Chapter II-methods and Approaches of English Language Teaching
Chapter II-methods and Approaches of English Language Teaching
2.1 Introduction
2.2.3 Audiolingualism
2.2.7 Suggestopedia
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3.1 Synthetic Phonics Method
4. Summary
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2.1 Introduction: If we survey methods and approaches of English
approach has something new to offer. Every one of them has his own merits. The
language study. It dominated the language teaching from the 1840s to the 1940s
all over the world. It had such a long run that with some changes it is still used in
some parts of the world particularly countries where English language teachers
From the 1940s various attempts have been made to conceptualize the nature of
methods and to find relationship between theory and practice within the method.
Note: * Henry Sweets reputation as the man who taught Europe phonetics was
reflected even in the literature. The main character Prof. Henry Higgins of
George Bernard Shaws play My Fair Lady has touches of Henry Sweet.
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Language teaching specialists such as Marcel, Predergast and Gouin
did a lot to promote alternative approaches to language teaching. They did not
get widespread attention. From the 1880s Henry Sweet in England, Wilhelm
Vietor in Germany, and Paul Parssy in France gave the intellectual leadership to
He set forth principles for the development of teaching method. These included
linguistic theory to language teaching. His view was that training in phonetics
phonetics.
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The principles put forth by the reformers provided the theoretical
natural method and gradually led to the development of the Direct Method.
The most active period in the history of approaches and methods was
from the 1950s to the 1980s. (1) First the Audiolingual Method and the Situational
Method came up. They were later replaced by communicative approach. During
the same period The Silent Way, the Natural Approach, The Total Physical
Response was also used for language teaching by some. In the 1990s Content
Teaching (CLT) as the basis for language teaching methodology in the 1980s
and it continues to be considered the most plausible basis for teaching of English
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An approach of Language Teaching has a common core set of
theories and principles for teaching. Variety of interpretations are possible while
applying these principles. It does give flexibility and freedom while applying them.
4. Cooperative Learning
5. Lexical Approach
6. Multiple Intelligences
8. Neurolinguistic Programming
techniques are elaborated. Hence the methods are best learned through training.
The teachers role is to follow the method and apply it according to the rules.
There is not much scope for interpretation. The different methods are
summarized here.
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1. Grammar Translation Method
2. Direct Method
3. Audio Lingualism
4. Counseling-Learning
7. Suggestopedia or Desuggestopedia
has been used by language teachers for many years. At one time it was called
the Classical Method since it was used in the teaching of the classical languages,
Latin and Greek. It was also referred as the Prussian Method in the United
sentences and texts into and out of target language. It dominated European and
Foreign language teaching from the 1840s to the 1940s. (10) Even today in many
places it is used in some form or the other. The main features of this method are
as follows:
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1. The first language is maintained as the reference system in the acquisition of
2. Reading and writing are the focus; not much attention is given to speaking or
listening.
3. Vocabulary selection is based mainly on the reading texts. Words are taught
4. Much of a lesson is devoted to translating sentences into and out of the target
language. This focus on the sentence is the distinctive feature of the method.
emphasized.
2.2.2 The Direct Method: Since the GTM was not very effective in preparing
progressed. The Direct Method has one very basic rule. No translation is
allowed. The Direct Method receives its name from the fact that meaning is to be
conveyed directly in the target language through the use of demonstration and
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visual aids, with no recourse to the students native language. It was introduced
in France, Germany, and United States by the end of the nineteenth century. In
the United States it was referred to as the Berlitz Method. Eventually many other
countries also experimented with this method. The main principles of this method
where paying clients had high motivation and the teachers were with the English
required teachers who were native speakers or had that level of fluency. It was
mainly dependent on the teachers skill and not so much on the text book. Many
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teachers were not proficient enough in the language. At times simple, brief
comprehension. The strict adherence to avoid the use of native language was
counter productive.
Brooks in 1964. It changed the language teaching from an art into a science. The
method was widely adopted in United States and Canada. There are many
learning theory. Practitioners found that it fell short of expectations. The skills
acquired failed to be transferred outside the classroom situation. The MIT linguist
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theory of language learning. He argued that sentences are not learned by
experimentation.
domain of language theory and the learning principles. It is different from theories
content for themselves by choosing topics they want to talk about. These are
then translated into the target language and used for interaction and language
practice.
teaching.
approach developed by British applied linguists from the 1930s to the 1960s.
Palmer, Hornby and other British applied linguists evolved systematic principles
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The oral approach was the accepted British approach to English
books of the period. In the 1960s Australian George Pittman and his colleagues
developed influential set of teaching materials based on this method. There were
widely used in Australia, New Guinea and the Pacific territories. The main
The third principle became a key feature and the term situational
2.2.6 The Silent Way: The silent way is the name of the method of language
teaching devised by Caleb Gattegno. It is based on the principle that the teacher
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should be silent as much as possible in the classroom but the learner should be
exercises, all of which are used to illustrate the relationships between sound and
meaning in the target language. The pronunciation charts called Fidels have
been devised for a number of languages and contain symbols in the target
language for all of the vowel and consonant sounds of the language. The
innovations in Gattegnos method are the ways in which classroom activities are
organized and the indirect role of the teacher. Gattegno believed that to teach
means to serve the learning process rather than to dominate it. Proponents of the
Silent Way claim its principles are far reaching, affecting not only education, but
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Suggestopedia is a specific set of learning recommendations derived from
music and musical rhythm to learning. It also gives importance to the decoration,
furniture and arrangement of the classroom and the authoritative behaviour of the
is stressed. According to Lozanov and others to make better use of our reserved
stimulated.
teaching method built around the coordination of speech and action. It attempts
childs first language acquisition. A baby spends many months listening to the
people around it long before it even says a word. The child has the time to try to
make sense out of the sounds it hears. No one tells the baby that it must speak.
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Learners in Total Physical Response have the primary roles of listener
and performer. They listen attentively and respond physically to commands given
by the teacher. They are encouraged to speak when they feel ready to speak
that is, when a sufficient basis in the language has been internalized. The
teacher plays an active and direct role in Total Physical Response. Teacher has
to provide the raw material for the cognitive map that the learners will construct
in their own minds. Asher stressed that TPR should be used in association with
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2.3 Approaches of English Language Teaching:
parts of the world was ready for a fundamental change. It brought a new
Since its inception CLT has passed through different phases. In its first
phase, a primary concern was the need to develop a syllabus that was
for the organization of syllabuses in terms of notions and functions rather than
grammatical structures.
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In the second phase CLT focused on procedures for identifying
gap activities.(3)
of communicative methodology.
1. Appropriateness: Language use reflects the situation of its use and must be
participants, and the purpose of the communication. Thus learners may need
messages, that is, real meanings. Hence the focus on information sharing
language acquisition.
4. Risk Taking: Learners are encouraged to make guesses and learn from their
errors. By going beyond what they have been taught, they are encouraged to
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5. Free Practice: CLT encourages the use of holistic practice involving the
classic form as is visible in the huge range of course books and other teaching
basis for teaching proposal; It emerged within mainstream education and was
adopted by the end of the 1970s, particular as the basis for the design of work
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2. A focus on life skills: Students are taught those language skills required by
instruction.
focused sub-objectives so that both teachers and students can get a clear
sense of progress.
specified behaviours.
language training to immigrants in the world has applied this program since the
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Thus CBLT has been embraced by the large sections of ESL
of thinking skills.
language being learned with little or no direct or explicit effort to teach the
settings since the 1980s. Besides applications in ESP (English for Social
than alternative language teaching approaches. Critics say that most language
teachers have been trained to teach language as a skill rather than a content
subject.
involving pairs and small group of learners in the class-room. The early twentieth
century U.S. educator John Dewey is credited with promoting the idea of building
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cooperation in learning into regular class-rooms on a regular and systematic
basis. It was more developed in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s as a
that traditional models of classroom learning were teacher fronted and favoured
majority students. They believed that minority students might fall behind higher-
interactive tasks.
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2.3.5 Lexical Approach: A Lexical approach in language teaching is
derived from the belief that the building blocks of language learning and
communication are not grammar, functions, notions but lexis that is words and
word combinations. The role of lexical units has been stressed in both first and
second language research. These have been referred by many different labels.
teachers manuals.
Type 4: These are computer concordancing programs and attached data sets
to allow students to set up and carry out their own analyses. These are
internet.
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how a lexically based theory of language and language learning can be applied
strengths. For instance some students are better visual learners than aural
learners. They learn better when they are able to read new material rather than
simply listen to it. It has been estimated that for up to 25 percent of the
learners.
teaching circles. Gardner has theorized that individuals have at least eight
distinct intelligences that can be developed over a lifetime. These are stated
here:
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1. Logical/mathematical the ability to use numbers effectively to see abstract
3. Body/kinesthetic the ability to use ones body to express oneself and to solve
problems.
the general public schools that use MI theory encourage learning that
teaching.
whole person and the environment and its activities are intended to enable
students to become more well rounded individuals and more successful learners
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in general. Some linguistic activities are as follows: student speeches, story-
telling, debates, journal keeping, small and large group discussions, work sheets,
provides a rich source of classroom ideas and can help teachers think about
Approach.
California joined hands with Tracy Terrell and published a book The Natural
Krashen and Terrell see communication as the primary function of language and
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3. The focus in the classroom should be on listening and reading; speaking
4. In order to lower the affective filter, student work should centre on meaningful
required to take training in how to use the techniques in their respective fields.
Richard Bandler (a student of linguistics) in the mid 1970s. They were essentially
rapport with clients, helping them achieve goals and bring about personal
change.
The neuro part of NLP is concerned with how we experience the world
through our five senses and represent it in our minds through our neurological
processes. The linguistic part of NLP is concerned with the way the language we
use shapes as well as reflects our experience of the world. If we change the way
we speak and think about things, we can change our behaviour. We can also use
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language to help other people who want to change. The programming part of
NLP is concerned with training ourselves to think, speak and act in new and
positive ways in order to release our potential and reach those heights of
adopt and use the principles of NLP they will become more effective teachers.
involved are:
1. Activities that involve real communication are essential for language learning
2. Activities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote
learning.
teaching. Nunan 1989 gives the definition The communicative task is a piece of
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focused on meaning rather than form. The task should also have a sense of
completeness, being able to stand alone as a communicative act in its own right.
techniques. TBLT, however, offers a different rationally for the use of tasks as
well as different criteria for the design and use of tasks. The dependence on
2.3.10 Whole Language: The term whole language was created in the 1980s
by a group of U.S. Educators concerned with the teaching of reading and writing
designed to help children and adults learn a second language in the same way
community. The teacher creates a climate that will support collaborative learning.
The learner is a collaborator, collaborating with fellow students, with the teachers
and with writers of texts. The whole language movement is not a teaching
method but an approach to learning that sees language as a whole entity. Each
particular classes.
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3.1 Synthetic Phonics Method:
are relatively recent. Different writing systems (scripts) have been invented in
different parts of the world at different times in History. As a matter of fact the
number of writing systems are fewer as compared to the speech system. The
writing system like the traditional Chinese writing system represents a whole
word with a single symbol. Such writing systems are called logographies.
Reading in a logographic system is slow and laborious. The writing systems that
They are more efficient but vary in complexity. The regular alphabetic systems
Spanish are also extremely regular. Similar is the case with many Indian
English are irregular or exception words and are not spelled the way they
There are 45 phonemes in the English language and that the 26 letters
in English can represent the 45 phonemes in about 350 ways. This poses a
problem for the teacher trying to help children to learn to read English text.
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There are two major approaches to teaching children the alphabetic
Analytic phonics: For many years analytic phonics has formed part of
the early years reading programme. Teaching starts at the whole word level. It
involves a look and say approach. It is generally taught in parallel with graded
reading books.
to books or reading. It involves teaching small groups of letters very rapidly and
unfamiliar words.
children are taught to take a single syllable word such as cat apart into its three
letters, pronounce a phoneme for each letter in turn /k, ae, t/ and blend the
phonemes together to form a word. Synthetic phonics for writing reverses the
sequence. Children are taught to say the word they wish to write, segment it into
its phonemes and say them in turn for example /d, o, g/ and write a grapheme for
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3.1.1 ICT Based Synthetic Phonics Method:
multimedia program. The digital content helps the process in multiple ways.
5. The blending and the segmenting process is explained by the audio visual
impact
6. The games are based is such a way that they enrich all the four skills of
communication has been established beyond doubt. Hence demand for English
teachers or instructors are difficult to find and match the required number of
demand. It is for this reason that the ICT Based Synthetic Phonics Method will
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play a key role. Interactive instruction through a multimedia like use of computer,
DVD, internet can reach to for many places and for many people in todays
4. Summary:
own merits. Every method and every approach has something new to offer.
the contexts and situations in which it is learned and used. English no longer
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References
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