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Rescooped by Shona Whyte from Technology and language learning onto TELT |
This site has a huge collection of open access journals across a range of disciplines and languages. Very useful for research.
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Rachael Roberts, "freelance ELT author, teacher and trainer," credits Mario Rinvolucri with the term "teacherless task" in his 1970s EFL materials, pre-dating today's task-based teaching. This post includes examples of such tasks, reasons why they work, and ideas for developing full lessons with feedback using this model. Delete the scoop?
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From
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July 8, 2012 2:51 AM
Shona Whyte: Ten suggestions for activities using video in the EFL/ESL classroom. Practical ideas described concisely. Delete the scoop?
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University of Hawai'i Spanish professor Marta Gonzalez-Lloret explains the principles of task-based language teaching (TBLT) and gives examples of technology use for language learners such as virtual and synthetic worlds (Second Life, World of Warcraft).
See a demonstration of her collaborative environment for Spanish learners "En busca de Esmeraldes" and another virtual environment for an ESP course for health professionals, plus a Chinese online course Delete the scoop?
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Website for presentations of the 2011 TBLT conference... Colloquia abstracts and presentations from John Norris among others. Delete the scoop?
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2010 collective volume edited by Michael Thomas and Hayo Reinders. It's reviewed for the Linguist List here http://linguistlist.org/pubs/reviews/get-review.cfm?SubID=4521758. Delete the scoop?
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From
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July 30, 2012 5:57 AM
Shona Whyte: A little piece on how the flipped classroom fits task-based learning models and why it can help language teaching and learning by freeing up class time for interaction in the target language.
(Voxy.com sells online English tuition for Hispanic speakers.)
Shona Whyte's comment,
July 30, 2012 7:02 AM
More on the Flipped Classroom here http://www.scoop.it/t/telt/?tag=flipped%20classroom
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Shona Whyte: Very clearly structured 2006 conference presention - given with lectern and mic and no slides - in Busan, Korea, by Rod Ellis. The video is online at the Asian EFL Journal website, accessible with the login member and password busan2006 (which are helpfully posted on their video page).
Ellis explains what task-based language teaching (TBLT) is and why it is relevant to teaching English in Korea, illustrates with Korean students and discusses criticisms of the TBLT approach
Ellis identifies 3 dimensions of language teaching - goals (learning objectives) - content (Type A versus Type B syllabus) - methodology (accuracy vs fluency)
He introduces the notion of the Type B syllabus, which specifies learning activities or tasks, but not the language to be used. "Language is a by-product of the tasks."
TBLT aims to develop knowledge of language for natural communication, using a series of message-focused tasks, and the methodology is fluency, "saying what you want to say" rather than "using the language accurately." However, there is an accuracy side to the methodology of TBLT.
Why tasks? 1. develop implicit knowledge incidentally through the effort to communicate (an attempt to recreate the same conditions in the classroom as for L1) 2. allow automatisation - unless you experience trying to communication in "real operating conditions" (like outside the classroom) you will never use the language fluently
What is a task? 4 criteria 1. goal-directed (not a linguistic purpose) 2. primary focus on meaning (using language) 3. participants choose linguistic resources (unlike Type A frameworks which provide language resources) 4. task has clearly defined outcome
Unfocused versus focused tasks: unfocused tasks are not designed to use a particular language feature, which focused tasks are oriented towards a particular grammatical structure, although primary focus is always on meaning. No situational grammar activities, to practice a particular structure.
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Shona Whyte:
Here's a very practical discussion of group formation for second language interaction by Judith Rance-Roney in the English Teaching Forum 2010. It begins with some second language research supporting the importance of interaction for language acquisition, then looks at a variety of ways of grouping students to maximise their learning opportunities. It's based on ESL for higher education in the US, but applicable to foreign language contexts also for the most part.
I've picked out some do's and don'ts which I think are valuable:
DO - also consider a roster of groupings, to make different groups for different tasks/topics - group students by proficiency; keep a class list ordered by language level for quick reference - assign roles to group members: leader, scribe, reporter, vocabulary monitor, time monitor - allow 5 minutes' study time for learners to absorb new language or instructions before group work begins
DON'T - consistently mix high and low proficiency learners: the stronger students will dominate - always group by affiliation: learners who do not know each other well accomplish more on-task learning - always avoid grouping same-L1 learners together: L1 discussion can be helpful and code-switching can lead to greater analytic depth Via Phil Chappell Delete the scoop?
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Website for presentations of the 2011 TBLT conference... Kim McDonough's plenary presentation on Perceived challenges with the use of task in EFL contexts: "teachers have questioned whether task-based peer interaction facilitates the acquisition of grammatical and lexical forms or provides language input that has new, complex, or accurate forms." Delete the scoop?
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