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The Audiolingual Method From “Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching” By J.C. Richards and T.S. Rodgers.
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Page 1: The audiolingual method

The Audiolingual Method

From “Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching” By J.C. Richards

and T.S. Rodgers.

Page 2: The audiolingual method

Background Before World War II, there were three methods:

a) A modified Direct Method Approach

b) A Reading Approach.

c) A Reading-Oral Approach.

Page 3: The audiolingual method

Problems with these three methods:

1. They lacked standardization of vocabulary and

grammar.

2. No one could agree what was important to teach

for beginning, intermediate or advanced learners.

3. They basically, lacked “STRUCTURE”

Page 4: The audiolingual method

World War II Changed everything...

Page 5: The audiolingual method

The Army Specialized Training ProgramThe Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP)

was started in 1942.

Native speakers acted as an informant of the

language and as a linguist, as in the Direct

Method.

Students and informants gradually learned a

language, ten hours a day for six days a week.

Page 6: The audiolingual method

The ASTP continued for two years and by the

1950s, as a result of many factors Audiolingualism

became a standardized way of teaching a language.

Page 7: The audiolingual method

Sputnik 1 – The First Russian Satellite (1957)

Page 8: The audiolingual method

It changed everything again:

a) It made the U.S. Government realize the need for new

and more intensive foreign language teaching

methodology.

b) The National Defence Education Act (1958) provided

money for training of teachers, the development of

teaching materials and for the study and analysis of

modern languages.

Page 9: The audiolingual method

The term “Audiolingualism” was coined by

Professor Nelson Brooks (1964). In the 1960’s,

Audiolingualism began to lose its popularity, but

this method is still used today.

Page 10: The audiolingual method

ApproachTheory of Language: Structuralism

Structural linguistics

influenced

Audiolingualism.

Elements in a language

are linearly produced in

a rule-governed way.

Linguistic levels are

pyramidally structured.

Phonology

Morphology

Phrases

Sentences

Page 11: The audiolingual method

Approach Theory of Learning: Behaviourism

Behavioural psychology influenced Audiolingualism.

Behaviourists believe that humans are organisms

capable of learning many behaviours. It depends on

three elements:

1. Stimulus: Bring out behaviour.

2. Response: Triggered by stimulus.

3. Reinforcement: Marks the response as being

appropriate or not and encourages repetition which

is vital in the learning process.

Page 12: The audiolingual method

BehaviourismLearning Behaviour

Organism

Behaviour

Stimulus

Response

Reinforcement

Learner.

Language behaviour.

Content.

Learner’s response.

Reaction

intrinsic/extrinsic

approval.

Page 13: The audiolingual method

Approach - ConclusionsForeign language learning is a process of

mechanical habit formation.

Language skills are learned more effectively if

they are learned in spoken form (drills) rather

than written form.

Language must be learned in context of the

linguistics and culture.

Page 14: The audiolingual method

Design - ObjectivesShort-term Objectives Long-term Objectives

Listening comprehension.

Accurate pronunciation.

Recognition of speech

symbols as graphic signs.

The ability to reproduce

these symbols in writing.

Language as the

native speaker uses it.

Page 15: The audiolingual method

Design – The SyllabusBased on a linguistic or structure-based approach

to language teaching. Built on:

1. Step by step linguistic syllabus, which contains:

Phonology.

Morphology.

Syntax.

2. Lexical syllabus of basic vocabulary.

Page 16: The audiolingual method

Design – Types of learning and teaching activities.

Dialogues Drills

Contextualize key

structures.

Illustrate situations.

Used for repetition

and memorization.

Distinctive feature of this method.

1. Repetition.

2. Inflection.

3. Replacement.

4. Restatement.

5. Completion.

6. Transposition

.

7. Expansion.

8. Contraction.

9. Transformati

on.

10. Integration.

11. Rejoinder.

12. Restoration.

Page 17: The audiolingual method

Design - Roles1. Learner

roles: They can be

directed by skilled training techniques.

External displays.

Reactive role. They do not

initiate interaction.

2. Teacher roles:

Central and active.

Model of the target language.

Controls the process of learning.

Monitors and controls the learner’s performance.

3. The role of instructional materials:

Teacher-oriented.

Tape recorders, a language laboratory and audiovisual equipment are important.

Page 18: The audiolingual method

ProcedureExtensive oral instruction is required where the target

language is used. Typical procedures:

1. Model dialogue. Repeat. Correction of mistakes.

Memorize.

2. Dialogues are adapted and then acted out.

3. Key structures are selected and used for pattern drills.

4. Textbooks. Follow-up reading, writing or vocabulary

activities may be introduced.

5. Follow-up activities in a language laboratory.

Page 19: The audiolingual method

The decline of AudiolingualismIt was examined in many ways:

1. Theoretical foundations were considered weak in both

language theory and learning theory.

2. Practitioners discovered that the practical results did

not meet expectations.

3. Students were not able to transfer skills to real

communication outside the classroom.

4. Many students found the classes boring and

unsatisfying.

Page 20: The audiolingual method

Noam Chomsky He rejected this approach.

His theory of transformational grammar said

that language is creative and generated, not a

habit.

Language derives from innate aspects of the

mind and from how humans process

experience through language.

Page 21: The audiolingual method

Final Conclusion...Audiolingualism holds that language

learning is like other forms of

learning. That is the reason why, it

stresses the mechanistic aspects of

language learning and language use.