Top Banner
Vocabulary teaching
31

Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Dec 12, 2015

Download

Documents

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: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Vocabulary teaching

Page 2: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt

– Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items

– Indirect1, learner training approach: Teach conscious vocabulary-related strategies

– How to help a poor man?

– Indirect2, natural approach: Create opportunities for spontaneous acquisition via communicative tasks . The three hypotheses.

Page 3: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Direct teaching

• Selection and ordering• Amount and rate• Presentation• Practice • Production• Assessment

– TASK Which are in the teacher’s hands?

Page 4: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Selection and ordering… the vocab syllabus

– Who does it?

– What criteria are relevant?– TASK

Page 5: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Importance, aka utility• Frequency lists e.g.

http://www.lextutor.ca/vp/bnc/nation_14/ • Ministry lists• Other student needs

• Ease, aka learnability, teachability• Interlingual, intralingual, extralingual

• Interest

Page 6: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Amount and rate

– What would be the ideal amount of vocabulary to be learnt overall in a course?

– What is a suitable rate per hour of new words?– TASK

Page 7: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 8: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 9: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 10: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 11: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 12: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Presentation– What actually is a pedagogically useful vocabulary

item to present?• Words?• Word families?• Lexical chunks aka lexical phrases, formulae,

readymades…?

Page 13: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Beyond phrasal verbs (e.g. bring up), multiword compounds (e.g. hard disk) and idiomatic phrases (e.g. pull someone’s leg) to:

• polyword at any rate, by and large, as well [= ‘also’]• frame or slot the [adj.]-er the [adj]–er, as [adj]….as,

so [adj]…that… ,Little did…realize that…

• sentence headCould you....., God only knows wh-… • sentence tail …, if you would., …and so on.• cliché There's more than one way to skin a cat.

Page 14: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

– What is there to present about a lexical item?• ..beyond the basic ‘form – one meaning’ link

– How can presentation be done?• Traditional deductive presentation• Inductive presentation

Page 15: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Deductive presentation– Three basic ways to present word meaning– Extension to other aspects of words like

collocation• E.g. More Words You Need (Rudzka et al., 1985,

MacMillan) http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~scholp/corptask2.htm

Page 16: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Inductive presentation, requiring learner strategies– To present word meaning

• Teacher provides a ‘pregnant context’ , e.g. a situation or story from which the meaning of the word can be easily guessed

– For other aspects of words like collocation, grammatical behaviour, stylistic value• Students work on corpus concordance lines or statistics e.g. at

http://corpus.byu.edu/bnc/

Page 17: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Practice… Production

• Any repetition / practice of vocab has some at least minimal value… but• ….there are many types of vocab exercise/task• Teacher needs to choose suitable ones in the light of

what kind of work needs to be done on vocab that has been presented• So what are the functions of exercises / practice?

Page 18: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

X = what the teacher presented about the lexical items

• Confirm that X has been correctly learnt• Reinforce prior learning, i.e. aid memory of X

– Recycling, repetition– Establishment of associations– Deepening of processing

• Activation: automatise /proceduralise what has been learnt of X so that learners access it more fluently

• Activation: extend knowledge of the items beyond X• Activation: turn passive/receptive/recognition mastery of

X into active/production/recall ability

Page 19: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Recycling… or lack of it

Page 20: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,
Page 21: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Exercise types in P and W

– Selective attention: Make students identify/notice wordform (e.g. underline the word wherever it occurs in the text) a

– Recognition: Make students show recognition/receptive knowledge of meaning (e.g. match word with picture) b

– Manipulation: make students show wordformation knowledge (e.g. change word from noun to adjective)

– Interpretation: make students show knowledge of collocation and syntactic properties (e.g. guess meaning from context, give grammatical function of word in text)

– Production: make students show recall/production word knowledge (e.g. open cloze) c

Page 22: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Communicative practice/production– Often seen as ultimate goal of vocab teaching– ‘Deep end’ approach… reverse PPP– Indirect 1 approach needed here

Page 23: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Indirect1 teaching

• Vocabulary related strategies potentially to teach– To help learner where (s)he does not know

vocabulary, esp. in real communicative use: Coping• Some of those involve learning: Discovery• Some involve managing without the needed vocab

– To help learner remember vocabulary previously met/taught: Consolidation

– TASK… think of examples

Page 24: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Coping• Skip/avoid• Make do with existing L2 resources (and maybe

Discover)• Appeal (so Discover)

• Consolidation• Self-selection and note keeping• Repetition• Association• Integrative practice

Page 25: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• What the teacher needs to check– What strategies do students already know from L1?– What strategies have been already taught, maybe

implicitly, through direct teaching?– For more demanding strategies, check if students have the

threshold language prof to be able to exploit them / transfer them from L1

Page 26: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Three general approaches:– Allow or encourage them (e.g. ‘Use your dictionary’, ‘Try

guessing it’, ‘Why not put that in your vocab notebook?’)

– Teach them overtly as opportunities arise during a reading task, on specific instances• Inductively: e.g. ‘What did/could you do here to get the meaning?’• Deductively: e.g. ‘Look at the phrase after the word and guess’

– Teach them overtly and separately from reading task• Inductively: e.g. ‘What do you do when you meet an unknown

word?’, ‘What do you do to try to remember words?’• Deductively: e.g. ‘I am going to show you how to use your

dictionary properly’. Note: examples used may be known words

Page 27: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• After strategy teaching…– Implement ‘deep-end’ approach– Indirect2 should work better now

Page 28: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

Indirect2 teaching

• Incidental spontaneous learning in extensive communicative language use

• The three hypotheses claiming major sources of this– Input (Krashen)– Output (Swain)– Interaction (Long)

Page 29: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• What really occurs?– Incidental learning/acquisition– ..but is it unconscious/implicit?• The need for noticing

• So consciousness is involved

• … but the teacher does not teach vocab or strategies in this approach/phase

Page 30: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

• Conditions the teacher needs to create– Interesting communication opportunities– Motivated students– ?Input modification– Incidental learning may be planned to be• Vocab acquisition tasks: required vocab at i+1… but not

i+2• Vocab fluency tasks: required vocab at i or i-1• Strategy development tasks?

Page 31: Vocabulary teaching. General approaches that teachers and teaching materials can adopt – Traditional direct approach: Teach vocabulary items – Indirect1,

References• Thornbury, S. 2002. How to Teach Vocabulary. London: Longman.• Gairns, R. and Redman, S. 1986. Working with words: a guide to teaching and

learning vocabulary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.• Carter, R. and McCarthy, M. 1988. Vocabulary and language teaching. London:

Longman. • Sökmen, A. 1997. ‘Current trends in teaching second language vocabulary.’ In

Schmitt, N. and M. McCarthy (eds) Vocabulary: Description, Acquisition and Pedagogy. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press

• Hatch, E. and C. Brown. 1995. Vocabulary, Semantics and Language Education. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (parts only)

• Nation, I.S.P. 2001. Learning Vocabulary in another Language. Cambridge: Cambridge Applied Linguistics Series, CUP

• Read, J. 2000. Assessing Vocabulary.