Foreign Language Learning Guide (PDF)

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Document Details

GiftedBowenite7150

Uploaded by GiftedBowenite7150

King Khalid University

Tags

foreign language learning language learning techniques language acquisition ESL

Summary

This book provides a guide on learning a foreign language. It outlines four principles for language learning: identifying needs, balancing learning across four strands, applying learning techniques, and maintaining motivation. The book emphasizes the importance of equal time allocation to input (listening/reading), output (speaking/writing) and focused language learning activities to better promote fluency.

Full Transcript

The book is based on a lot of research but to keep the book as brief and practical as possible, only a few studies are cited. For more references, see Nation, I.S.P. (2009) Teaching ESL/RFL Listening and Speaking. New York: Routledge, Nation, I.S.P. (2009) Teaching ESL/RFL Reading and Writing. New Y...

The book is based on a lot of research but to keep the book as brief and practical as possible, only a few studies are cited. For more references, see Nation, I.S.P. (2009) Teaching ESL/RFL Listening and Speaking. New York: Routledge, Nation, I.S.P. (2009) Teaching ESL/RFL Reading and Writing. New York: Routledge, and Nation, P. (2013) What should Every EFL Teacher Know? Seoul: Compass Publishing. A summary of the book There are four things that you need to do when you learn a foreign language: Principle 1: Work out what your needs are and learn what is most useful for you Principle 2: Balance your learning across the four strands Principle 3: Apply conditions that help learning using good language learning techniques Principle 4: Keep motivated and work hard–Do what needs to be done You need to spend equal amounts of time on each of the four strands: 1 learning from meaning-focused input (listening and reading) 2 learning from meaning-focused output (speaking and writing) 3 language-focused learning (studying pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar etc) 4 fluency development (getting good at using what you already know) Language learning activities You need to be clear why you are learning the language. If speaking the language is your main goal, you need to get some help on pronouncing the language early in your study of the language. If reading is your main goal, do a lot of regular deliberate learning of vocabulary and a lot of reading. There are about twenty language learning techniques that you should use and you need to understand how to use these techniques well and in the right balance. These are described in the activity boxes in this book. ‫افضل استراتيجيه لتعلم اللغه‬ When you start learning the language, get hold of the 120 item survival vocabulary for that language from Paul Nation’s web site, and learn that using word cards. If the survival vocabulary has not been made for your language, get a speaker of that language to help you make it, using the English survival list as a guide. If you like using a tablet or cell phone, find a good flash card program for doing your word card learning. Otherwise, use small cards putting the foreign word or phrase on one side Introduction / 5 and the translation on the other. Become really fluent with the survival vocabulary by practicing it over and over again. Get a movie that you like in the foreign language and find the script for it on the web. Watch parts of the movie many times while studying the script. Get a short book in the foreign language and start working your way through it with a dictionary. An easy book is best and the books that native-speaking children use at school when they are first taught to read can be a good choice. When you have read the book carefully, read it again at least twice more quickly. Put the repeated words on to word cards to study. Do lots of easy reading every week. Try to arrange a regular speaking time with a native speaker either face-to-face or on the web. Practice useful role plays of common situations, such as greeting people and saying goodbye, buying things in a shop, asking for help and asking directions. Repeat these role plays several times so they can be done fluently. Keep a list of them so they can be practiced again and varied over several weeks. ٢‫استراتيجيه‬ Learn useful phrases and sentences as whole units but also make sure you understand their parts and how they fit together. Understanding the parts makes the whole phrase or sentence easier to remember. Avoid learning near synonyms, opposites or members of a lexical set together. Lexical sets are groups like the months of the year, the names of fruit, colours, parts of the body and articles of clothing. If you learn the words in such pairs or groups at the same time, the words in them get mixed up with each other making them harder to learn. Spend some time regularly studying and practicing pronunciation, preferably with a teacher who understands about the sounds of the language. This is very important if you are learning a language such as a tone language like Chinese which uses very different sounds from your first language. 6 The conditions for language learning The two most important conditions supporting learning are spaced repetition and the quality of attention given to items. Quality is increased by recalling what you have met, making varied recalls, analyzing and elaborating on language items, and giving deliberate attention. Learning a language involves a lot of work and even the most talented language learners work hard at a learning a language, so be prepared to work hard, work regularly and keep your motivation high by noting your successes in using the language and in increasing your language knowledge. Set regular weekly goals for words to learn, pages to read, and minutes to spend doing listening. Keep a record of what you do so you can see your progress. Introduction / 7 Chapter What do you need to do to learn a foreign 01 language? This chapter outlines four basic principles that learners should follow when they are learning another language. In the following chapters each of these principles is given much more detailed attention. This chapter thus provides an overview of the book. Principle 1 → Work out what your needs are and learn what is most useful for you Principle 2 → Balance your learning Principle 3 → Apply conditions that help learning Principle 4 → Keep motivated and work hard–Do what needs to be done Will following the principles described in this book help my learning? This book can help you, and here are some possible reasons why. If your language course does not provide large amounts of input through reading and listening at the right level for you, then you are missing a very important opportunity for learning. Research with very young foreign language learners, found that by increasing the amount of interesting and understandable written input without increasing class time, learners had almost double the language proficiency gains of those who followed a program involving the same amount of class time but with much less input. These gains were maintained a year later. Similarly, if you are not doing deliberate learning through using bilingual word cards, but instead are spending time doing a variety of vocabulary related exercises, you are likely to be learning vocabulary at less than half the rate that you could easily achieve. If your course does not include fluency development activities such as timed reading, then following a timed reading course taking a total of around three hours of study will increase your reading speed in the foreign language by at least 50% and in some cases will double your reading speed. There is a lot of research on learning foreign languages, but the findings of this research do not always get put into practice. Applying the findings of some of this research can result in very dramatic increases in learning. 8 Principle 1: Work out what your needs are and learn what is most useful for you If you are clear about why you are learning a language, you can better choose what and how to learn. Most people want to be able to speak a language, but some have the goal of reading it. If you are already part of the way through your language study, then test yourself to see how much you know. To get an idea about how much you need to learn when you learn another language, here are some vocabulary size figures from English. It is likely that European languages like French, Spanish, Dutch and German require similar vocabulary sizes. Other languages are likely to require similar sizes but there is no research on this. To be familiar with 98% of the running words in a friendly informal conversation, or to be familiar with 98% of the running words in a movie, you need to know around 6,000 different words. To be familiar with 98% of the running words in a novel or newspaper, you need to know around 8000-9000 different words. This is a lot of words and native speakers learn them at the rate of around 1,000 different words a year, until they reach a vocabulary size of close to 20,000 different words. However, as we shall see, not all words are created equal, and with a vocabulary of 1,000 to 2,000 of the most useful words we can hold adequate conversations and get most things done. Principle 2: Balance your learning ‫تعريف‬ Balancing learning is probably the most important principle, but it does require some skill and effort in applying it. The principle of the four strands says that if you want to have a well-balanced language course, you need to spend equal amounts of time on 1 learning from meaning-focused input (listening and reading) 2 learning from meaning-focused output (speaking and writing) 3 language-focused learning (studying pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar etc) 4 fluency development (getting good at using what you already know). All four strands are important and they need roughly equal amounts of time. In Chapters 3 to 6 we will look at how this can be done. Chapter 1 / 9 If the language you are learning has a sound system that is very different from your native language, it is worth deliberately learning about the sound system of the foreign language. This means finding a teacher who can do more than say sounds for you to copy; the teacher needs to explain how the sounds are produced in your mouth. An alternative is to do that study yourself. Some people can learn the sounds well without help or study, but if you are having difficulty with the sounds, then it is best to have a teacher. If your goal is only to read the language, then the time that you would spend on output (strand 2) can simply be changed to more reading input. Similarly, if your goal is just to speak the language (particularly if the script of the language you are learning is difficult), you may want to make all of your input strand consist of spoken language. Principle 3: Apply conditions that help learning Learning a language involves both deliberate and incidental learning, and these both involve the conditions of repetition, retrieval (recall), varied meetings and varied use, using visuals, and deliberate attention. Good learning also involves avoiding interference which makes learning more difficult. We will look in more detail at these conditions in Chapter 7, but they are mentioned throughout the book because they are so important. Is there a best method for learning a language? Unfortunately, the answer is no. Language learning can occur through all kinds of methods. What is most important is that good principles of learning are applied. You may have heard of methods like grammar-translation, aural-oral, the silent way, Suggestopaedia, the communicative approach, and TPR (Total Physical Response). These all have their supporters and attackers. Each method has its strengths and weaknesses and there is no research that shows the superiority of one method over another. It is fine to follow a particular method although it is not necessary. What is important is that there is a balance of learning opportunities across the four strands of meaning-focused input, meaning-focused output, language-focused learning, and fluency development. It is also important that the learning conditions of repetition, retrieval, varied meetings and varied use, deliberate attention, and deep processing occur. The most useful items to learn should get the most attention and you need access to material which is at the right level for you. 10 Principle 4: Keep motivated and work hard–Do what needs to be done Many people begin learning a language and then give up when they see how much work is required. It takes young native speakers many years to learn their first language and they are highly motivated to learn it. When learning a foreign language, there is often not the immediate motivation of being able to use what you have just learned. It is usually easier to learn when the language is being used around you. A learner of a foreign language needs to set short-term goals where there are signs of progress and achievement. This can be as simple as learning twenty new words, or learning how to answer the telephone. Having clear short term goals can keep motivation high. In Chapter 8 we will look more closely at motivation and working hard. A very useful principle to follow when learning most things is the time-on-task principle. This principle says if you want to learn something, do it a lot. If you want to learn to read, read a lot. If you want to learn to speak, speak a lot. This is a rather crude quantity-based principle, but it works. The more time you spend doing something, usually the better you will become at doing it. It is easy to criticize this principle because it concentrates on quantity rather than quality. However, there is a lot of research to support it. In the following chapter we will look at finding out what you need to learn. Chapter 1 / 11

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