodate different
    attitudinal and motivational background as much
    as possible.

13
  • 10. Textbooks should maximise learning potential
    by encouraging intellectual, aesthetic and
    emotional involvement which stimulates both right
    and left brain activities. Good textbooks enable
    the stud5nts to receive, process and retain
    information through multiple intelligences.

14
III. Selecting textbooks
  • --we select after we evaluate. However,
    evaluating textbooks is one thing, selecting
    textbooks is quite another.
  • --When we evaluate a textbook with an intention
    of adoption, we try to match what is offered by
    the book with the needs of our language
    programme.
  • --Go over the 3 questionnaires.

15
IV. Adapting textbooks
  • Maley (1998281) suggested the following options
    to adapt materials
  • 1.omission the teacher leaves out things deemed
    inappropriate, offensive, unproductive, etc.,
    for the particular group.
  • 2.addition where there seems to be inadequate
    coverage, teachers may decide to add to
    textbooks, either in the form of texts or
    exercise material.
  • .

16
  • 3.reduction where the teacher shortens an
    activity to give it less weight or emphasis.
  • 4.extension where an activity is lengthened in
    order to give it an additional dimension. (For
    example, a vocabulary activity is extended to
    draw attention to some syntactic patterning.)

17
  • 5.rewriting/modification teacher may
    occasionally decide to rewrite material,
    especially exercise material, to make it more
    appropriate, more communicative, more
    demanding, more accessible to their students,
    etc.
  • 6.replacement text or exercise material which is
    considered inadequate, for whatever reason, may
    be replaced by more suitable material. This is
    often culled from other resource materials.

18
  • 7.reordering teachers may decide that the order
    in which the textbooks are presented is not
    suitable for their students. They can then decide
    to plot a different course through the textbooks
    from the one the writer has laid down.
  • 8.branching teachers may decide to add options
    to the existing activity or to suggest
    alternative pathways through the activities. (For
    example, an experiential route or an analytical
    route.)

19
V. Conclusion
  • Firstly, teachers need to have the authority to
    evaluate, select and adapt textbooks. In many
    cases, teachers are simply told to use a certain
    textbook. In worse circumstances, teachers are
    told how to use a book. Some teachers are even
    criticized for intentionally leaving out
    activities that they do not consider appropriate
    or necessary.

20
  • Secondly, teachers have to have the initiative
    to evaluate, select and adapt textbooks. Very
    often, with a heavy workload, teachers simply do
    not have the time or energy to do anything beyond
    lesson planning and marking students homework.
    Without explicit encouragement from authorities,
    many teachers do not make an effort to evaluate
    and adapt textbooks.

21
  • Thirdly, teachers need to know how to evaluate,
    select and adapt textbooks. At the time when this
    book is being written, very few ELT teacher
    education programmes in China offer specific
    training in materials evaluation and design, and
    publications on ELT materials are hard to find.
    If textbook evaluation is ever done, it is mostly
    ad hoc impressionistic judgement based on
    experience or intuition. It is the concern for
    this deplorable situation that made the authors
    incorporate this last unit into a methodology
    book, which, in normal cases, would not touch the
    material world.

22
VI. Assignments
  • 1. Review the unit do all the exercises.
  • 2. Write a teaching plan of reading class based
    on the Reference Book of TLEBC.

23
Thank you ! Good bye !
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