Top Banner
FORM- FOCUSED INSTRUCTION ROD ELLIS
25

Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

Apr 15, 2017

Download

Education

jredris
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FORM-FOCUSED

INSTRUCTIONR O D E L L I S

Page 2: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FORM-FOCUSED INSTRUCTION THREE TYPES:1.Focus-on-Forms2.Focus-on-Form (planned)3.Focus-on-Form (incidental)

Page 3: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FOCUS-ON-FORMS

Learning language – similar to Krashen’s “Learned System”■Language learning is deliberate and planned■Oral activities have specific/explicit structural

goals.■Teacher and Students aware of purpose/goals of

activities.■exposure, controlled practice, open practice,

production, reflection.

Page 4: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FOCUS-ON-FORM (PLANNED)

○“Enriched Input” - input that has been specially contrived to provide and highlight target structures○However, learners focus on meaning not

structure. So learning is ‘incidental’ rather than ‘intentional’ (at least from the learner’s perspective)

Page 5: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FOCUS-ON-FORM (PLANNED)

○“Input Enhancement” to draw attention of learner to target feature○“Focused Communicative Tasks” to induce

learners into using target features○Meant to induce ‘noticing’ of target forms

within the context of meaning-focused activity.

Page 6: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FOCUS-ON-FORM (INCIDENTAL) ○Preemptive■teacher/learners take ‘time-out’ from a communicative task to draw attention to target form■teacher anticipates difficult structures and addresses them before task (vocab/grammar)

Page 7: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

FOCUS-ON-FORM (INCIDENTAL) ○Reactive■corrective (negative) feedback after perceived errors occur■implicit/explicit negative feedback●explicit can be more obtrusive and have affective

consequences●implicit: recasts, asking for clarification, asking for

repetition.

Page 8: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

NOTICING HYPOTHESIS

R I C H A R D S C H M I D T

Page 9: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

NOTICING HYPOTHESIS – WHAT IS IT?•Noticing Hypothesis

–Students cannot learn/acquire target features unless they ‘notice’ it.

– ‘Noticing’ is an important and vital first step in language learning.

Page 11: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHERWhen teaching oral skills…•…how can we move from Krashen’s “Natural Approach” to a more ‘form-focused’ approach? •How do we get our students to “notice” their own language skills and development?

Page 12: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

MINI-WORKSHOP:FOCUS-ON-FORM AND ‘NOTICING’•Consider the common oral activities we use. –How can we ‘focus-on-form’ in these common tasks?

–How can we get our students to ‘notice’ in these tasks?

Page 13: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Classroom Discussions

Page 14: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Presentations

Page 15: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Debates

Page 16: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Role Play/Panel Discussion

Page 17: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Interviews

Page 18: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITYPicture Narrating/Describing/”Find the Differences”

Page 19: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

ACTIVITY:

Running Dictation

Page 20: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

SPEAKING ACTIVITIES TO TRYPecha Kucha•20x20 presentation•20 slides, 20 seconds per slide•Live or Recorded•http://www.pechakucha.org/

Page 22: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

SPEAKING ACTIVITIES TO TRYDigital Recording•Record discussion, presentation, oral activity. Review and reflect on performance.•Digital Storytelling•Recorded presentations, interviews, projects

Page 23: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

SPEAKING ACTIVITIES TO TRYSentence Auction•Write 10 sentences on the board (some with mistakes)•Students are placed in groups and each group has $1500-2000.•Auction each sentence.• In order sold, ask students if sentence is correct. If not, give 10 seconds to correct it.•Continue until each sentence is corrected.

Page 24: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

SPEAKING ACTIVITIES TO TRYSentence Auction1 point for every $100 left over at the end5 points for every correct sentence-3 points for every incorrect sentence they couldn't correct3 points for every corrected sentence.

Students with the most points win

Page 25: Form focused instruction and noticing without embedded video

SPEAKING ACTIVITIES TO TRYAnything else?•What are some speaking activities (structured or unstructured) that have worked for you?