"In the name of God"
Unit 1
"The origins of language"
a. Ding-Dong b. Bow- Wow
c. Pooh-Pooh d. yo- heare- ho
(Jean Jacque Roussean)
"the function of language"
a. interact ional: we for communication with each other.
b. transitional: we use their linguistic abilities to communicate skill, knowledge, and information.
Unit 2
The development of writing
1. Non- Linguistic (غير زباني)
A. pictograms/ picture- writing: ï
Pictures came to represent particular images in consist way we can being to describe the produce as a form of picture- writing
B. Ideograms/ Idea writing:
The distinction between pictograms and ideogram is a difference in the relationship between them the symbol (more abstract)
2. Linguistic (زباني)
A. logogram- word writing (خط ميخي- سومري)
B. rebus writing
C. syllabic writing (فينيقي ها)
D. alphabetic writing (عربها- هبروها)
Unit 3
The properties of language
Two kinds of signal
A. communicative: (interact ional) (سيگنالهايي كه ارتباطي اند- از روي قصد و نيت انجام مي شود)
B. informative: (unintentional) (سيگنالهايي كه غير عمدي اند)
We use language for human. ---.signal use for human & animals
Unique Properties of human language
A. displacement: we able to speak about placement, events
B. arbitrariness; convention
C. creativity/ productivity/ open ended ness- fixed reference
D. cultural transmission
E. Discreteness
F. Duality
G. Vocal- auditory channel
H. Reciprocity
J. non- directionality m. rapid fades
Unit 4
"Animal & human language"
Animal
1. Language like behavior
2. Conditional respond
Chimpanzee: Washoe/ Sara/ Lana
yer
Horses: hans/ buzz/ darier
Unit 5
"The sounds of language"
Phonetics: individual sound as it occurs in speech. (concrete)
Phonology: meaning- distinguish sound in language ( abstract)
Or
The smallest unit of sound in L which can distinguish to words.
Phonetics:
A. Articulatory phonetics: the study of how speech sounds are made. آواشناسي توليدي))
Articulation: vocal/ voiceless
The study of how speech sounds are produced.
B. acoustic phonetics: the physical properties of speech as sound waves in the air.(ويژه گيهاي فيزيكي مهم است)
C. auditory/ perceptional phonetics (آواشناسي شنيداري)
The perception, via the air, of speech sound.
D. forensic: relating to carts/ legal cases, speaker identification the analysis of recorded utterances (تشخيص دادن صداي ضبط شده از صداي واقعي و زنده)—
دادگاه، مسائل قضائي، و موارد حقوقي) (مرتبط به
Phonetics:
a. vowel : no obstacle b. consonants: with obstacle
Cardinal vowel
Front Back
2e U7
3e 6
4 â a5
- photoryization: can actually happen with a wide range of vowel sound and is more common in some varieties of English than is other.
1- Place of articulation
- Oral cavityحفره اي كه بسمت دهان باز است:
- Nasal cavityحفره اي كه بسمت بيني باز است:
- Bi- labialصداهايي كه توسط لب توليد مي شوند:
- Interdentally or dentalصداهايي كه توسط دندان توليد مي شوند:
- Alveolar ridgeصداهايي كه درپشت دندان، چسبيده به لثه توليد مي شوند:
- Hard palateصداهايي كه در قسمت كام (ته) دهان توليد مي شوند:
- Palatalنزديكند به لثه:
- Soft palate or velumصداهايي كه در قسمت نرم كام دهان توليد مي شوند:
(pharynx: قسمت جلويي كه هوا مي خوريم)
Both the consonant coda can consist of more than one
Co- articulation effects:
The process of making one sound almost of the same time as the co- articulational it include: a. assimilation b. elision
Assimilation: when 2 phonemes occurs is sequence some aspect of one phoneme is taken or copied by the other
Elision: omission
this omission of a sound segment which would be present in the deliberate pronunciation of a word is …
Morphology- word formation
Assimilation: همگوني شنبه شمبه
Dissimilation: دگرگوني/ناهمگوني خرسند خنسند
Metathesis: قلب قفل قلف
Fusion: ادغام دنب دم
Elision: حذف اگرچه گرچه
Addition: افزايش سپورت اسپورت
Shift: ابدال سوراخ سولاخ
Unit 6
"The sounds pattern of language"
phonology:
- the study of sound pattern of language.
- The description of the systems and pattern of speech sounds in a language.
the description of the system. Pattern of speech sounds in along.
Minimal pairs:
When 2 words are identical in from accept for a contrast in one phoneme accruing in the same position. E.g pat, bat جفتهاي كمينه
(Ba—bo--- be)
Minimal set: e.g (foot--- fit--- fat)
When a group of words can be different each one from the others by changing one phoneme we have minimal set.
Allo phone: any of the different forms of a phoneme.
فيل--- پيل سفيد---سپيد
Phoneme تفاوت درمعني ايجاد ميكند
[p]
Phone tactics: the arrangement of the distinction sound units in along.
Phonemes
Syllabus & clusters
Onset rime
Consonant nucleus coda
Vowel consonant
Consonant also known as consonant cluster
"Prescriptive approach"
The view of grammar as a set of rules for the proper use of language is still to be found may be best characterized as prescriptive approach.
- Back formation: A word of one type is reduced to from another word of a different type.
- Conversion: A change is the function of a word, when a noun comes to be used as a verb, is called Conversion.
- Acronyms: Are formed from the initial letters of a set of other words
- Derivation: it is accomplished by means of a large number of small bits of the English long which are not given separate listing in dictionary.
- Prefixes: some affixes have to be added to the beginning of a word
- Suffixes: some affixes are added to the end of the word.
- Multiple processes: when one or other processes combination with each other
Unit 7
"Word and word – formation process"
1. Coinage or coining: the invention of totally new terms.
درزبانشناسي term= word
E.g.( يك سري كلمات تجاري) asprin Xerox Rica nylon klenex
2. borrowing: that is, talking over of words from long
--- Translation: there is directed translation of the elements of a word into the borrowing. e.g alcohol (Arabic) yogurt (tur
- يك جور قرض گيري كه خود كلمه را قرض نمي گيريم بلكه، معنايش را قرض مي كنيم :
Calque/ loan translation
e.g - skyscraper آسمان خراش
- automobile خودرو
3. Compounding: is very common is Lang—like German/ English/ the combination of two words.
ازكلماتي كه داريم با تركيبشون با همديگر استفاده مي كنيم و كلمه جديد مي سازيم
Wall paper كاغذ ديواري
Wastebasket گلخانه
"Manner of articulation"
|
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bilabials |
labio-dental |
dental |
alveolar |
Alveopalatal |
velar |
glotal |
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Stop/ plosive |
P b |
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T d |
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K g |
p |
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Fricative |
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F v |
0 |
S z |
S z |
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Affricative |
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C z |
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Nasal |
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M |
N |
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Y |
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lipuids |
L r |
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l |
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Glides semivowels |
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w |
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Y |
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+v= with vibration voiced
-v= without vibration voiceless
(Affricates: (چ و ج) از stop & fricative تشكيل مي شوند)
Unit 8
"Morphology"
Morphology: the study of form in language.
Morpheme: the smallest meaningful unit in a language.
Boys چندتا مورفيم است؟ : دوتا 1. Boy 2. s
Boys چند تا word است؟ : يكي (byz)
Free
Morphemes: functional (دستوري) proposition. Conjunction.Article…
derivational اشتقاقي))معمولاً وند اند-
bound
inflectional (تصريفي) دستوري اند-
Morph: the actual forms to realize morphemes
Allomorphs: different forms of morpheme.
Morphophonemic's: variation in the form of morphemes because of phonetic factor.
e.g. regular form of past tense
begged/ begged/ ed تلفظ مي شود [d]
tripped/ trip '' '' '' [t]
needed/ ni:dId/ '' '' [Id]
Morphological description:
The gir- is wild- ness shock- ed the teach er s
Functional lexical in flectional lexical derivational lexical inflectional lexical derivation inflectional
Morphs & Allomorphs
When we can learn the main morphemes of these morphemes and allomorphs have the same action for us.
Unit 9
Types of Grammar:
"Phrase and sentence and grammar"
Grammar : we need a way of describing the structure of phrases and sentences which will account your all of the grammatical sequence and rule out all the ungrammatical sequences.
The part of speech: Nouns, Adjectives, Verbs, Preposition, Pronouns, Conjunctions.
Traditional Grammar:
other
past
Activevoice, Passive
c. gender:
natural gender (male/female)
: grammatical gender
nouns are classified to their gander typical
Blending: the combination of two separate forms to produce a single new terms is present in the process.
Clipping: the elements of reduction which is noticeable in blending is even apparent in the process described.
Unit 10
Syntax
Syntax: the study of structure and ordering of components within a sentence
- the study of how words combine to form sentences and the rules which govern the formation of sentences.
Generative Grammar: A type of grammar which attempts to define and describe by a set of rules all the grammatical sentences of a L and no ungrammatical sentences.
Deep and surface structure:
1. that is the syntactic from they take as actual English sentences this differences in superficial from distinguishes the fest that to sentences are very closely.
2. the basic components shared by two sentences would be represented and is an abstract level of structural organization in all the elements
" symbols used in any tactic description"
1. the first of there is in the form of an arrow it can be interpreted as consist of …
2. the second symbol used is in the form of parentheses or round brackets
phrase structure rules:
it shold enable use to generate a large number of sentences with only a small number of rules.
labeled of diagramms
tree diagram
NP VP
PRONUN N
Transformational rules:
We need set of rules which will change or move constituents in the structures derived from the phrase structure rules.
Some properties of Grammar
1. Generating all the grammatical sentences.
2. productivity: the creation of novel (and grammatical) sentences
3. Recursive ness: the capacity to be applied more than once in generating of structure.
E.G ___ this is the dog that chased, the cat that killed the rat…همچنين مي توانيم تا بينهايت ادامه دهيم
4. Capable of showing how a single underlying, abstract representation can be come different surface structure or via versa.
E.G ___ Ali hits the man with an umbrella.
[Surface structure]
Ali hits the man with an umbrella
[Deep structure]
e.g= Ali broke the window.
The window was broen by Ali.
[ 2 surface structures & 1 deep structure]
Gr.
Performance كنش based on behavior
Surface structure written, spoken
Deep structure underlying, abstract
Chomsky Ferdinande Saussaur
Language/ LAD (INNATE)-(in mind) longage قوه زباني
Competence كد)) longue زبان در جامعه
Performance (ظهور) parole زبان گفتار practice
اولين فورمولي كه چامسكي ارائه كرد
Lexicon
Morphemes
Syntax
Pronunciation Phonology rules sentence rules semantics meaning
چامسكي مدلش را ساده تر كرد
Standard theory / ST
Semantic interpretation Deep structure Phonetic Representation
جزء معنا دار جزء اساسي
Meaning
Transformational component
Surface Structure
Phonological component
مدل EST چامسكي
Extended Standard Theory/ EST
Lexicon + Phrase Structure Rules P S R)) Deep Structure Transformations (گشتارها) Surface Structure Semantic Rules Projection Rules
Phonological Representation Semantic Interpretation
مدل y- Shade- Model چامسكي
Syntactic Component
Lexicon + Phrase Structure Rules Deep- Structure Movement Self- Structure Logical Form Phonological Form
Phonological Rules Semantic Rules
Phonetic Representation Semantic Interpretation
Refrence:
- - George Yule
- - Falk
- - Fromklin
Provided by: Abbas Kamali Nejad
Teaching Grammar :
The goal of grammar instruction is to enable students to carry out their communication purposes. This goal has three implications:
Adult students appreciate and benefit from direct instruction that allows them to apply critical thinking skills to language learning. Instructors can take advantage of this by providing explanations that give students a descriptive understanding (declarative knowledge) of each point of grammar.
An important part of grammar instruction is providing examples. Teachers need to plan their examples carefully around two basic principles:
In the communicative competence model, the purpose of learning grammar is to learn the language of which the grammar is a part. Instructors therefore teach grammar forms and structures in relation to meaning and use for the specific communication tasks that students need to complete.
Compare the traditional model and the communicative competence model for teaching the English past tense:
Traditional: grammar for grammar's sake
Communicative competence: grammar for communication's sake
At all proficiency levels, learners produce language that is not exactly the language used by native speakers. Some of the differences are grammatical, while others involve vocabulary selection and mistakes in the selection of language appropriate for different contexts.
In responding to student communication, teachers need to be careful not to focus on error correction to the detriment of communication and confidence building. Teachers need to let students know when they are making errors so that they can work on improving. Teachers also need to build students' confidence in their ability to use the language by focusing on the content of their communication rather than the grammatical form.
Teachers can use error correction to support language acquisition, and avoid using it in ways that undermine students' desire to communicate in the language, by taking cues from context.
Example:
Student (in class): I buy a new car yesterday.
Teacher: You bought a new car yesterday. Remember, the past tense of buy is bought.
Example:
Student (greeting teacher) : I buy a new car yesterday!
Teacher: You bought a new car? That's exciting! What kind?
Language teachers and language learners are often frustrated by the disconnect between knowing the rules of grammar and being able to apply those rules automatically in listening, speaking, reading, and writing. This disconnect reflects a separation between declarative knowledge and procedural knowledge.
· Declarative knowledge is knowledge about something. Declarative knowledge enables a student to describe a rule of grammar and apply it in pattern practice drills.
· Procedural knowledge is knowledge of how to do something. Procedural knowledge enables a student to apply a rule of grammar in communication.
For example, declarative knowledge is what you have when you read and understand the instructions for programming the DVD player. Procedural knowledge is what you demonstrate when you program the DVD player.
Procedural knowledge does not translate automatically into declarative knowledge; many native speakers can use their language clearly and correctly without being able to state the rules of its grammar. Likewise, declarative knowledge does not translate automatically into procedural knowledge; students may be able to state a grammar rule, but consistently fail to apply the rule when speaking or writing.
To address the declarative knowledge/procedural knowledge dichotomy, teachers and students can apply several strategies.
Identify the relationship of declarative knowledge and procedural knowledge to student goals for learning the language. Students who plan to use the language exclusively for reading journal articles need to focus more on the declarative knowledge of grammar and discourse structures that will help them understand those texts. Students who plan to live in-country need to focus more on the procedural knowledge that will help them manage day to day oral and written interactions.
Recognize that development of declarative knowledge can accelerate development of procedural knowledge. Teaching students how the language works and giving them opportunities to compare it with other languages they know allows them to draw on critical thinking and analytical skills. These processes can support the development of the innate understanding that characterizes procedural knowledge.
Understand that students develop both procedural and declarative knowledge on the basis of the input they receive. This input includes both finely tuned input that requires students to pay attention to the relationships among form, meaning, and use for a specific grammar rule, and roughly tuned input that allows students to encounter the grammar rule in a variety of contexts.
Discourse analyst Douglas Biber has demonstrated that different communication types can be characterized by the clusters of linguistic features that are common to those types. Verb tense and aspect, sentence length and structure, and larger discourse patterns all may contribute to the distinctive profile of a given communication type. For example, a history textbook and a newspaper article in English both use past tense verbs almost exclusively. However, the newspaper article will use short sentences and a discourse pattern that alternates between subjects or perspectives. The history textbook will use complex sentences and will follow a timeline in its discourse structure. Awareness of these features allows students to anticipate the forms and structures they will encounter in a given communication task.
· Mechanical drills in which students substitute pronouns for nouns or alternate the person, number, or tense of verbs can help students memorize irregular forms and challenging structures. However, students do not develop the ability to use grammar correctly in oral and written interactions by doing mechanical drills, because these drills separate form from meaning and use. The content of the prompt and the response is set in advance; the student only has to supply the correct grammatical form, and can do that without really needing to understand or communicate anything. The main lesson that students learn from doing these drills is: Grammar is boring.
Teacher: Did you go to the library last night?
Student 1: No, I didn¢t. I went to the movies. (to Student 2): Did you read chapter 3?
Student 2: Yes, I read chapter 3, but I didn¢t understand it. (to Student 3): Did you understand chapter 3?
Student 3: I didn¢t read chapter 3. I went to the movies with Student 1.
v Developing Grammar Activities
In both cases, instructors can use the Larsen-Freeman pie chart as a guide for developing activities.
For curricula that introduce grammatical forms in a specified sequence, instructors need to develop activities that relate form to meaning and use.
· Describe the grammar point, including form, meaning, and use, and give examples (structured input)
· Ask students to practice the grammar point in communicative drills (structured output)
· Have students do a communicative task that provides opportunities to use the grammar point (communicative output)
For curricula that follow a sequence of topics, instructors need to develop activities that relate the topical discourse (use) to meaning and form.
· Provide oral or written input (audiotape, reading selection) that addresses the topic (structured input)
· Review the point of grammar, using examples from the material (structured input)
· Ask students to practice the grammar point in communicative drills that focus on the topic (structured output)
· Have students do a communicative task on the topic (communicative output)
See Teaching Goals and Methods for definitions of input and output. See Planning a Lesson for an example of a lesson that incorporates a grammar point into a larger communication task.
When instructors have the opportunity to develop part or all of the course curriculum, they can develop a series of contexts based on the real world tasks that students will need to perform using the language, and then teach grammar and vocabulary in relation to those contexts.
For example, students who plan to travel will need to understand public address announcements in airports and train stations. Instructors can use audiotaped simulations to provide input; teach the grammatical forms that typically occur in such announcements; and then have students practice by asking and answering questions about what was announced.
v Using Textbook Grammar Activities
Textbooks usually provide one or more of the following three types of grammar exercises.
· Mechanical drills: Each prompt has only one correct response, and students can complete the exercise without attending to meaning. For example:
George waited for the bus this morning. He will wait for the bus tomorrow morning, too.
· Meaningful drills: Each prompt has only one correct response, and students must attend to meaning to complete the exercise. For example:
Where are George¢s papers? They are in his notebook.
(Students must understand the meaning of the question in order to answer, but only one correct answer is possible because they all know where George¢s papers are.)
To use textbook grammar exercises effectively, instructors need to recognize which type they are, devote the appropriate amount of time to them, and supplement them as needed.
Recognizing Types
Before the teaching term begins, inventory the textbook to see which type(s) of drills it provides. Decide which you will use in class, which you will assign as homework, and which you will skip.
Assigning Time
When deciding which textbook drills to use and how much time to allot to them, keep their relative value in mind.
· Mechanical drills are the least useful because they bear little resemblance to real communication. They do not require students to learn anything; they only require parroting of a pattern or rule.
· Meaningful drills can help students develop understanding of the workings of rules of grammar because they require students to make form-meaning correlations. Their resemblance to real communication is limited by the fact that they have only one correct answer.
· Communicative drills require students to be aware of the relationships among form, meaning, and use. In communicative drills, students test and develop their ability to use language to convey ideas and information.
Supplementing
If the textbook provides few or no meaningful and communicative drills, instructors may want to create some to substitute for mechanical drills. See Developing Grammar Activities for guidelines
v Assessing Grammar Proficiency
Just as mechanical drills do not teach students the language, mechanical test questions do not assess their ability to use it in authentic ways. In order to provide authentic assessment of students¢ grammar proficiency, an evaluation must reflect real-life uses of grammar in context. This means that the activity must have a purpose other than assessment and require students to demonstrate their level of grammar proficiency by completing some task.
To develop authentic assessment activities, begin with the types of tasks that students will actually need to do using the language. Assessment can then take the form of communicative drills and communicative activities like those used in the teaching process.
For example, the activity based on audiotapes of public address announcements (Developing Grammar Activities) can be converted into an assessment by having students respond orally or in writing to questions about a similar tape. In this type of assessment, the instructor uses a checklist or rubric to evaluate the student¢s understanding and/or use of grammar in context. (See Assessing Learning for more on checklists and rubrics.)
Mechanical Tests
Mechanical tests do serve one purpose: They motivate students to memorize. They can therefore serve as prompts to encourage memorization of irregular forms and vocabulary items. Because they test only memory capacity, not language ability, they are best used as quizzes and given relatively little weight in evaluating student performance and progress.
Confession
~~~~~~~~
سلام به همه دوستان همكلاسيم
مطالب مهم كتاب آبيه از درس 1و2و5 كه مربوط به استاد هشترودي ميشه رو اينجا آوردم
اميدوارم كه بدردتون بخوره
What makes a good T? 1- Somebody who has an affinity with the S that they're teaching. 2- Should try and draw out the quiet ones & control the more talkative ones.3- he should be able to correct people without offending them.4- a good T someone who helps rather than shouts.
How should T talk to S? 1- The T should adapt their L. 2- T should Rough-tuning is that unconscious simplification.
How should T give instruction? 1- they must be kept as simple as possible. 2- They must be logical before giving instruction. 3- Translate the instruction
What is the best kind of lesson? One of the greatest enemies of successful teaching is S boredom. S should know what happen in class. They send a ripple through the class. That ripple is mixture of surprise & curiosity and it is a perfect starting point for S involvement.
How important is the S motivation? Integrative motivation was more powerful than Instructional motivation.
What characteristics do good classroom learners share? 1- A willingness to listen. 2- …. To experiment. 3- … to ask S. 4- to think about how to learn.5- … to accept correction.
What's special about teaching? The great difference between adult and younger ages is that the former come to lessons with a long history of learning experience.
Complements: a Complement is used with verbs like be, seem, look. To give info about subject. (In a bad mood)Subject + verb only: intransitive (the door opened) Tow objects: she loved him.
Adverbial (phrases): he lived in
Multi-clause sentences: The girl met the woman who was standing by the canal and they went to a café and had a meal which they enjoyed very much.Parts of speech: noun – verb – adverb – adjective
. Adverb (adverbial phrase): a word that describes or adds to the meaning of a verb, adjective, another adverbor a whole sentence. (at home in half an hour) prepositional phrase: a word which is used to show the way in which other words are connected. (on top of) conjunction: a word that connects sentences, phrases or clauses. (and- so- but) collective noun: the poor live in terrible condition compound nouns: boyfriend. Noun phrase: the tall grinning acrobat. (home sickness)
Phrasal verbs: are formed by adding an adverb or a preposition (we set out the following day) verb complementation: this describes what words & kinds of word we can use after particular verbs (I can swim). Types of pronoun: personal – reflexive: …self. Relative: who, whose, where, which, that. Adjectives: can be use before and after nouns. Comparative: good= better. and superlative: young= younger. modifying adverbs: wonderfully, usually, really
Conditional: 1- if u go out without umbrella you will get wet. 2- if you went out … u would get wet. 3- if u had gone out … u would have gotten wet. Words together: collection= make the bed- do the homework. pronunciation: sound – stress – pitch and intonation.
سلام دوستان
تمام نکات مهم کتاب آبی استاد کریمی را اینج جمع کردم
امیدوارم که به کارتون بیاد
What does language study consist of?1- Be exposed to 2- Understanding the meaning.3- Understanding the form 4- Practice
The plan of the lesson: Expose: 1-Beginner: Representing the object 2- Elementary: listen to the tape 3- Intermediate: comparative 4- Advanced: variety of function. Understanding the meaning: 1-showing subject. 2- Real situation 3- Question to understand the meaning 4- Examples Understanding the form: 1- spelling gesture, hand syllabus. 2- Using drill & pattern based on conversation 3- Question to make a comparative adjective 4- Object+verb+object+adjective Practice: 1- repetition-confidence. 2- Choral & individual repetition.3 - Choral & individual repetition- giving opposite & make a sentences. 4- Make a sentence. Why do students make sentence? meaning according the same word. grammatical consideration matter developmental errors.How should T correct S?1-The T job is to point out when something has gone wrong- and see if thr S can correct herself or himself 2- sometimes, however, S cant put mistakes right on their own, so we have to help them. 3- if we get other S in the class to help out, we have to make sure that the S who made the mistake in the first place isnt going to be humiliated by this. 4- sometime S like that prefer gentle correction from the T. 5- in the right kind of atmosphere S enjoy helping each other- and being help in returnWhat kind of reading should S s do? 1) The Text should be authentic. 2) Should consider about capabilities3) the topic and tapes of reading text are wrote considering too. What reading skills should S acquire? 1) they need to be able to scan the text.2) they need to be able to skim a text. 3) Reading for detailed comprehension 4- reading for pleasure What are the principles behind the teaching of reading?1)
How does writing fit into E S A? Student should consider this 3factors:1- Engage.2- Study.3- Activate? What kind of speaking should students do? The students are using any and all the language at their command to perform some kind of oral task.Why encourages students to do speaking tasks? Rehearsal: rehearse such a real-life event in the safety of the classroom. Feedback: speaking activities can give them enormous confidence and satisfaction .Engagement what do speaking activities look like? Beginner: information gap (make conversation—hello-how are you)Elementary: survey (نظر سنجي كنند-يا اينكه همه پرسي كنند)Intermediate: discussion (exchange 0f opinions provokes spontaneous fluent language use-(عقايد را ردوبدل كردن باعث مي شود همزمان از زبان بطور سليس و راحت استفاده كرد)Advance: roll play (نقش بازي كردن) Tow things can bee added to this description: The T could make the role-play a whole-class activity by having all the S act out a public meeting whit many speakers. Not all role-plays need to be this intricate if you ask your S to role play a party situation. Role-play is more than just play acting: it offers chances for rehearsal and Engagement that some other activities fail to give. How should teacher correct speaking?(Constant interruption from the teacher will destroy the purpose of the speaking activity).As with any kind of correction, it is important not to single S out from particular criticism ----There are no hard and fast rules about correcting How do speaking activities fit into E S A? Opportunistic teaching0activate stage0study work. Why teaches listening? Use different accent and dialog. Help S to acquire subconscious part of mind .Pronunciation grammar- picture and stress. It’s a skill what kind of listening should S do? Should be authentic listening material. Should be realistic (depends on the Level – Age – Interest .What is special about listening? Cannot feedback to previous paragraph, re-read the headline, stop to. (Its time bound).S cannot change the speed of the speaker.(it is time bound).It is conversational. The speed of the tape is related to the speaker. What are the principles behind the teaching of listening? The Tape recorder is just as important as the tape. The preparation is vital. Once will not be enough. Different listening stages need different listening what do listening sequence look like? Beginners: T at the first represent and showing some picture Elementary: 1- Listen the conversation is a Drama-theatrical
2- We have some picture – we have to answer the question.3- We should be dealt about grammar Describe about characteristics of the character. Intermediate: Topic is cultural different.(در اين لول قبل از شنيدن سوال مي كنند ولي در المنتري بعد از شنيدن مي پرسند).Upper intermediate: the teacher is faced with the problem of wanting to use a long taped segment which is complex and contain much of the speech phenomena where does video fit in? Video is richer than audio tape. Speaker can be seen. Their body motivations give clues as to meaning. Background info can be filed in visually. Playing the tape without sound. 0 0 0 but covering the pic. Freezing the pic. Dividing the class in half
How to se textbooks? What are the different options for textbook use? Omit the lesson. Replace the textbook lesson. Add to what is in the book. Adapt what is in the book Advantages of the textbooks: consist of syllabus and vocabulary will have been chosen with care. Good textbooks have a range of reading and listening material and workbooks. Why do adding, adapting and replacing look like? Intermediate (Addition) Elementary/pre- intermediate (Adaptation) Lower intermediate (Replace) How should T choose text book? Methodology Price (how expensive is the textbook? Can the S afford it? Will they have to buy an accompanying workbook? Can they afford book? What abut the T? Can he or she pay for the teacher's book and tapes? Availability- Layout and design Skills syllabus- Topic- Stereotyping Teachers guide
When completing the questions from the table, which steps T should try to follow that? Analysis: The T can look through the various books on offer, analyzing each for answers to the questions on the next page. It helps to have a chart to write down the answer for this so that the information is clearly displayed. Piloting. Consultation. Gathering opinions
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