developing oral fluency

11
COMENIUS MEETING DROPS OF SKILLS - SHARING METHODS MEETING IN VIENNA, AUSTRIA, 01-05/12/2014

Upload: patoeva

Post on 18-Jul-2015

257 views

Category:

Education


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Developing oral fluency

COMENIUS MEETING DROPS OF SKILLS -SHARING METHODS

MEETING IN VIENNA, AUSTRIA, 01-05/12/2014

Page 2: Developing oral fluency

DEVELOPING ORAL

FLUENCY IN THE

SECONDARY CLASSROOM

Teacher Training Course, IPC Exeter, UK

March 2014

Page 3: Developing oral fluency

Reasons to attend the course:

- Difficulties to make students talk;- Get to know different strategies to improve their learning;- Prepare young people for life and for the world of work.

Main contents of the course:

- How to lead students to talk- Examples of activities teachers can use to achieve this goal;- The role of a teacher in a communicative activity.

Page 4: Developing oral fluency

Why do communicative activities?

“At the risk of stating the obvious, ‘Getting students to talk’ is the major and one of the most difficult tasks confronting any teacher of languages. But talk they must; not only because research into second language acquisition consistently advocates developing a context of spoken interaction in the classroom as the key variable in the quality and quantity of students language learning, but also because it is through cooperative talking that learners are enabled to simulate and thus prepare for the actuality of out-of-class communication.”

Professor Christoph N. Candlin, General editor in Getting Students to Talk, by Aleksandra Golebiowska, p.ix,1990 [Prentice Hall]

Page 5: Developing oral fluency

What makes a good communicative activity?

Authenticity (real life communication is stimulated by the fact thatpeople know different things and have different opinions)

It should contain either an information gap:- role plays “learners are given a task to complete … the learners are

told who they are, what their opinions are and what they know that isunknown to the others”

or an opinion gap:- simulations: “learners are told who they are and what their task is.

They present arguments according to their own beliefs.” - discussions: “learners retain their own personalities and views. Their

task is to come to an agreement regarding an issue introduced by theteacher.”

Aleksandra Golebiowska, Getting students to Talk, p.5,1990 [Prentice Hall]

Page 6: Developing oral fluency

Other exemples of communicative activities

• Find someone who …• Board games• Spot the similarities/differences• Mutual creative writing• Crosswords• Surveys• Ranking activities

Page 7: Developing oral fluency

Activities should be motivating; group work is an integral part of a communicative activity. It:- Generates more student talking time;- Frees the teacher to teach more effectively;- Is learner-centred, activily involving all students;- Encourages students to be responsible for their own learning;- Encourages social skills like teamwork.

Some rules for communicative activities to work:For the students:- Not to show the role card to anyone;- Not to reveal all the information card to anyone- Speak English

Page 8: Developing oral fluency

For the teachers:

- Ask the students to memorise their role-cards- Establish and enforce rules to promote the use of English in a

communicative way;- Present materials in a professional way;- Give simple instructions to students.

Page 9: Developing oral fluency

Student AYou are ill and are going to the doctor’s surgery. Follow the prompts below:1. Greet the doctor3. Explain why you are at the surgery5. Give all the information required7. Thank the doctor, say goodbye and leave the surgery

Student BYou are the doctor and have to advise the patient and prescribe medication. Follow the prompts below:2. Respond and ask for the reason of the visit4. Ask questions about the condition (e.g. when/how…)6. Tell the patient what the condition/disease is and advise him and/or prescribe some medication.

Idea taken from Role Plays for Today, Jason Anderson, Delta Publishing

Page 10: Developing oral fluency

What is the role of the teacher in a communicative activity?

- Monitoring- Listening for errors/mistakes and noting them for future reference- Prompting/encouraging- Being available as a reference source

Page 11: Developing oral fluency

Thank you for your attention

Margarida MarquesEnglish TeacherAgrupamento de Escolas Miguel Torga Bragança Portugal