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Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations Words Skills: Language and Activities for Talking About Words
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Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Jan 06, 2016

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Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations. Words Skills: Language and Activities for Talking About Words. Today’s class: (1)We will review concepts covered last class. (2) We will briefly discuss the importance of collocations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Unit 1: What’s in a Word?The Importance of Collocations

Words Skills: Language and Activities for Talking About Words

Page 2: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• Today’s class:• (1)We will review concepts covered last class.• (2) We will briefly discuss the importance of

collocations.• (3) We will look at language used for posing

word riddles, giving hints and asking for answers.

Page 3: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Review

• Last class we looked at three important concepts:(1) Negotiation of meaning.(2) Skills-based curricula.(3) Teacher as an important source input and interaction for their students.

Page 4: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Task 1: Before we begin . . .

I’ve given you a piece of paper. Without asking your partner or anybody else. How would you say this in English?

• Bottle 은 여섯 글자로 되어 있다 .

Write your answer on the piece of paper. And hand it in.

Page 5: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Bottle has six letters.

Page 6: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Classroom English

The verb ‘have’ collocates with ‘word’.

Words have letters.

As an English teacher, you have to be very careful and pay attention to which words form collocations to avoid using awkward language.

Page 7: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Look at the following expressions below:

Bottle consists of six letters.Bottle is composed of six letters.

These expressions are grammatically correct yet very awkward.

Page 8: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Let’s try another example

• What verb goes in the blank:

____________ a snowball fight.

Page 9: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

You have a snowball fight.

Page 10: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Here’s another example:

He’s lonely. He needs to ____________ a girlfriend.

Page 11: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

make a girlfriend?

Page 12: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

You can make friends,

but you usually get a girlfriend

or find a girlfriend.

Page 13: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• Students (and non-native ESL teachers) produce awkward language at times because they are not aware of which words form collocations.

Page 14: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• Being aware of collocations will help you and students avoid using language that is grammatically correct but awkward.

• When we look at classroom interactions in English, pay careful attention to the language boxes for those interactions so that you can avoid awkward language.

Page 15: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• In this class I want you to be very careful about word choice.

• As future English teachers the standard for you is much higher than for other students.

Page 16: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• Roughly speaking, we say that two words are collocations if they occur together frequently. And because they occur together frequently, the combination seems natural. Whereas other words that are nearly synonymous would seem strange in the same combination.

Page 17: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• A classic example comes from Michael Halliday:

Page 18: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

• Strong tea versus powerful computers. Strong is synonymous with powerful yet powerful seems awkward when applied to tea and strong seems awkward when applied to computers.

Page 19: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

Our first classroom interaction:

Discussing collocations with our students.

Page 20: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

When we spot awkward word use we can

explain it the following ways.

(a)You can use the present tense putting emphasis on the word that needs to be changed.

• You PAY a visit not DO a visit.• You don't Do a mistake, you

MAKE a mistake.

Page 21: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

(b) You can use the modal can (but we really mean usually).

• Trees can be TALL but not HIGH.(Unless you mean high up on a mountain)

• A woman can be BEAUTIFUL but not HANDSOME.

Page 22: Unit 1: What’s in a Word? The Importance of Collocations

(c) You can point out what we usually say:

• We usually say HEAVY rain not STRONG rain.

• REACH an agreement is more common/natural than MAKE an agreement.