What is ‘good practice’ in teaching an additional language? Richard Johnstone Milan, March 2011
Mar 27, 2015
What is ‘good practice’ in teaching an
additional language?
Richard JohnstoneMilan, March 2011
Overview
Introduction Teaching an additional language at primary school Three models of Languages Education Factors and Outcomes
What is ‘good practice’ in teaching? How might we recognize ‘good practice’? Some examples
Conclusions
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Three models of Languages Education at primary school
MLPS Limited amount of time / Variety of starting ages Main aims are to teach initial aspects of the additional
language and associated cultures By far, the dominant model across the world
CLIL Teaching one or two subjects (or aspects of subjects) througth
the medium of the additional language More time (e.g. 20-25% of time overall) Strongly endorsed by European Commission
BILINGUAL/ IMMERSION EDUCATION Considerably more time (Minimally 40% of time overall) A range of underlying deep societal aims
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Factors and OutcomesSOCIETAL PROVISION PROCESS INDIVIDUAL OUTCOMES
Exposure to TL
Business Need
Time
Intensity
Teaching
Instruction
Age
Literacies
Plurilingual proficiency
Dominance of English
Information
Innovation
Learning
Acquisition
Ethnicity
Prior languages
Proficiency in a particular language
Treatment by the media
Place of Ls in the curriculum
Problem-solving
Networking
Gender
Prior attainments
Examination
Attainments
Internet
Globalisation / Localisation
Supply, Training and CPD of teachers
Communication
Interaction
Socio-economic background
Identity
Sense of self
Transferable skills
Political will
Parental Demand
Teacher clusters and networks
Assessment
Evaluation
Attitudes and Motivation
Citizenship
Mobility
Attitudes to particular languages and communities
Policies and support (transnational / national / local)
Planning
Management
Administration
Personality
Cognitive style
Learning strategy
Autonomy
Intercultural competence
EU citizenship (e.g. basic right to mobility)
Infrastructure for continuity across sectors
Innovation
Development
Research
Confidence
Anxiety
Self-esteem
Teachers
Job satisfaction
Career prospects
Fast capitalism / elite bilingualism
Evaluation
Research
Fund-raising
Profile-raising
Values
Beliefs
Schools
Ethos&Reputation
Performance
BEP (SPAIN) KEY POSITIVE FACTORS
SOCIETAL PROVISION PROCESS
•Political will•Parental interest & demand for EBEiE•But pupils had very limited contact with English outside school
•An early start (in some cases from age 3)•Substantial time for English (40%)•Leadership at national level from Ministry & British Council together•Supernumerary teachers fluent in English•Agreed continuity across primary and secondary education•Supportive national Guidelines on BEP curriculum•In-service courses for teachers•Highly reputable external international examination for students at age 16
•General teaching strategies•Language-focused strategies•Activities which offer students cognitive challenge, integrating their knowledge•Creation of community atmosphere in class•Use of assessment in support of learning•Management approach based on consultation and collaboration
What is ‘good practice’ in teaching a ML?
Doing things which are considered to be ‘good’ ‘As a teacher, I am implementing a communicative approach’ ‘I am using the Council of Europe Portfolio’ ‘I am developing a learner-centred approach’ ‘I am developing intercultural competence’ ‘I am introducing CLIL ......’
BUT ........ Although these things are probably ‘good’, and I have observed some
excellent teaching based on them I have also observed some unimpressive teaching based on them
So ‘good practice’ should also minimally imply ...
... Doing these things well!
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Recognizing ‘good practice’
Doing these things well ..... Yes, we can look at how well the teacher performs
certain activities But we should also make judgements about
good practice in teaching by observing closely its actual effects on pupils/students What were pupils doing really well? What teacher behaviours seemed associated with
this? (BEP Evaluation, Spain)
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Three components of ‘good practice’
.
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1. Implementing activities
which are desirable
2. Doing them
well / skilfully / smoothly
/coherently / responsively
......
3. Taking careful
account of effects on
pupils / students
In the BEP evaluation, we worked from 3. to 2. to 1.
BEP STUDY 1: Primary 5 & 6 pupils’ performance and attainments in classrooms
Fluent and confident command of English, including technical vocabulary
Production of extended utterances General ease of comprehension and of interaction
with the teacher A range of language functions to express the
discourse of science and English language & literacy lessons.
Some errors but these seemed developmental and not to detract from pupils’ generally promising performance.
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BEP STUDY 3: Secondary 2 students’ performance and attainments in class
Fluent and confident use of language reflecting students’ maturing cognitive capacities.
Specialized vocabulary to cope with particular content areas: e.g. ‘fertilisation’, ‘characteristics of predators’, ‘acids &
alkalis’ Range of language functions, related to
English (language & literacy) and Science: e.g. providing explanations; coping in an interview;
improvising; making a presentation; elaborating the consequences of particular processes; constructing their own arguments
Range of social and task-related purposes: e.g. banter; peer-support; conducting experiments
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BEP STUDY 5: Infants and early primary
The lessons observed show substantial progression from age 3 to age 7 in pupils’ learning and language development: Initially, their activity was based on actions, songs,
chants, games, objects and visuals By Year 2 of primary school they had moved into the
use of English for doing science in the form of studying the environment: Generated longer utterances in response to technical
questions Some degree of verbal reasoning Pronunciation generally very good High speed of comprehension and an ability to
demonstrate this quickly through actions and mimes The teachers were generally pleasant, calm, organized
and encouraging. Their English was good, as was their planning and organization. They had high expectations of their pupils.
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BEP Primary 5/6 performance in class
T: ‘What happens when you have a cold?’
P: ‘Mucus goes through the Eustachian tube into the middle ear.’
T: ‘How does the doctor know this if he cannot see into the middle ear?’
P: ‘He sees a change in the position of the eardrum.’
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BEP Primary 5/6 performance in class
‘If a liquid is not in a container, it will spill (spread) out.’ (boy)
‘If we pour a liquid from one container to another, it changes shape’(boy)
‘If you put the water from the jar into the beaker, it will take the shape of the new container. The shape of the water change’ (sic).
‘We can see that solids can be different. They have different volume and matter’ (girl)
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BEP Primary 5/6 performance in class
‘We know that light travels in straight lines because ……… behind the opaque object, you cannot see the light, only the shadow. When you put a bottle or glass in front of a source of light, the light travels through it’.
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BEP Good Practice: General Teaching
Keeps all pupils involved in the lesson
Checks pupils’ outputs Is willing to collaborate
with colleagues Is firm but pleasant Uses visual aids Gives clear explanations
of what pupils are to do Reviews pupil outputs
with the whole class Gives clear guidelines
for use of ICT in class
Keeps pupils’ attention focused
Avoids spoon-feeding Presents tasks in a clear
and interesting way Keeps a log of mistakes
for subsequent comment
Chooses websites which are appropriate and comprehensible
Helps pupils work out their own solutions
Exudes ‘presence’
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BEP Good Practice: More language-focused
Helps pupils focus on linguistic form as well as function and meaning
Pays due attention to accuracy, especially where meaning would otherwise be compromised
Introduces deliberate mistakes for pupils to identify and correct
Helps pupils focus on key words
Helps pupils develop clear definitions
Helps them describe the properties of things
Helps them make contrasts, e.g. …. whereas …..
Helps them develop robust classifications
Helps them develop use of the passive voice, essential for science
Pupils have to extend their utterances by using additional vocabulary
Colour-codes in order to highlight particular types of word, e.g. verbs
Allows judicious use of Spanish
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CHILDREN’S MOTIVATION: ACTIVITIES
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Wu (2003) studied children aged 5 learning English primary school in Hong Kong, monolingual
Cantonese classroom activities which fostered intrinsic
motivation These included
a predictable learning environment, moderately challenging tasks, necessary instructional support, evaluation that emphasises self-improvement attribution of success or failure to variables that the
learner can do something about.
L1 / L2 within one overall system
Primary Year 1& 2 Introduction of some 30 language concepts in the national
language
Primary Year 3 & 4 These same concepts systematically transferred into the
learning of a foreign language Initially for recognition / comprehension, then for
production Pupils used these concepts in order to monitor their own
spontaneous oral production and to plan and then monitor their own spontaneous and planned written production
Outcomes Spoken and written output that was fluent, creative and
accurate
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EARLY READING19
Mertens (2003) found that children in Grade 1 learning French benefited from being introduced to written French
immediately showed results superior to those in purely oral approaches
Vickov (2007) claims that children at Grade 1 in Croatia were not disadvantaged in their writing in Croatian by being
introduced to writing in English. Dlugosz (2000) found that the introduction of reading in
the foreign language at kindergarten even when reading in the first language was also only just
starting helped speed the process of understanding and speaking the
foreign language.
PROGRESSION: UPS & DOWNS20
Mitchell (2003) claims that second language learning is not like climbing a ladder; but is a complex and recursive process with multiple
interconnections and backslidings, and complex trade-offs between advances in fluency, accuracy and
complexity.
Pelzer-Karpf & Zangl (1997) found that children’s utterances seemed impressive in Years 1&2 but then in Year 3 went through a phase of ‘Systemturbulenz’
in which their grammar control seemed to fall apart when the cognitive demands of their tasks were raised to the
point that temporarily their grammar-systems could not fully cope
But by Year 4 it sorted itself out.
CREATIVITY AND ACCURACY21
Lyster (2004) studied ‘form-focused instruction’ (FFI) and ‘corrective feedback’ (CF) with Grade 5 children.
FFI and CF were found to be more successful than an approach based on no-FFI and no-CF Recasts: an example of no-FFI & no CF
What did you do yesterday evening? I watch television Oh, you watched television? Yes
He also found it useful to encourage pupils in ‘noticing’ particular formal features of the target language
This helped them develop an awareness of language and to refine their internalised language systems as they progressed
Thinking of introducing CLIL or EBE Not to be undertaken lightly Think carefully about it and analyze your own
situation What are the key societal / provision / process factors I must
take into account in my context, in order to make a good start? In particular, think of teacher supply, teacher CPD and provision
of appropriate materials
Consult staff, parents and relevant authorities Inform yourselves + staff + parents about what CLIL
and EBE are and require Plan for sustainability Seek to develop ICT and other contacts
Joint projects / intercultural learning / exposure to wider range of L2 models
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CONCLUSION: SUCCESSFUL LEARNER
Plans, practices, revises Reviews, Self-assesses Processes input, e.g.
notices, guesses, infers, predicts
Seeks opportunities to use the additional language ‘for real’
Seeks feedback: negative as well as positive
Relates learning & use of the additional language to the learning of other things
Uses reference material appropriately
Interacts and negotiates meaning, e.g. probes, seeks clarification
Offers help, seeks help Takes personal
responsibility
Is aware of and manages different types of discourse
Produces spontaneous as well as non-spontaneous output
Focuses on form as well as on meaning, at different times
Controls anxiety and uses this productively
Feels confident, self-efficacious
Seeks underlying pattern Pays attention, focuses
attention, sustains attention
Develops strategies, uses these and reflects on / revises them
Self-motivates, self-rewards, is curious and seeks challenges
…… Other?
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REFERENCES
Chesterton, P., Steigler-Peters, S., Moran, W. & Piccioli, M. T. (2004). Developing sustainable language learning pathways: an Australian initiative. Language, Culture & Curriculum, 17, 1, 48-57 balance. Windsor: NFER Publishing.
Dlugosz, D.W. (2000). Rethinking the role of reading in teaching a foreign language to young learners. ELT Journal, 54 3, 284 - 290.
Edelenbos, P., Johnstone R. M. & Kubanek, A. (2006). The main pedagogical principles underlying the teaching of languages to very young learners. Languages for the children of Europe: Published Research, Good Practice & Main Principles. Brussels, European Commission. http://ec.europa.eu/education/policies/lang/doc/young_en.pdf
European Commission. (2003). Promoting language learning and linguistic diversity: an Action Plan 2004-2006. Brussels: European Commission
Johnstone, R. M. (2001. Addressing 'the age factor': some implications for languages policy. Guide for the development of Language Education Policies in Europe - From Linguistic Diversity to Plurilingual Education. Strasbourg, Council of Europe Reference Study http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/JohnstoneEN.pdf
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REFERENCES (continued)
Lyster, R. (2004a). Differential effects of prompts and recasts in form-focused instruction. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 26, 399-432.
Lyster, R. (2004b). Research on form-focused instruction in immersion classrooms: implications for theory and practice. Journal of French Language Studies, 14, 3, 321-41.
Mertens, J. (2003). Rhythm, rhymes and rules. Vom Nutzen der Schrift (nicht nur) beim frühen Englischlernen. Fremdsprachenunterricht, 47 (56) 3, 168 - 173.
Mitchell, R. (2003). Rethinking the concept of progression in the national curriculum for modern foreign languages: a research perspective. Language Learning Journal, Winter 2003.
Peltzer-Karpf, A. & Zangl, R. (1997). Vier Jahre Vienna Bilingual Schooling: Eine angzeitstudie. Vienna; Bundesministerium für Unterricht und kulturelle Angelegenheiten., Abteilung 1/1.
Vrhovac, Y. (Ed.) (2010. Introducing the European Language Portfolio in the Croatian and French foreign language classroom: teachers’ experiences and classroom activities with 8 to 14 year-olds. University of Zagreb: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Vickov, G. (2007) Pisanje na engleskom u prvom razredu osnovne skole (Writing skills in English in the first Grade of primary school), Stranijezici.
Wu, X. (2003). Intrinsic motivation and young language learners: the impact of the classroom environment. System, 31 4, 501 - 517.
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SUCCESSFUL ELL TEACHING: 1
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Planning: Seeking to develop not only AL proficiency but also broader
aims, e.g. citizenship, intercultural learning, social skills Collaborating and joint planning with other colleagues in the
school, with parents and with teachers in secondary schools Planning long-term for sustainability, as well as short-term for
success Adopting an inclusive approach, bringing encouragement,
emotional warmth appropriate support to all pupils Understanding that true progression in a language is not based
on the ‘ladder’ model but is a more complex and recursive process.
Building on children’s first language, whatever that may be, helping them to develop explicit conceptual knowledge of this which is then transferred systematically to the additional language they are learning.
SUCCESSFUL ELL TEACHING: 2
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Providing: a clear example to pupils of oneself as an enthusiastic,
though by no means perfect, AL learner and user encouragement, sustained and varied input, interaction,
feedback, a supportive learning environment and guidance
a challenge which stimulates pupils’ interest and �curiosity
corrective as well as positive feedback, while ensuring �that this does not undermine confidence or self-esteem
open-ended questions and stimuli, encouraging children �to be free and creative.
SUCCESSFUL ELL TEACHING: 3
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Encouraging learners: to be strategic &reflective, to engage in self-assessment &
self-monitoring to begin reading, writing from an early stage to draw holistically on their range of capacities and senses,
e.g. physical movement, sense of shape, colour, gesture ….. to derive motivation from feelings of pleasure and success in
what they are attempting to do �to focus on the structure of different kinds of discourse, e.g.
conversations, stories, reports, essays, letters … to develop skills of predicting, guessing and making
inferences to reflect on and explore the rich diversity of human
language and the immense linguistic potential that each of us possesses
KEEPING A PORTFOLIO 29
Short statements of what learners think they can do I can explain … a game, a recipe, how to make something I can narrate/tell … an experience, a story, a film I can say … what I like/dislike, and explain why I can speak/talk about … my friends, family I can read … an illustrated children’s book I can find … in a text what I am looking for
Personal diary of occasions outside school when the learner used the target language
Brief discussion of language-learning problems encountered, and of solutions which the learner has found
….. Other?
Portfolio: impact on pupils
The Portfolio offers an opportunity for the teacher to continuously follow and assess the pupils’ achievements; it motivates pupils to use the foreign language, and develops their awareness of the need to take responsibility for their learning and performance.
It helps pupils to consciously follow the development of their overall language and communication competence.
Teachers see that pupils, with their help, can independently and with full responsibility do the tasks, prepare their language production, think about it, and decide what they have done well, and what could be improved, and finally, assess their own performance.
Vrhovac et al (2010)
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CHILDREN’S INTRINSIC MOTIVATION: DEVELOPMENT
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Nikolov (1999) followed three cohorts of children for eight years, taught by the same teacher
It was found that learners’ motivation could be maintained by
intrinsically interesting and cognitively challenging tasks
Intrinsic motivation Initially associated with ‘fun’ activity Then becomes linked to ‘curiosity’ and ‘challenge’ Then becomes associated with perception of self
as successful language learner
PROCESSES: PEER-TUTORING32
Xu, Gelper & Perkins (2005) studied class-wide peer-tutoring (CWPT) Children at elementary school Grade 2 in the United
States Regular instances of:
cooperative play reciprocal initiation & response.
The researchers concluded that: CWPT had significantly helped the children in their social
behaviour.
Reference: Xu, Y., J. Gelfer & P. Perkins. (2005). Using peer-tutoring to increase social interactions
in early schooling. TESOL Quarterly, 39, 1, 83-106
PROCESSES: COMPUTER-MEDIATED
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Nutta et al (2002) compared a conventional text-based approach with a computer-enhanced
multimedia approach, pupils Grades 2-5 in a USA elementary school. The computer-enhanced group:
more interactive greater access to immediate feedback more precise in pronunciation smoother flow of reading produced larger chunks of language.
Concluded that: ICT can help younger learners in integrating their languages skills and
in developing important strategies of monitoring.
Reference: Nutta, J. et. al. (2002). Exploring new frontiers: What do computers contribute to
teaching foreign languages in elementary school? Foreign Language Annals, 35 , 3, 293 - 306.
KEY MLPS FACTOR: CONTINUITY 34
It works well when across the two sectors (Primary-Secondary) there is the following: exchange of information and support reciprocal visits collaborative planning mutual esteem
Large-scale project in New South Wales,Australia: Chesterton et al (2004) Joint planning by teachers covering 3 years at
Primary School and 2 years at Secondary School