Transcript Document

Chapter 5
The Oral Approach
General Ideas
The Oral Approach / Situational
Language Teaching means an
approach to language teaching
developed by British applied linguists
from the 1930s to the 1960s.
It
is a grammar-based method in which
principles of grammatical and lexical
gradation are used and new teaching points
presented and practiced through
meaningful situation-based activities.
General Ideas
Although no longer in fashion,
techniques derived from this
approach have shaped the design of
many widely used EFL/ESL textbooks.
It is of significance to understand the
practices and principles of this
approach.
Background
1) This approach originated in Britain in the
1920s.
2) Harold Palmer and A. S. Hornby were the
most important and influential figures.
3) They were dissatisfied with the Direct
Method.
4) Another objective was to
principles of vocabulary control.
develop
5) Frequency counts showed that a core of
2000 words occurred frequently in daily
use and written texts.
Background
6) Organization of the grammar content of a
language course should be based on the
principle of gradation.
7) Their view of grammar was very different
from that of the Grammar-Translation
Method.
8) Students acquire a little information at a
time and learn to make meaningful
statements.
9) Sentences patterns used to have oral
Theoretical Basis
Theory of language
1) It can be characterized as a type of
British “structuralism”.
2) Language as speech/Language was
identified with speech, and speech
ability was approached through oral
practice of structure.
3) Language as rule-governed/British
linguists believe that elements in a
language were rule-governed/lower level
systems of word classes (nouns, adjectives,
and so on) led to higher level systems of
phrases and sentences.
Theory of language
4 ) Emphasis on the close relationship
between the structure, context and
situation.
5) Primary importance attached
meaning, context and situation.
to
Theory of learning
1)
Behaviourist
habit
formation/Foreign language learning
was considered basically a process
of habit formation.
2) Language learning in revelopment
of literacy
Theory of learning
3) The habit formation of foeal life and
language learning in the classroom:
the acquisition of spoken language
and the foreign language speech
patterns
4) Naturalistic principles for classroom
teaching
5) Direct and spontaneous uses of the
target language
Basic principles
Main features
1) Language teaching begins with
the spoken language
2) The target language
language of instruction.
is
the
3) New language is introduced and
practiced in situations.
4) Speech habit is formed in the
initial period of a language course.
Main features
5) Accuracy is maintained.
6) Common core words are covered.
7) Simple forms of grammar are taught
before complex ones, and inductively.
8) Reading and writing are introduced
learning later.
Teachers’ role
Deciding on the content of learning
Setting the space
Setting up situations
Model in the presentation stage
Error detector in the practice stage &
grammar.
Objectives
The objectives of language teaching are to
help the students:
to get a practical command of the
four basic skills of a language;
to obtain accuracy in pronunciation
Techniques
1) New sentences patterns presented
in situations
2) Drill-based practice
3) Guided repetition
4) Substitution activities
5) Dictation
6) Controlled reading and writing
tasks
Procedures
1) Listening
2) Choral imitation
3) Individual imitation
4) Isolation
5) Building up to a new model
6) Elicitation
7) Substitution drills
8) Question-answer drills
9) Correction
Summary and Comments
Advantages
1) The first attempt to establish
theoretical principles
2) Developing a methodological
framework for the first time
Disadvantages
Not
concentrated
with
appropriateness or rules
for use in real discourse
Discussion
1) What is the goal of teachers who
use the Oral Approach?
2)
What
are
some
of
the
characteristics of this approach that
make it so distinctive from the Direct
Method?