teaching grammar
- grammar with a communicative aim / pedagogical grammar:
- form - accuracy - how is it formed?
- meaning - meaningfulness - what does it mean?
- use - appropriateness - when/why is it used?
- grammar teaching can be less direct, more implicit, and more engaging. (ask more questions)
- presentation and practice:
- set the context (why are we using what we are using today?)
- elicitation
- modelling
- drilling
- story/ dialogue building
- pair work
- mingling
- engagement
- instead of showing a grammar box, an example or pictures could be used. a timeline is also helpful.
- feedback and correction
- indicating the error instead of saying what the error was (by raising your eyebrows or shaking your head).
- indicating what the mistake is or where it is (by repeating the incorrect work with questioning intonation).
- giving the correction, partly or wholly yourself (saying a corrected verb form) and getting the learner to complete it or repeat it.
- "you mean (this)?" student: "yes" "would you repeat it, please?"
- finger contractions
- ask questions to check understanding and to make sure students are following the IDEA/MEANING of the sentence - we are focusing on the communicative aim.
- the questions have to lead the way to understanding
- the questions have to be simple and have simple answers (yes/no, I don't know, etc).
may 27 2022 ∞
may 27 2022 +