ELT 6 PDF - Productive Competences – Speaking

Summary

This document explores effective strategies for teaching speaking, addressing challenges like vocabulary limitations, pronunciation difficulties, and student inhibitions. It details how to foster speaking in the classroom, using various techniques, including activities, games, and simulations.

Full Transcript

Session 6: Productive Competences – Speaking 1. Communication Problems − lack of knowledge of pronunciation (I love you is pronounced I laugh you) − lack of knowledge of language (grammar, vocabulary, set phrases) − lack of knowledge of the functions of language, discourse patterns, regis...

Session 6: Productive Competences – Speaking 1. Communication Problems − lack of knowledge of pronunciation (I love you is pronounced I laugh you) − lack of knowledge of language (grammar, vocabulary, set phrases) − lack of knowledge of the functions of language, discourse patterns, register (informal language when it should be formal) − lack of knowledge of cultural and social rules and norms, speech situation knowledge (answer to the question how are you: good, fine) 2. How Does Speaking Work? 3. Challenges and Solutions when Teaching Speaking 3.1. Challenges − lack of vocabulary − problems with pronunciation − inhibition (learners are often worried about making mistakes, afraid of criticism, shy of other’s attention) − lack of time − lack of practice − lack of creativity − low or uneven participation − different levels of speaking competence 3.2. Solutions − teaching speaking strategies: paraphrasing, using body language, intonation, code-switching (games like Activity/Taboo can help) − creating a positive atmosphere: welcoming mistakes, building trust − planning phrases with tolerance of mistakes (not too many interruptions, focus on fluency, not always accuracy) − giving time to conceptualise (Think, Pair, Share) − using a variety of speaking activities − using a model text/doing a brainstorming − pair or group work/activities like the round robin − learner orientation (language level, topic) − creating meaningful tasks (simulations, project work) − providing learners with language support (empowering students) − developing the willingness to speak and the ability to speak 3.3. Problems in the Classroom − the speaking process is complex o speaking involves encoding (conceptualising and formulating), verbalising (articulation), monitoring o speaking needs a context, a cause and occasion, an intention, meaningful content, emotions, gestures, body language, etc. − up to 30% of students do not speak in class − average amount of speaking: less than a minute (one-word-answers, fragments) 3.4. Teaching Speaking − teachers have to prepare the students for different kinds of oral production o producing an oral text for one or more listeners: speaking from notes, acting out a rehearsed scene o spoken interaction: conversation, debate, interview o oral mediation: summarising and paraphrasing texts, informal interpreting for visitors − purposes of speaking o interactional: engaging in direct social interaction with a strong focus on building a relationship (small talk, conversations) o transactional: conveying and receiving information, e.g. in a speech or when ordering in a restaurant − dual status of the target language in class: learning object and main medium of communication − form-focused interaction in class vs. spontaneous interaction outside of school − highly conventionalised and routinised communicative units (IRF = teacher initiation, learner response, teacher follow-up/feedback VS. confrontation with less predictable communicative settings) 4. Speaking as a Negotiation of Meaning − when interacting with one another, meaning is not simply transferred, but it is negotiated − in this process of negotiation of meaning (is at the heart of language development), speakers try to reach a clear understanding of each other 5. Parameters of a Genuine Speaking Situation − persons: who is talking to whom − relationship of the interlocutors − knowledge the interlocutors have of one another (common experiences) − the interlocutors’ common knowledge of the topic − topic: complexity, familiarity − communication motive − emotions: individual involvement − urgency of the message − place: where does the conversation take place − speaker’s intent: discourse strategy − time: when does the conversation take place − level of language skills − non-verbal signals: facial expressions, gestures, body language − action continuum: actions during the conversation − presence of certain objects − medium: phone, face-to-face, interactive − degree of privacy: intimate, group, media − degree of obligation 6. Teaching Speaking to Different Learner Groups Young Learners − playful, often using songs, games, and role-play − varied practice with a strong element of repetition − offer opportunity to experiment with language: input that focuses on verbs and structure words, not just on nouns − strong focus on pronunciation is important, as errors in pronunciation are prone to fossilisation − principles for developing speaking skills in the primary classroom o find a balance between listening and speaking o use English as a means of communication in the classroom o present new language using gestures, mime and action o encourage learners to interact spontaneously and give them support to get their message across Advanced Learners: use real-life type of speaking − telling a joke − greeting a passing colleague − making a phone enquiry − chatting with a friend − explaining medical problems to a doctor − negotiating a sale − giving street directions − making a presentation − communicating live online during an Internet game − explaining a grammatical point Speaking Activities for Different Stages − awareness-raising activities: listening to scripted, semi-scripted or authentic recordings while focussing on features of spoken language (e.g. organisation, socio-cultural aspects, topic, performance effects, communication strategies, speech acts, discourse markers, features of spoken grammar and vocabulary, stress and intonation) − appropriation activities: practice with less and less control by the teacher and peers (e.g. starting with chants, writing as preparation for speaking, reading aloud, flow-diagram conversations and dialogues with assisted performance and scaffolding) − fostering automaticity and autonomy: tasks with minimal teacher assistance under real operating conditions (e.g. academic presentations, drama, role-plays and simulations, discussions and debates outside of class speaking) Methods to Increase the Individual Speaking Time of Students − coherent speaking o dramatic reading o talking about pictures, drawings and other creatives o story-telling o 1-minute or book and movie presentations (group and partner work) o other cooperative methods: TPS, round robin, 4 corners, … − participating in conversations o dialogues: dialogues with a framework (model dialogues) o talking while walking o interviews: tandem work, information-gaps, job interviews o class surveys o cooperative methods: TPS, round robin, 4 corners, discussions, role play

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