ELT News Think Tank
This Month's Think Tank Panel
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Marc Helgesen
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Peter Viney
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Chuck Sandy
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Panelists: Marc | Peter | Chuck
Date: January 2002
Topic: "What are some ways to increase language output inside
and outside the classroom?"
(The flip side to December's article on input, our authors and teachers discuss output. -ed.)
Peter Viney
You could call this 'How do you teach English?' because using a language
actively is the only way to learn it. I always focus on speaking as the
first and most important skill in the classroom. So, the whole range of
classroom techniques and strategies is involved with maximising and increasing
language output within the class. The ways of maximising language output
are basic and often repeated - plenty of pair work and group work. Reduce
TTT (teacher talking time), increase STT (student talking time). This
can be done even in controlled phases, and in lesson observation it's
always great to see a teacher use interactive questioning fluently and
easily (see the intro to any of my teachers' books). Silence, as Mark
says, is vital, and this can be as simple as allowing thinking time before
selecting someone to respond in question work or drills or pronunciation
work.
Outside the classroom is the hard part, especially in Japan. While it's
easy to list ways of practising receptive skills (as we did last month),
it's harder to see how to practise productive skills. Foreign visitors
quickly get used to school kids calling out 'Hello-How-Are-You' which
shows that the will to practise is there, even at a formulaic level that
precedes dissolving into giggles. This doesn't happen much elsewhere.
I thought it was because we foreigners stood out so sharply in Japan,
but I guess that we must stand out just as sharply in Thailand or Mexico,
where it happens far less often.
You can develop your receptive skills by keeping your eyes and ears open
for each and every manifestation of the target language, but few people
have the personality to practise speaking skills when they just happen
to meet a foreigner - which might not be very often at all outside the
major city centres. Some do, as I can attest from several plane and train
journeys, but conversation dies when they say 'What do you do?' and I
mention teaching, or writing English language text books! And anyway,
a three hour plane journey back from Italy was not improved by having
to answer detailed vocabulary questions about 'King Lear' from the earnest
Italian student in the next seat. Especially as I didn't know so many
of the answers.
The use of Internet chat rooms practises productive skills (just as pen-friends
were meant to do twenty years ago). This only helps students at the higher
levels. A few years ago a lot of work was done on web sites that would
enable students to pair up to work on material, so that a Japanese could
be paired with a Brazilian for example. The idea failed due to the inequality
of Internet use in different countries, as well as the vastly different
experience of language learning. There are specialist sites however. Some
cities may have clubs and forums for practising English, but as far as
I know it's rare to see them except as part of a private language school.
There seems to be a demand for basic simple repetition and drill work
which courses are starting to provide on audio. Not exciting nor novel,
but still useful. The mail order language courses all work on the Encylopaedia
/ Part Work optimism principle. People buy a 24 cassette course in the
fond belief that they will persevere to the end. In Britain if you look
at the courses donated to charity shops you can see that cassettes 3 to
24 in the series have never been taken out of their cases. 'One at a time'
is a good principle to adopt for these audio back-up materials, and they
really only work as support to a course rather than a replacement for
a course. For years there have been separate self-study courses and proper
language courses. Self-study materials are important, but really come
into their own as an integrated add-on to a course with a teacher.
Panelists: Marc | Peter | Chuck
Peter Viney, Freelance ELT Author
Co-author of New American Streamline & Grapevine. Peter's Web site
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