Grammar
is central to the teaching and learning of languages. It is also one of the
more difficult aspects of language to teach well. Many people, including language teachers,
hear the word "grammar" and think of a fixed set of word forms and
rules of usage. They associate "good" grammar with the prestige forms
of the language, such as those used in writing and in formal oral presentations,
and "bad" or "no" grammar with the language used in
everyday conversation or used by speakers of nonprestige forms.
Language
teachers who adopt this definition focus on grammar as a set of forms and
rules. They teach grammar by explaining the forms and rules and then drilling
students on them. This results in bored, disaffected students who can produce
correct forms on exercises and tests, but consistently make errors when they
try to use the language in context.
Other
language teachers, influenced by recent theoretical work on the difference
between language learning and language acquisition, tend not to teach grammar
at all. Believing that children acquire their first language without overt
grammar instruction, they expect students to learn their second language the
same way. They assume that students will absorb grammar rules as they hear,
read, and use the language in communication activities. This approach does not
allow students to use one of the major tools they have as learners: their
active understanding of what grammar is and how it works in the language they
already know.
The
communicative competence model balances these extremes. The model recognizes
that overt grammar instruction helps students acquire the language more
efficiently, but it incorporates grammar teaching and learning into the larger
context of teaching students to use the language. Instructors using this model
teach students the grammar they need to know to accomplish defined
communication tasks.
Goals and Techniques for Teaching Grammar
The goal of grammar instruction is to
enable students to carry out their communication purposes. This goal has three
implications:
- Students need overt instruction
that connects grammar points with larger communication contexts.
- Students do not need to master
every aspect of each grammar point, only those that are relevant to the
immediate communication task.
- Error correction is not always the
instructor's first responsibility.
Overt
Grammar Instruction
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.
- Teach the grammar point in the
target language or the students' first language or both. The goal is to
facilitate understanding.
- Limit the time you devote to
grammar explanations to 10 minutes, especially for lower level students
whose ability to sustain attention can be limited.
- Present grammar points in written
and oral ways to address the needs of students with different learning
styles.
An important part of grammar
instruction is providing examples. Teachers need to plan their examples
carefully around two basic principles:
- Be sure the examples are accurate
and appropriate. They must present the language appropriately, be
culturally appropriate for the setting in which they are used, and be to
the point of the lesson.
- Use the examples as teaching
tools. Focus examples on a particular theme or topic so that students have
more contact with specific information and vocabulary.
Relevance
of Grammar Instruction
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
- Teach the regular -ed form
with its two pronunciation variants
- Teach the doubling rule for verbs
that end in d (for example, wed-wedded)
- Hand out a list of irregular verbs
that students must memorize
- Do pattern practice drills for -ed
- Do substitution drills for
irregular verbs
Communicative competence: grammar for
communication's sake
- Distribute two short narratives
about recent experiences or events, each one to half of the class
- Teach the regular -ed form,
using verbs that occur in the texts as examples. Teach the pronunciation
and doubling rules if those forms occur in the texts.
- Teach the irregular verbs that
occur in the texts.
- Students read the narratives, ask
questions about points they don't understand.
- Students work in pairs in which
one member has read Story A and the other Story B. Students interview one
another; using the information from the interview, they then write up or
orally repeat the story they have not read.
Error
Correction
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.
- When students are doing structured
output activities that focus on development of new language skills, use
error correction to guide them.
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.
Student (in class): I buy a new car yesterday. Teacher: You bought a new car yesterday. Remember, the past tense of buy is bought.
- When students are engaged in
communicative activities, correct errors only if they interfere with comprehensibility.
Respond using correct forms, but without stressing them.
Example:
Student (greeting teacher) : I buy a new car yesterday!
Student (greeting teacher) : I buy a new car yesterday!
Teacher: You bought a new car? That's
exciting! What kind?
Strategies for Learning Grammar
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.
1.
Relate knowledge needs to learning goals.
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.
2.
Apply higher order thinking skills.
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.
3.
Provide plentiful, appropriate language input.
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. (For more on input, see Teaching Goals and
Methods.)
4.
Use predicting skills.
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.
5.
Limit expectations for drills.
- 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.
- Communicative drills encourage
students to connect form, meaning, and use because multiple correct
responses are possible. In communicative drills, students respond to a
prompt using the grammar point under consideration, but providing their
own content. For example, to practice questions and answers in the past
tense in English, teacher and students can ask and answer questions about
activities the previous evening. The drill is communicative because none
of the content is set in advance:
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.
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.
Developing
Grammar Activities
Many
courses and textbooks, especially those designed for lower proficiency levels,
use a specified sequence of grammatical topics as their organizing principle.
When this is the case, classroom activities need to reflect the grammar point
that is being introduced or reviewed. By contrast, when a course curriculum
follows a topic sequence, grammar points can be addressed as they come up.
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)
Ingin mendapatkan eModul + Power Point Lengkap? Silahkan KLIK DI SINI dan pilih eModulnya.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar