1 / 19

LING 306 TEFL METHODOLOGY

LING 306 TEFL METHODOLOGY. CONTENT BASED TASK BASED & PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES. CONTENT-BASED, TASK-BASED, AND PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES. CONTENT BASED INSTRUCTION.

Download Presentation

LING 306 TEFL METHODOLOGY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LING 306 TEFL METHODOLOGY CONTENT BASED TASK BASED & PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES

  2. CONTENT-BASED, TASK-BASED, AND PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES

  3. CONTENT BASED INSTRUCTION • For years, specialised language courses have included content relevant to a particular profession or academic discipline, e.g., for airline pilots, medical practitioners, lawyers • It integrates the learning of language with the learning of some other content, often academic subject matter – academic subjects provide natural content for language instruction • Motivated “language across the curriculum” movement for native speakers in England • Snow (1991) referred the approach as “a method with many faces”

  4. CONTENT-BASED APPROACH - MODELS • LANGUAGE IMMERSION PROGRAM • ADJUNCT MODEL • SHELTERED INSTRUCTION • COMPETENCY-BASED INSTRUCTION

  5. CONTENT BASED APPROACH • In a second language environment, it offers the significant advantage that second language students do not have to postpone their academic study until their language reaches a high level • Competency-based instruction – an effective form of content-based instruction for adult immigrants – offers an opportunity to develop their language skills and vital ‘life-coping’ skills

  6. CONTENT-BASED APPROACH - PHILOSOPHY • Uses the WHOLE LANGUAGE APPROACH – calls for language to be regarded holistically rather than by pieces • Claims that students learn best when they are working to understand the meaning of the whole text • Work from top-down – understand the overall text before work on the linguistics forms

  7. CONTENT-BASED APPROACH - PHILOSOPHY • Whole language educators provide content-rich curriculum where language and thinking can be about interesting and significant content (Edelsky, Altweger, and Flores 1991) • Errors are seen as part of learning process • Embraces Vygotsky’s idea about social nature of learning – learning is best served by collaboration between teacher and students and among students

  8. CONTENT-BASED APPROACH

  9. CONTENT-BASED APPROACH

  10. TASK-BASED APPROACH • A task-based approach aims to provide learners with a natural context for language use • As learners work to complete a task, they have abundant opportunity to interact • Learning can be facilitated by the interaction in which learners work to correctly understand others and make themselves understood • Learners will have opportunity to acquire language that beyond their current level and use them later

  11. TASK-BASED APPROACH • Prabhu (1987) identified 3 types of tasks: an information-gap activity, an opinion-gap activity, and a reasoning-gap activity (p. 148) • An information-gap activityinvolves the exchange of information among participants in order to complete a task • An opinion-gap activity requires that students give their personal preferences, feelings, or attitudes in order to complete a task • A reasoning-gap activity requires students to derive some new information by inferring it from information they have been given

  12. TASK-BASED APPROACH • Prabhu feels that reasoning-gap tasks work best: • Information-gap tasks often require a single step transfer of information, rather than sustained negotiation • Opinion-gap tasks tend to be rather open-ended • Reasoning-gap tasks encourage a more sustained engagement with meaning, though they are still characterized by a somewhat predictable use of language

  13. TASK-BASED APPROACH

  14. TASK-BASED APPROACH

  15. PARTICIPATORY APPROACH • In some ways the participatory approach is similar to the content approach - • It begins with content that is meaningful to the students • Any forms that are worked upon emerge from that content • Difference – the nature of the content • It is not the content of subject matter texts, but rather content that is based on issues of concern to studen

  16. PARTICIPATORY APPROACH - PHILOSOPHY • What happens in the classroom should be connected with what happens outside that has relevance to the students • Education is most effective when it is experience-centred, when it relates to students’ real needs • A goal of the participatory approach is for students to be evaluating their own learning to increasingly direct it themselves • Students are motivated by their personal involvement • Teachers are co-learners, asking questions of the students, who are the experts on their own lives

  17. PARTICIPATORY APPROACH - PHILOSOPHY • The curriculum is not a predetermined product, but the result of an ongoing context-specific problem-posing process • Students can create their own materials, which, in turn, can become texts for other students • Focus on linguistic form occurs within a focus on content • Language skills are taught in service of action for change, rather than in isolation • When knowledge is jointly constructed, it becomes a tool to help students find voice and by finding their voices, students can act in the world

  18. PARTICIPATORY APPROACH

  19. PARTICIPATORY APPROACH

More Related