SlideShare a Scribd company logo
The University of Holy Koran and Islamic Sciences
Faculty of Education
Prepared by:
Adil Babiker
The aim of the course is to:
Help students acquire concepts and
skills needed to practice teaching
in effective manner.
 Presenting new vocabulary/chorusing
 Teaching receptive skills
 Teaching productive skills
 Teaching grammar and presenting structures
 Using the board and other audio/visual aids
 Communicative activities in classroom(pair work –
group work – role play – games – songs)
 Planning a lesson
 First and second languages acquisition
 Teaching English Through English/J. Willis
 Teach English / Adrian Doff
 Learning To Teach English/ G.Ellis
 New vocabulary is one of the basic building blocks
in your students' learning
 Teaching meanings of words can be taught in
different ways such as:-
* Using pictures
* Drawing diagrams, maps,
* Demonstration (action and gesture)
* Definition and explanation
* Translation
*Using word relationship (synonyms , antonyms ,
hyponyms
 New vocabulary is one of the basic building
blocks in your students' learning. But have you
ever put much thought into how you introduce
new words? Learning long laundry lists of words
can be very tedious for students. On the other
hand, introducing words in students' native
language and then translating them into English
or vice versa is not very effective, either. You have
to start training them to think in English right
from the start. Needless to say, the language you
are teaching should be spoken at all times, even if
students are absolute beginners.
 So, how do you introduce new vocabulary without
resorting to translation or long lists of words?
Here's your answer!
 Pointing is probably the technique of choice when teaching real
beginners. The teacher shows students illustrations or flashcards
and points to the items they wish to teach. You can also use posters,
Power Point presentations, or different types of computer software
where illustrations are presented in electronic format. Google
Images is a real life-saver! Pointing works best with nouns which
include food, clothes, animals, professions, sports, classroom
objects, office supplies, etc… but also colors, actions, and any
adjective that can be clearly illustrated (like facial expressions, for
example to teach feelings). The main advantage of pointing is that
words may be introduced in blocks, and you may easily and
effectively introduce several in one lesson. Works well with visual
students.
 This technique can be used with students of all levels and works best with
concepts and ideas that can't be easily seen or touched, like abstracts, or
anything that is not a real object. There are different ways to use substitution:
 Synonyms – You substitute one word students are familiar with for another
new one.
When you call someone, do you sometimes have to wait? You have to hold.
Do trains usually run on time? They are on schedule.
 Antonyms – You substitute one word they are familiar with for its opposite.
Is a Ferrari a cheap car?(No) It’s an expensive car.
 Substitution works very well with phrasal verbs, which usually have a one-
word equivalent: Do you put off going to the dentist? You postpone seeing your
dentist.
 However, you should be careful when using words that are not exact synonyms
or antonyms. Remember to imply that the connotation may be different in
some cases.
 This technique is similar to substitution, but in this case, you
set a scene or situation and then substitute it with a new
word or phrase, thus effectively naming the scene.
 Do you usually eat pancakes, eggs, and bacon for
breakfast? (No) So, you have a light breakfast.
 The hotel accepted too many reservations. The hotel is
overbooked.
 The steak I ordered last night was not cooked enough. It
was undercooked/rare/bloody.
 This technique works great with kinesthetic learners, namely
those who learn best by moving their bodies. Most teachers
believe that mining works best with children, particularly when it
comes to exaggerating emotions and facial expressions, but adults
may also enjoy miming.
 Most teachers are also aware of the advantages of Total Physical
Response in the ESL classroom. TPR works well with parts of the
body (I’m touching my nose! Touch your nose!), actions (I’m
walking to the door), and the imperative mood or commands (Sit
down! Stand up!)
 The main advantage in miming and TPR is that you can get
students physically engaged in the lesson. It gets them out of their
seats and shakes things up. So make sure you maximize
opportunities to get them moving!
 The use of realia or real-life objects in the ESL classroom
can make a huge difference in student learning. It engages
them and motivates them to learn. It’s fun and sets a more
natural learning environment. Some realia you may use to
introduce new vocabulary includes:
 Maps
 Tea sets, dishes, and utensils
 Clothes
 Toy planes, trains, cars, animals, furniture, etc…
 Family photos
 Holiday items (pumpkin, Easter eggs, Halloween or
Christmas decorations)
 Plastic fruits and vegetables
Language skills are divided
into receptive and productive
ones.
The receptive skills include
listening and reading while the
productive ones are speaking
and writing.
 Extensive exposure to receptive skills
leads to the productive one. Wilkins
(1984: 1 00) maintains that "the
transfer of linguistic knowledge from
receptive to productive is probably a
relatively slow process, but it does
take place, as the study of language
acquisition shows." Hence, a rich
exposure to listening and reading is
required to attain mastery and
proficiency in natural production.
Language
Skills
Receptive
Skills
Listening Reading
Productive
Skills
Speaking Writing
Language
Skills
Aural
Listening Speaking
Graphics
Reading Writing
 Receptive does not mean passive.
Why?
 Integration of skills in classroom is a
series of activities or tasks which use
any combination of the four skills in a
continuous and related sequence.
 The skills are not practised in
isolation but in a closely interwoven
series of tasks which mutually
reinforce and build on each other.
 In traditional courses the skills were in
each unit of the syllabus. The focus was on
one skill at a time.
 In recent courses, one lesson will have
some listening ,some reading, some
writing and some speaking activities all
using the same language being taught in
similar contexts.
 In classroom situations these skills should
be practised together linked by the same
content, theme and contexts.
 Sometimes it is called teaching oral
language or oral skills.
 Plenty of the new language is presented
and practised orally first.
 The ultimate goal of language teaching is
communication, so emphasis has been laid
on developing the speaking skills.
Teachers should attempt to motivate
students to speak and to make classroom
speech as natural and meaningful as real
life speech is.
 Speaking should begin right away from the warm
up activities.
 Teacher presents the new language: sound,
meaning and form which must be linked together
in the students’ minds.
 Teachers should:
Present new language in several contexts
and situations(real and imaginary) using
multiple contextualisation techniques to
enable students understand it and begin to
use it to communicate.
Not teach only grammatical form then, but
also the communicative function and the
appropriate use.
Also recycle the new language in different
contexts of situations.
A drill is controlled oral
exercise.
Drills are used at the beginning
of practice stage just after
presenting new items. They are
mechanical drills and
meaningful drills.
 Chorusing: Pupils repeat a model sentence by the
teacher. Chorusing is done in context. Single
isolated words should never be chorused.
 Repetition: Pupils have to repeat some of the
sentences the teacher has used to present the new
language. The teacher says in normal speed and
intonation 2 or 3 times. Pupils listen. Teacher tells
pupils to repeat (whole class.
 Back chaining: It is used for repetition of long
sentences in the early stages. The teacher says the
complete sentence then divides it into small chunks.
 Substitution drills: Replacing one word or part of a
sentence with something similar following the same
pattern. e.g. Hashim can see a cat. (horse / monkey
/dove ….)
 Transformational drills: used to pracitise changes in
sentence structure: from affirmative to negative, from
statement to question, from active to passive.
I get up every morning at 5 o’clock. ( Use Tom)
Tom gets up every morning at 5 o’clock.
I have a bath.
He has a bath.
 A meaningful drill is used when the student has to
understand part or all of the sentence in order to
be able to respond.
 Substitution dialogues: used to practise oral
fluency and done in pairs. They are more
realistic. Students substitute words used in
original dialogue with other appropriate words.
e.g. colours, size, price …… substituted with
other words in the same context.
 Using pictures: Pictures are used to practise oral
language. They offer students opportunities and
cues to talk about them through discussing
something, creating a story, giving opinion,
guessing meaning ….
 Guessing drills: The teacher gets the students to
try to find out something through guessing
(games). e.g. Students think about their favourite
sports, hobby, colour, animal ….. Then they take
it in turns to find out each other’s favourite sport
…by asking: Is it ……
 Dialogues are certainly the most
natural form of language practice
. This is because most real
communication takes place orally
,in the from of conversation
between two or more people .
 So , dialogues , in fact ,provide
meaningful communicative
situations .
 Moreover dialogues can be
used at all stages of the lesson
.
 They could also be practised
in the warm-up stage as they
provide opportunity to recycle
and reinforce language that
has already been learnt .
As clearly argued by Byrne
(1986) our main concern in the
language programme will
almost certainly be the
teaching of spoken language .
For a number of reasons ,
dialogues seem to be best
suited for this purpose:
They present the language
directly in situations in which it
is commonly used.
They permit and encourage the
learner to practise the
language on the same way.
They encourage active
participation in a lesson
Suggested procedure for
teaching a dialogue:
A short relevant warm up
Setting a context situation
Presenting new items
The teacher modelling the
dialogue
 A second modelling the
dialogue by good students
Two students demonstrate a third
modelling
The students repeat the dialogue after the
teacher (whole class , half of the class,
rows …..)
Two students practise in front of the class.
Simultaneous pair work. (teacher monitors)
Substitution dialogue
Students make their own dialogue in pairs
simultaneously
Role-play
The importance of teaching
writing in classroom:
Reinforce language in other
parts of the course
Provide group activities and
variety
Promote accuracy
Develop handwriting, spelling,
punctuation, neatness and
speed.
Communicate ideas
Reduce teacher talking
time
Often needed for
formal and informal
testing
Expose students to the
FL through more than
one medium
Increase the amount of
language contact
through work that can
be done out of the class
Writing stages:
A.The controlled stage
B.The guided stage
C.The free stage
 This stage consists of a
number of activities like:
 Pre writing activities
 Copying patterns, letters,
words, phrases, clauses
 Exercises at sentence
level
 Exercises at paragraph level
 Gap filling
 Putting sentences in the
right order to make a
paragraph
 Making sentences from a
substitution table
the student has enough
freedom to produce
individual answer which
need not be exactly the
same as any other student’s
answer.
Guided practice might include
the following:
 Exercises at text level:
Students have to rewrite a
model passage making
changes according to
instructions, but without
being given key words or cues
 Completing a skeleton passage
The beginning is often given and
the students are instructed to
use all the words and add their
own to write a passage about
……..
 Information transfer exercise
Students have to use information
from a map, a graph, a diagram,
a table or any other form
 By this stage the pupils may have
enough practice in doing controlled
activities.
 As a result they would move to free
practice with originality of thought
and freedom from common errors.
 Oral preparation is needed.
 The teacher would teach the students
the qualities of a good paragraph:
(unity, coherence, clearness and
correctness)
…
1. Teacher prepares and makes students
familiar with the topic to create
expectations and arouse interest in the
subject matter.
2. T. directs comprehension task: T. makes
sure that sts Know what the are going to
do. T. directs the sts’ purpose.
3. Sts read or listen for task. Sts do the task.
4. T. directs feedback. T. evaluates sts
performance after sts check their
answers with each other.
5. T. directs related task. T organises follow
up task related to the text. (This is done
by a step in which T returns to the text to
practise another skill.
 Authenticity means the degree to
which language teaching materials
have the qualities of natural speech
or writing.
 Authentic materials are texts taken
from newspapers, magazines …….
And tapes of natural speech from
ordinary radio or TV programmes.
 The use of authentic materials is
suggested whenever teaching
receptive skills is discussed.
 They are often simplified, but some
writers say you keep the original
text unchanged.
The Oral Communication Process:
•It is a two-way process: speaker
listener.
•It involves listening and speaking.
•The listener is not passive. Listeners have
positive function to perform (interpreting
and negotiating the meaning). Then they
exchange the role with the speakers.
•Speaking involves responding to what has
been heard.
•The teacher makes sure that the two
skills are integrated.
 It is one of the most important factors
of successful listening activities that
Ts should give the pupils reason for
listening: ( Why do they listen?
What do they listen to? Where ?
When?
Who do they listen to?
What kind of text they are going to
hear ( a conversation? a telephone
call? An interview?
 Aim of teaching dictation: To reinforce in
writing language which has already been
presented to pupils ears and eyes and
which has been practised orally. We can
use it to focus on speech problems of
pronunciation.
 Suggested procedure for teaching dictation
1. Pre listening: T tells sts that they are
going to write a short passage or
unrelated sentences, how many times
they will hear that. And T gives them
background to context.
1. First Listening: T reads the dictation
passage in normal speed and normal
intonation. Sts listen but do not write.
2. Second Listening: T reads dictation
,pauses after each short sense group of
words (chunks). T also dictates
punctuation saying comma, full stop ……
3. Post listening: T tells sts to read their
work quickly for revision. Sts exchange
books and T provides dictation written on
board. Sts correct each other’s work. T
checks sts’ marking and takes notes of
common mistakes.
 Steps for teaching reading:
1. Lead in: prepare students and make them familiar
with the topic to create interest.
2. Set 2 or 3 pre-reading questions for gist.
3. Present only uninferable new words which are
central to meaning (key words)
4. Students read silently and quickly for general
understanding and to answer the pre-reading
questions set in step 2.
5. Students answer the pre-reading questions set in
step 2.
6. Set comprehension questions in details.
7. Students read carefully, silently and more slowly
to discover answers.
8. Student discuss the text in pairs or groups to
compare answers and guess meanings of new
words.
9.Whole class discussion to make sure of general
and detailed understanding.
10. (Optional but important) Direct text related task
for further exploitation of language or theme and
text.
E l t

More Related Content

PPSX
Teaching English Grammar
PPS
39 Activities for English Lesson
PPTX
Practical teaching technique for Young Learners
PPT
Teaching speaking
PPS
Teaching grammar with fun
PPTX
The classroom activities in language teaching ..
PPTX
Methods in teaching thursday report
PPTX
How to teach grammar
Teaching English Grammar
39 Activities for English Lesson
Practical teaching technique for Young Learners
Teaching speaking
Teaching grammar with fun
The classroom activities in language teaching ..
Methods in teaching thursday report
How to teach grammar

What's hot (20)

PPTX
ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING METHODOLOGY:Topic : Listening Skills
PDF
ESWI-WhitePaperWeb
PPTX
TEFL- Teaching Vocabulary
PPT
Teaching Techniques
PPTX
English (as a second language) learning at rural india
PPTX
Reading Phonics Meeting
PPT
Teaching english to young learners
DOCX
TPR Storytelling
PPTX
Teach english
PPT
Ефективні шляхи презентації англійської граматики
PPTX
Speaking Activities in the Foreign Language Class
PDF
How to teach__a_ppu_lesson
PPTX
12 activities to integrate pronunciation
PPTX
TPR-S PowerPoint
PPTX
Project Sri Lanka ESL Teacher Training
PDF
To speak or not to speak... That is the question!
PPTX
Endang Badriyatin F. (16108810014)
PPTX
the principles of teaching speaking
DOCX
Teaching Speaking to young children
PPT
Губарєва С. С. Ефективні шляхи презентації англійської граматики (5-6 класи)
ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING METHODOLOGY:Topic : Listening Skills
ESWI-WhitePaperWeb
TEFL- Teaching Vocabulary
Teaching Techniques
English (as a second language) learning at rural india
Reading Phonics Meeting
Teaching english to young learners
TPR Storytelling
Teach english
Ефективні шляхи презентації англійської граматики
Speaking Activities in the Foreign Language Class
How to teach__a_ppu_lesson
12 activities to integrate pronunciation
TPR-S PowerPoint
Project Sri Lanka ESL Teacher Training
To speak or not to speak... That is the question!
Endang Badriyatin F. (16108810014)
the principles of teaching speaking
Teaching Speaking to young children
Губарєва С. С. Ефективні шляхи презентації англійської граматики (5-6 класи)
Ad

Similar to E l t (20)

PPTX
Additional resource for audio lingual method
PDF
5. Teaching Reading, Speaking & Listening.pdf
PPTX
Lecture 4-A Century of Language Teaching.pptx
PPTX
Teaching specific aspect of language
PPTX
Esl (4)Methods of English Teaching
PPTX
Why teach pronuciation
PPTX
METHODOLOGY I ( I Bimestre Abril Agosto 2011)
PPTX
SPEAKING por JACQUELINE GAVILANES
PPTX
Teaching methods and approaches with examples
PPT
zizio zozii juipjnjandfjoàndọnnjfjnfnfnfn
PDF
Teaching approaches
PDF
Teaching language-skills
PPT
Teaching of grammar and vocabulary
PPTX
The Audiolingual Method
PPTX
The Audio-Lingual Method (ALM) = Army Method
PPT
Approaches to language teaching
PPT
Methods approaches filang311_lesson1_oct_2008
PPT
The Making-of a Professional Teacher
PPTX
Two easy ways to learn a foreign language
PPTX
How to learn a foreign language
Additional resource for audio lingual method
5. Teaching Reading, Speaking & Listening.pdf
Lecture 4-A Century of Language Teaching.pptx
Teaching specific aspect of language
Esl (4)Methods of English Teaching
Why teach pronuciation
METHODOLOGY I ( I Bimestre Abril Agosto 2011)
SPEAKING por JACQUELINE GAVILANES
Teaching methods and approaches with examples
zizio zozii juipjnjandfjoàndọnnjfjnfnfnfn
Teaching approaches
Teaching language-skills
Teaching of grammar and vocabulary
The Audiolingual Method
The Audio-Lingual Method (ALM) = Army Method
Approaches to language teaching
Methods approaches filang311_lesson1_oct_2008
The Making-of a Professional Teacher
Two easy ways to learn a foreign language
How to learn a foreign language
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
PDF
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
PDF
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PDF
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf
PDF
Supply Chain Operations Speaking Notes -ICLT Program
PDF
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
PPTX
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PPTX
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PDF
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape
PPTX
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
PDF
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf
PDF
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
PDF
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
PPTX
Lesson notes of climatology university.
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PDF
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf
Supply Chain Operations Speaking Notes -ICLT Program
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
Lesson notes of climatology university.
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program

E l t

  • 1. The University of Holy Koran and Islamic Sciences Faculty of Education Prepared by: Adil Babiker
  • 2. The aim of the course is to: Help students acquire concepts and skills needed to practice teaching in effective manner.
  • 3.  Presenting new vocabulary/chorusing  Teaching receptive skills  Teaching productive skills  Teaching grammar and presenting structures  Using the board and other audio/visual aids  Communicative activities in classroom(pair work – group work – role play – games – songs)  Planning a lesson  First and second languages acquisition
  • 4.  Teaching English Through English/J. Willis  Teach English / Adrian Doff  Learning To Teach English/ G.Ellis
  • 5.  New vocabulary is one of the basic building blocks in your students' learning  Teaching meanings of words can be taught in different ways such as:- * Using pictures * Drawing diagrams, maps, * Demonstration (action and gesture) * Definition and explanation * Translation *Using word relationship (synonyms , antonyms , hyponyms
  • 6.  New vocabulary is one of the basic building blocks in your students' learning. But have you ever put much thought into how you introduce new words? Learning long laundry lists of words can be very tedious for students. On the other hand, introducing words in students' native language and then translating them into English or vice versa is not very effective, either. You have to start training them to think in English right from the start. Needless to say, the language you are teaching should be spoken at all times, even if students are absolute beginners.  So, how do you introduce new vocabulary without resorting to translation or long lists of words? Here's your answer!
  • 7.  Pointing is probably the technique of choice when teaching real beginners. The teacher shows students illustrations or flashcards and points to the items they wish to teach. You can also use posters, Power Point presentations, or different types of computer software where illustrations are presented in electronic format. Google Images is a real life-saver! Pointing works best with nouns which include food, clothes, animals, professions, sports, classroom objects, office supplies, etc… but also colors, actions, and any adjective that can be clearly illustrated (like facial expressions, for example to teach feelings). The main advantage of pointing is that words may be introduced in blocks, and you may easily and effectively introduce several in one lesson. Works well with visual students.
  • 8.  This technique can be used with students of all levels and works best with concepts and ideas that can't be easily seen or touched, like abstracts, or anything that is not a real object. There are different ways to use substitution:  Synonyms – You substitute one word students are familiar with for another new one. When you call someone, do you sometimes have to wait? You have to hold. Do trains usually run on time? They are on schedule.  Antonyms – You substitute one word they are familiar with for its opposite. Is a Ferrari a cheap car?(No) It’s an expensive car.  Substitution works very well with phrasal verbs, which usually have a one- word equivalent: Do you put off going to the dentist? You postpone seeing your dentist.  However, you should be careful when using words that are not exact synonyms or antonyms. Remember to imply that the connotation may be different in some cases.
  • 9.  This technique is similar to substitution, but in this case, you set a scene or situation and then substitute it with a new word or phrase, thus effectively naming the scene.  Do you usually eat pancakes, eggs, and bacon for breakfast? (No) So, you have a light breakfast.  The hotel accepted too many reservations. The hotel is overbooked.  The steak I ordered last night was not cooked enough. It was undercooked/rare/bloody.
  • 10.  This technique works great with kinesthetic learners, namely those who learn best by moving their bodies. Most teachers believe that mining works best with children, particularly when it comes to exaggerating emotions and facial expressions, but adults may also enjoy miming.  Most teachers are also aware of the advantages of Total Physical Response in the ESL classroom. TPR works well with parts of the body (I’m touching my nose! Touch your nose!), actions (I’m walking to the door), and the imperative mood or commands (Sit down! Stand up!)  The main advantage in miming and TPR is that you can get students physically engaged in the lesson. It gets them out of their seats and shakes things up. So make sure you maximize opportunities to get them moving!
  • 11.  The use of realia or real-life objects in the ESL classroom can make a huge difference in student learning. It engages them and motivates them to learn. It’s fun and sets a more natural learning environment. Some realia you may use to introduce new vocabulary includes:  Maps  Tea sets, dishes, and utensils  Clothes  Toy planes, trains, cars, animals, furniture, etc…  Family photos  Holiday items (pumpkin, Easter eggs, Halloween or Christmas decorations)  Plastic fruits and vegetables
  • 12. Language skills are divided into receptive and productive ones. The receptive skills include listening and reading while the productive ones are speaking and writing.
  • 13.  Extensive exposure to receptive skills leads to the productive one. Wilkins (1984: 1 00) maintains that "the transfer of linguistic knowledge from receptive to productive is probably a relatively slow process, but it does take place, as the study of language acquisition shows." Hence, a rich exposure to listening and reading is required to attain mastery and proficiency in natural production.
  • 16.  Receptive does not mean passive. Why?  Integration of skills in classroom is a series of activities or tasks which use any combination of the four skills in a continuous and related sequence.  The skills are not practised in isolation but in a closely interwoven series of tasks which mutually reinforce and build on each other.
  • 17.  In traditional courses the skills were in each unit of the syllabus. The focus was on one skill at a time.  In recent courses, one lesson will have some listening ,some reading, some writing and some speaking activities all using the same language being taught in similar contexts.  In classroom situations these skills should be practised together linked by the same content, theme and contexts.
  • 18.  Sometimes it is called teaching oral language or oral skills.  Plenty of the new language is presented and practised orally first.  The ultimate goal of language teaching is communication, so emphasis has been laid on developing the speaking skills. Teachers should attempt to motivate students to speak and to make classroom speech as natural and meaningful as real life speech is.
  • 19.  Speaking should begin right away from the warm up activities.  Teacher presents the new language: sound, meaning and form which must be linked together in the students’ minds.
  • 20.  Teachers should: Present new language in several contexts and situations(real and imaginary) using multiple contextualisation techniques to enable students understand it and begin to use it to communicate. Not teach only grammatical form then, but also the communicative function and the appropriate use. Also recycle the new language in different contexts of situations.
  • 21. A drill is controlled oral exercise. Drills are used at the beginning of practice stage just after presenting new items. They are mechanical drills and meaningful drills.
  • 22.  Chorusing: Pupils repeat a model sentence by the teacher. Chorusing is done in context. Single isolated words should never be chorused.  Repetition: Pupils have to repeat some of the sentences the teacher has used to present the new language. The teacher says in normal speed and intonation 2 or 3 times. Pupils listen. Teacher tells pupils to repeat (whole class.
  • 23.  Back chaining: It is used for repetition of long sentences in the early stages. The teacher says the complete sentence then divides it into small chunks.  Substitution drills: Replacing one word or part of a sentence with something similar following the same pattern. e.g. Hashim can see a cat. (horse / monkey /dove ….)  Transformational drills: used to pracitise changes in sentence structure: from affirmative to negative, from statement to question, from active to passive. I get up every morning at 5 o’clock. ( Use Tom) Tom gets up every morning at 5 o’clock. I have a bath. He has a bath.
  • 24.  A meaningful drill is used when the student has to understand part or all of the sentence in order to be able to respond.  Substitution dialogues: used to practise oral fluency and done in pairs. They are more realistic. Students substitute words used in original dialogue with other appropriate words. e.g. colours, size, price …… substituted with other words in the same context.
  • 25.  Using pictures: Pictures are used to practise oral language. They offer students opportunities and cues to talk about them through discussing something, creating a story, giving opinion, guessing meaning ….  Guessing drills: The teacher gets the students to try to find out something through guessing (games). e.g. Students think about their favourite sports, hobby, colour, animal ….. Then they take it in turns to find out each other’s favourite sport …by asking: Is it ……
  • 26.  Dialogues are certainly the most natural form of language practice . This is because most real communication takes place orally ,in the from of conversation between two or more people .  So , dialogues , in fact ,provide meaningful communicative situations .
  • 27.  Moreover dialogues can be used at all stages of the lesson .  They could also be practised in the warm-up stage as they provide opportunity to recycle and reinforce language that has already been learnt .
  • 28. As clearly argued by Byrne (1986) our main concern in the language programme will almost certainly be the teaching of spoken language . For a number of reasons , dialogues seem to be best suited for this purpose:
  • 29. They present the language directly in situations in which it is commonly used. They permit and encourage the learner to practise the language on the same way. They encourage active participation in a lesson
  • 30. Suggested procedure for teaching a dialogue: A short relevant warm up Setting a context situation Presenting new items The teacher modelling the dialogue  A second modelling the dialogue by good students
  • 31. Two students demonstrate a third modelling The students repeat the dialogue after the teacher (whole class , half of the class, rows …..) Two students practise in front of the class. Simultaneous pair work. (teacher monitors) Substitution dialogue Students make their own dialogue in pairs simultaneously Role-play
  • 32. The importance of teaching writing in classroom: Reinforce language in other parts of the course
  • 33. Provide group activities and variety Promote accuracy Develop handwriting, spelling, punctuation, neatness and speed.
  • 34. Communicate ideas Reduce teacher talking time Often needed for formal and informal testing
  • 35. Expose students to the FL through more than one medium Increase the amount of language contact through work that can be done out of the class
  • 36. Writing stages: A.The controlled stage B.The guided stage C.The free stage
  • 37.  This stage consists of a number of activities like:  Pre writing activities  Copying patterns, letters, words, phrases, clauses  Exercises at sentence level
  • 38.  Exercises at paragraph level  Gap filling  Putting sentences in the right order to make a paragraph  Making sentences from a substitution table
  • 39. the student has enough freedom to produce individual answer which need not be exactly the same as any other student’s answer.
  • 40. Guided practice might include the following:  Exercises at text level: Students have to rewrite a model passage making changes according to instructions, but without being given key words or cues
  • 41.  Completing a skeleton passage The beginning is often given and the students are instructed to use all the words and add their own to write a passage about ……..  Information transfer exercise Students have to use information from a map, a graph, a diagram, a table or any other form
  • 42.  By this stage the pupils may have enough practice in doing controlled activities.  As a result they would move to free practice with originality of thought and freedom from common errors.  Oral preparation is needed.  The teacher would teach the students the qualities of a good paragraph: (unity, coherence, clearness and correctness)
  • 44. 1. Teacher prepares and makes students familiar with the topic to create expectations and arouse interest in the subject matter. 2. T. directs comprehension task: T. makes sure that sts Know what the are going to do. T. directs the sts’ purpose. 3. Sts read or listen for task. Sts do the task. 4. T. directs feedback. T. evaluates sts performance after sts check their answers with each other. 5. T. directs related task. T organises follow up task related to the text. (This is done by a step in which T returns to the text to practise another skill.
  • 45.  Authenticity means the degree to which language teaching materials have the qualities of natural speech or writing.  Authentic materials are texts taken from newspapers, magazines ……. And tapes of natural speech from ordinary radio or TV programmes.  The use of authentic materials is suggested whenever teaching receptive skills is discussed.  They are often simplified, but some writers say you keep the original text unchanged.
  • 46. The Oral Communication Process: •It is a two-way process: speaker listener. •It involves listening and speaking. •The listener is not passive. Listeners have positive function to perform (interpreting and negotiating the meaning). Then they exchange the role with the speakers. •Speaking involves responding to what has been heard. •The teacher makes sure that the two skills are integrated.
  • 47.  It is one of the most important factors of successful listening activities that Ts should give the pupils reason for listening: ( Why do they listen? What do they listen to? Where ? When? Who do they listen to? What kind of text they are going to hear ( a conversation? a telephone call? An interview?
  • 48.  Aim of teaching dictation: To reinforce in writing language which has already been presented to pupils ears and eyes and which has been practised orally. We can use it to focus on speech problems of pronunciation.  Suggested procedure for teaching dictation 1. Pre listening: T tells sts that they are going to write a short passage or unrelated sentences, how many times they will hear that. And T gives them background to context.
  • 49. 1. First Listening: T reads the dictation passage in normal speed and normal intonation. Sts listen but do not write. 2. Second Listening: T reads dictation ,pauses after each short sense group of words (chunks). T also dictates punctuation saying comma, full stop …… 3. Post listening: T tells sts to read their work quickly for revision. Sts exchange books and T provides dictation written on board. Sts correct each other’s work. T checks sts’ marking and takes notes of common mistakes.
  • 50.  Steps for teaching reading: 1. Lead in: prepare students and make them familiar with the topic to create interest. 2. Set 2 or 3 pre-reading questions for gist. 3. Present only uninferable new words which are central to meaning (key words) 4. Students read silently and quickly for general understanding and to answer the pre-reading questions set in step 2. 5. Students answer the pre-reading questions set in step 2. 6. Set comprehension questions in details.
  • 51. 7. Students read carefully, silently and more slowly to discover answers. 8. Student discuss the text in pairs or groups to compare answers and guess meanings of new words. 9.Whole class discussion to make sure of general and detailed understanding. 10. (Optional but important) Direct text related task for further exploitation of language or theme and text.