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Teacher talk and classroom interaction
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Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Teacher talk and classroom interaction

Page 2: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Your trainerWendy Arnold

• MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL)

• Freelance teacher, trainer, writer, researcher

• IATEFL’s YL SIG committee• Specialist in reading for young

learner literacy• 15 years experience teaching Chinese

young learners

Page 3: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

What do you know?Interaction

• Features of teacher talk• Principles of giving

instruction and feedback

• Name the different types of classroom interaction

• Explain the role of interaction, input, output

Teacher talk

Page 4: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

DID YOUR LIST LOOK LIKE THIS?

PAIRWORK

questions and answers

dialogue

GROUPWORK

projectsrole play

TEACHER TALK

giving instructionsasking and answering questions

surveysWHOLE CLASS

games

songs/chants

Page 5: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Interaction

Input

Comprehensible output ( 可理解性输出 )

Comprehensible input ( 可理解性输入 )

Output

Language Acquisition( 语 言习得 )

Interaction

Summary of the relationship between interactions, comprehensible input, output and language acquisition

Page 6: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Example of pairwork (video)Students Teacher

• What are they doing?• Are they engaged?• Do they understand what

they are doing?

• What are they doing?• Are they supporting

anyone? How?

Page 7: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

WHAT MAKES THE INTERACTION

EFFECTIVE(有效 )?

WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS(问题 ) OF THE INTERACTION?

Page 8: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Example of groupwork (video)Students Teacher

• What are they doing?• Are they all engaged?

• What are they doing?• Are they helping anyone?

Page 9: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

WHAT MAKES THE INTERACTION EFFECTIVE?

WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS OF THE

INTERACTION?

Page 10: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Example of whole class activity (video)Students Teacher

• What they doing?• Does everyone know how

to do it?• How successful are they?

• What are they doing?• Are the instructions clear?• Are they supporting

anyone? How?

Page 11: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

WHAT MAKES THE INTERACTION EFFECTIVE?

WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS OF THE

INTERACTION?

Page 12: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Feedback

Teacher

• How are the teachers giving feedback?

Page 13: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

The Nature of interaction

a. The teacher’s “interactional” adjustment

b. The pupils’ “interactional” behaviors

Page 14: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Input and interactional adjustments (交互性调整 )

The most commonly used strategies to make the language input more comprehensible are:

1. RepeatingWhat do you think

of these strategies?Have you

identified other strategies in the

video clips?

3. Switching to Chinese

2. Simplifying questions

4. Setting an example

Page 15: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Atkinson (1987:426) worries that the teacher and/or the students will feel that “they have not ‘really understood any item of language until it has been translated.”

Page 16: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

1. Provide the beginning of a sentence and let pupils continue. Elicit by starting the sentence: For example: “Here’s the……”

Output and interactional adjustments

The most commonly used strategies to elicit language output are:

Have you identified other strategies in the

video clips?

2. Set a model and ask pupils to repeat. Give requirement: “You must say ……” or provide the expected answer.

3. Use rhetorical (反问 )questions: Example: Ss: Where’s the marker? S: Here’s the pencil sharpener. T: Pencil sharpener?

Page 17: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Walsh (2002, cited Wacaro, 2003:198) identified a number of features which obstructed(阻碍 ) learning potential(潜力 ).

Can you give examples in the video clips?

• The teacher completes the turn for the student.

• The teacher interrupts(打断 ) the student’s turn in order to correct.

• No negotiation(商量 ) of meaning is detectable via clarification requests(澄清 ), confirmation checks(确认 ).

• The teacher echoes(重复 ) the student response even if it is correct.• IRF (Initiate-Response-Feedback) turn-taking structure as the dominant (主要 )pattern.

Page 18: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

The pupils “interactional” behaviors:

• the “reduction” behavior

• the “achievement” behavior

(Faerch and Kaspar, 1980, cited in Ellis, 1985).

Did you see both behaviors in the video clips?

Page 19: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

the “reduction” behavior: the learner missing a turn by keeping silent, choosing to be out of the task by saying “no” or “I don’t know”, and other similar utterances, switching topics or imitating part or the whole of the teacher’s previous utterance.

Page 20: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

the “achievement” behavior: learners respond actively to the teacher’s utterance by using their first language, miming, requesting assistance or guessing.

Page 21: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

A demonstration lessonWork in groups and complete one of the following

tasks:

•Group 1: Count the time used for different types of interaction: PW, GW, IW, CW

•Group 2: Find out teachers’ interactional adjustment strategies

•Group 3: Find out pupils’ interactional behaviours

Page 22: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

A demonstration lesson

•Group 4: Write down all the questions asked by the teacher and find out the features of this teacher.

•Group 5: Write down the language used for praise and feedback and comment on it.

Page 23: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Cross group discussion

Each person: 2’

Time limit: 15’

Page 24: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

Let’s discuss what makes effective and dynamic interaction!Theory into practice:

Krashen Comprehensible input

Vygotsky ZPD (最近发展区 ) social interaction

Bruner Scaffolding (支架 )

Page 25: Teacher talk and classroom interaction. Your trainer Wendy Arnold MA in Teaching English to Young Learners (TEYL) Freelance teacher, trainer, writer,

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