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王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题详解

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题详解

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题详解《英语教学法教程》(第2版)(王蔷主编,⾼等教育出版社)为普通⾼等教育“⼗五”国家级规划教材,适⽤于师范院校英语专业学⽣,也可⽤于中学英语教师的继续教育课程和各类英语教师的在职培训课程。

该书被很多院校指定为英语专业考研必读书和学术研究参考书。

作为该教材的学习辅导书,本书具有以下⼏个⽅⾯的特点:1.梳理章节脉络,浓缩内容精华。

每章的复习笔记以该教材为主并结合其他教材对本章的重难点知识进⾏了整理,并参考了国内名校名师讲授该教材的课堂笔记,因此,本书的内容⼏乎浓缩了经典教材的知识精华。

2.中英双语对照,凸显难点要点。

本书章节笔记采⽤了中英⽂对照的形式,强化对重要难点知识的理解和运⽤。

3.解析课后习题,提供详尽答案。

本书收录了课⽂中的所有习题,并在参考教材附录的基础上对习题答案进⾏了完善和补充。

4.精选考研真题,补充难点习题。

本书精选名校近年考研真题及相关习题,并提供答案和详解。

所选真题和习题基本体现了各个章节的考点和难点,但⼜不完全局限于教材内容,是对教材内容极好的补充。

试读(部分内容)第1章 语⾔和语⾔学习1.1 复习笔记本章要点:1. The way we learn languages我们习得语⾔的⽅式2. Views on language语⾔观点3. The structural view of language结构主义语⾔理论4. The functional view of language功能主义语⾔理论5. The interactional view of language交互语⾔理论6. Common views on language learning关于语⾔学习的普遍观点7. Process-oriented theories and condition-oriented theories强调过程的语⾔学习理论和强调条件的语⾔学习理论8. The behaviorist theory⾏为主义学习理论9. Cognitive theory认知学习理论10. Constructivist theory建构主义学习理论11. Socio-constructivist theory社会建构主义理论12. Qualities of a good language teacher⼀个好的语⾔⽼师必备的素养13. Teacher’s professional development教师专业技能发展本章考点:我们如何习得语⾔;结构主义语⾔理论;功能主义语⾔理论;交互语⾔理论;关于语⾔学习的普遍观点;强调过程的语⾔学习理论和强调条件的语⾔学习理论;⾏为主义学习理论;认知学习理论;建构主义学习理论;社会建构主义理论;成为⼀个好的语⾔⽼师所要具备的基本素质;教师专业技能发展图。

英语课程教学法复习笔记

英语课程教学法复习笔记

英语课程教学法复习笔记第1章语言和语言学习1.1复习笔记第一章重点讨论语言观和语言学习观、优秀英语教师的基本素质以及如何成为一名优秀的英语教师。

本章要点:1.How do we learn languages?我们如何习得语言?2.\^ews on language 语言观点3.The structural view of language 结构主义语言理论4.The functional view of language 功能主义语言理论5.The interactional view of language 交互语言理论6.What are the common views on language learning?关于语言学习的普遍观点7.process-oriented theories and condition-oriented theories 强调过程的语言学习理论和强调条件的语言学习理论8.The behaviorist theory 行为主义学习理论9.Cognitive theory 认知学习理论10.Constructivist theory 建构主义理论11.Socio-constructivist theory 社会建构主义理论12.What makes a good language teacher?如何才能成为一个好的语言老师13.Teacher’s professional development教师专业技能发展本章考点:我们如何习得语言;我们如何习得语言;结构主义语言理论;功能主义语言理论;交互语言理论;关于语言学习的普遍观点;强调过程的语言学习理论和强调条件的语言学习理论;行为主义学习理论;认知学习理论;建构主义理论;社会建构主义理论;成为一个好的语言老师所要具备的基本素质;教师专业技能发展图本章内容索引:I . How do we learn languages?II.Views on language1.The structural view of language2.The functional view of language3.The interactional view of languageIII.Views on language learning and learning in general1.The behaviorist theory2.Cognitive theory3.Constructivist theory4.Socio-constructivist theoryIV.What makes a good language teacher?V.How can one become a good language teacher?VI. An overview of the bookphysical context in which language learning takes place, such as the number of students, the kind of input learners receive, andthe atmosphere. Some researchers attempt to formulate teaching approaches directly from these theories. For example, the Natural Approach, T otal Physical Response, and the Silent Way are based on one or more dimensions of processes and conditions.Some researchers attempt to formulate teaching approaches directly from these theories.1.The behaviorist theory( Skinner)a stimulus-response theory of psychologyProposed by behavioral psychologist Skinner. He suggested that language is also a form of behavior. It can be learned the same way as an animal is trained to respond to stimuli. This theory of learning is referred to as behaviorism.The key point of the theory of conditioning is that “you can train an animal to do anything (within reason) if you follow a certain procedure which has three major stages, stimulus, response, and reinforcement,,One influential result is the audio-lingual method, which involves endless ‘listen and repeat’ drilling activities. The idea of this method is that language is learned by constant repetition and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakes were immediately corrected, and correct utterances were immediately praised. This method is still used in many parts of the world today.2.Cognitive theory( Noam Chomsky):The term cognitive is to describe loosely methods in which students are asked to think rather than simply repeat.A language learner acquires language competence which enables him to produce language.Though Chomsky’s theor y is not directly applied in language teaching, it has had a great impact on the profession.One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentences based on their understanding of certain rules. This idea is clearly in opposition to the audio-lingual method.3.Constructivist theoryThe constructivist theory believes that learning is a process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his / her own experiences and what he / she already knows.It is believed that education is used to develop the mind, not just to rote recall what is learned.John Dewey believed that teaching should be built based on what learners already knew and engage learners in learning activities. Teachers need to design environments and interact with learners to foster inventive, creative, critical learners.4.Socio-constructivist theorySimilar to constructivist theory, socio-constructivist theory represented by Vygotsky (1978) emphasises interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of ‘Zone of Proximal Development,(ZPD) and scaffolding. In other words, learning is best achieved through the dynamic interaction between the teacher and the learner and between learners.质和实体语境,如学生的数量、氛围等。

英语教学法教程考研笔记

英语教学法教程考研笔记

Unit 1 language and language teaching1. What makes a good language teacher?● Ethic devotion● Professional qualities● Personal styles2. Views on language learning and learning in general:● Process-oriented theories: concerned with how the mind organizes newinformation such as habit formation, induction, making inference, hypothesis testing and generalization.● Condition-oriented theories: emphasize the nature of the human and physicalcontext in which the language learning take place, such as the number of the students and the kind of input learners receive, and the atmosphere.3. How can one become a language teacher?It involves more factors and longer learning time, and may never be finished.Stage 1: all English teachers are supposed to have a sound command of English. Stage 2: learning, practice and reflection. ● Learning:✓ Learning from others’ experience (empirical knowledge gainedthrough reading and observation) ✓ Learning the received knowledge (language learning theories,educational psychology, language teaching methodology, etc.)● Practice✓ Pre-service practice (pseudo practice)✓ Real classroom practice● Reflection: take on reflection seriously and keep reflectionGoal: (do not have an end) one can never become a perfect teacher. There isalways room for improvement.language development other's experiencereceived knowledgeown experience Practice Reflectio Professional competence Stage 1 Stage 2 GoalUnit 2 communicative principles and task-based language teaching1.What is communicative competence●Linguistic competenceKnowledge of language itself●Pragmatic competenceThe choice of the vocabulary and structure depends on the setting, therelative status of the speakers and their relationship.●Discourse competenceThe ability to understand or to express a topic logically and coherently byeffectively employing or comprehending the cohesive marks, such as first,second.●Strategic competenceSearching for other means of expression, such as using a similar phrase ……●Fluencythe ability to link units of speech together with facility and without strain or inappropriate slowness or undue hesitation)CLT: communicative language teaching2.Principles of communicative language teaching●Communication principleActivities that involve real communication promote learning.●Task principleActivities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning.●Meaningfulness principleLanguage that is meaningful to the learner support the learning process.3.Main features of communicative activities●Communicative purposeThere must be some information gap that students seek to bridge●Communicative desireA real need to communicate●Content not formThey must have some massage they want to communicate●Variety of language●No teacher intervention●No material controlTBLT: task- based language teaching4.Four components of a task● A purposeMake sure students have a reason for undertaking the task● A contextThis can be real, simulated or imaginary, and involves sociolinguistic issues such as the location and the relationship o f the speaker……● A processGetting students to learn some language strategies such as problem solving, reasoning……● A product5.Focus on individual language items –Purposeful and contextualized communication +ThenExercise → task6.TBL:●Pre-taskIntroduction to topic and task●Task cycle✓Task✓Planning✓Report✓Students hear task recording or read text●Language focus✓Analysis and practice✓Review and repeat task7.PPP●PresentationOf single new item; teachers introduces new vocabulary and grammatical structures.●PracticeOf new item: drills, exercise, and dialogue●ProductionActivity, role play or task to encourage ‘free’ use of language8.How to design tasks●Think about students’ needs and interests and abilities●Brainstorm possible tasks●Evaluate the list●Choose the language items●Preparing materials9.Constrains of CLT:●Whether it will meet the needs of learners from different contexts●It is very difficult to design a one to one correspondence between a function aform.10.Constrains of TBLT●Not effective for presenting new languages●Time is limited: teachers are busy●Culture of learning: some students may find it difficult to adapt to TBLT●Level of difficulty: students may find task-base language teaching quitedifficult of they do not have sufficient linguistic resources.Unit 4 lesson planning1.Why is lesson planning important?●It can make teachers aware of the aims and language contents of the lesson.●It helps teachers distinguish the various stages of a lesson and see therelationship between them so that activities of different difficulty levels canbe arranged properly and the lesson can move smoothly from one stage toanother.●It gives teachers opportunity to anticipate potential problems that may arisein class, and prepare some solutions to them.●It builds teachers’ confidence in class.●Teachers can also be aware of teaching aids in class.●Planning is a good practice and sign of professionalism.2.Principles for good class planning:●AimIt means realistic goals for the lesson; the things students are able to do at theend of the class.●VarietyPlanning a variety of different activities to introduce a wide selection ofmaterials, so that learning is always interesting.●FlexibilityPreparing some extra and alternative activities and tasks as the class does notalways go according to the plan.●LearnabilityThe contents and tasks planned for the lesson should be within the learningcapability of the students.●LinkageThe steps and steps in each stage are planned in such a way that they aresomeway linked with another one.3.Macro planningA planning over a longer period of time, for instance a whole-year course. It isoften done by a group of teachers who are to teach the same course.●Knowing about the professionWhich language area and language stage should be taught?●Knowing about the institutionThe institution arrangements of the time, frequency of the class……●Knowing about the learners●Knowing about the syllabus●Knowing about the textbook●Knowing about the objectivesponents of a lesson plan●Background informationWho the students are. The time and date of the class.●Teaching aimsWhat students are able to achieve at the end of the lesson(Linguistic and language skills)●Language contents and skills●Stages and procedures●Teaching aidsTeaching aids and resources, and how teachers will use them to aid learning ●End of lesson summaryTake some time to summarize what is learned in class.●Optional activities and assignments●After lesson reflectionUnit 5 classroom arrangement1.Efficient classroom arrangement can be achieved when these six conditions aremet:●The teacher plays appropriate roles.●The teacher provides clear instructions●Students are grouped in a way suitable for the learning activities.●The teacher asks appropriate questions.●There is discipline as well as harmony in the class.●The students’ errors are treated properly.2.The different roles of teachers:●Controller✓The teacher controls the pace so that the activities run smoothly and efficiently.✓The more communicative the activity is, the less control it needs.●Assessor✓Correcting mistakes✓Organizing feedback●OrganizerDesign and organize the tasks●PrompterWhen students are not sure how to start an activity, or what to do next, the teacher give appropriate prompts. (and……/anything else?/yes, but why?)●Participant●Resource-provider3.Rules to follow for making instructions effective:●To use simple instructions and make them suit the comprehension level of thestudents. (Also, make your comments as simple and as natural as possible)●To use mother tongue only when it’s necessary.●The best thing to do is to model the task/activity before letting students moveinto groups and pairs.●Demonstration is more effective than words.4.Student grouping:●Whole class work:✓Advantages:Everyone feels being together with others.It is good for teachers to instruction and explanation together, and also an ideal way to show materials and do presentation together.✓Disadvantages:Individuality is not favoured in this sense.Not everyone has an opportunity to express himself.Some students feel nervous and anxious when they are asked to present in front of class.It favors the transmission of knowledge from teacher to students rather than students discovering things by themselves.It is not a good way to enhance real communication. Students cannot communicate with others in this sense.●Pair work✓AdvantagesIt dramatically increase students’ speaking time in class.It allows students to work together rath er than under teachers’ guidance.It allows teachers to work with the weak pairs when others are working on their own.It can promote cooperation between students.✓DisadvantagesIt is often very noisy and teachers are afraid of losing control of the class.Some students may talk in native language or something not related to the topic. It is not very easy for teachers to monitor every pair.Some students may not like to work with peers, and they, think they can only learn from their teachers.So they refuse to participate in the activities.The choice of pair is a problem. S ome students don’t like to work with a particular partner while someone may dominate all the time.●Group workingSome groups may finish the task fast while some may be very slow. Teachers may have to prepare some optional activities for the quick group and be ready to help the slower groups all the time.●Individual studyTeachers need to prepare different tasks for different groups.5.Measures for disciplined acts and badly behaving students:●Acting immediatelyIndisciplined acts should be immediately stopped, so that less damage is made.●Stop the classIf the discipline is so disruptive as to hinder the progress of the whole class, the teacher should stop the class and make it clear what is wrong.●Rearrange the seats●Change the activity●Talk to students after class●Create a code of behaviorThe teachers and learners can work together to create some rules for the class during activities.6.Questioning in classroom●Display questions: questions that are already known to teachers and they areasking questions to check if students know the answer.●Genuine questions: questions that are used to find new information. They areoften more communicative.●Lower- order questions: questions that simply require recalling of informationor memorization of facts.●Higher-order questions: questions requiring more reasoning, analysis, andevaluation.7.Dealing with errors:●Dealing with spoken errors:If the task is not focusing on accuracy or fluency, ignore it.●When to correct:It is best not to interrupt students during fluency work, unless communication breaks down. If there are some common mistakes that other students might also have problems with, the teacher can take a note in his/her mind and try to do the correction after the student’s perfo rm.●How to correct:✓Self-correcting is encouraged.✓Indirect correction: repeating; asking other students to answer again……Unit 6 teaching pronunciations1.The role of teaching pronunciation●Students need not able to read and write IPA and to know phonetics.●Adult learners need focus on pronunciations, but young leaners don’t.●Learners who have more exposure to English need less focus onpronunciation than those who only learn English in the class.2.Realistic goal of teaching pronunciation:●Consistency: the pronunciation should be smooth and natural.●Intelligibility: the pronunciation should be understandable to the listeners.●Communicative efficiency: the pronunciation should help convey themeaning that is intended by the speaker.3.Focusing on a sound:●Say the sound alone●Get students to repeat the sound in chorus.●Get individual students to repeat the sound.●Explain how to make the sound.If students can produce the sound correctly, after the teacher’s modelling, it is not necessary to explain ‘how’.●Say the sound in a word.●Contrast it with other sounds.4.Perception practice:●Using minimal pairs:will-well till-tell fill-fell lid-led (tell which one is read)●Which orderPit pet bet (1 3 2)●Same or differentMet-meet well-well●Odd one outBit bit bit pit (No.4 is different.)●Complete:_ate_ate_ate_ate_ate_ate(late mate fate date hate rate……)5.Production practice:●Listening and repeat●Fill in the blanks✓Children love to play games.✓Black and white make gray.✓After April comes May.●Make up sentencesLast fast calm dark ……Making a sentence using as many from the given words.●Use meaningful context●Using picture●Use tongue twisters6.Practicing stress:●Using gestures:By clapping hands or using an arm movements as if conducting music.●Use the voice:Raise the voice to indicate stress●Use the blackboard:Highlight the stress parts by underlining them or writing them on the blackboard.Unit7. Teaching grammar1.Different ways to presenting grammar●The deductive methodRelies on reasoning, analyzing and comparingDisadvantages:✓It teaches grammar as an isolate one✓Little attention is paid to meaning✓Practice is more mechanicalAdvantages:✓It can be successful with selected and motivated students.✓It could save time when students are confronted with grammar rule which is complex but which has to learn.●The inductive method✓The teacher provide students with authentic language date and induces the learners to realize grammar rules without any form of explicitexplanation.✓Students are to apply the newly presented structure to produce sentences with given visual aids or verbal prompts.✓The teacher may elicit the grammar rule from the students.●The guided discovery method✓Students are induced to discover the rules by themselves but carefully guided and assisted by the teacher.2.Implicit knowledge and explicit knowledge●Implicit knowledge: knowledge that is unconsciously existed in our mind,which we can make use of automatically without making any effort.●Explicit knowledge: our conscious knowledge about the language.3.Successful practice●Pre-learningPractice is more effective when new language is clearly perceived and taken into short-term memory by the leaners.●V olume and repetitionThe more language the leaners are exposed to or perceived the more they are likely to learn.●Success-orientation:●Heterogeneity(异质性)Practice should be able to elicit different sentences and generate different levels of answers from different learners.●Teacher assistance●Interest4.Grammar practice:●Mechanical practice✓Substitution drillsMrs. Green has the largest house in town.(clean house/ green lawn/ pretty garden)✓Transformation drillsChange the following sentence into past tense.Now he lives in London. (last year. Paris)●Meaningful/communicative practiceRank the items on the left column according to the listed on the top.cheap healthy tasty Important BeerWaterFruitcigarettesEg. I think beer is cheaper than fruit.ing prompts for practice:●Using picture prompts●Using mimes (role play) or gestures as prompts●Using information sheet as prompts●Using key phrase or key words as prompts●Using chained phrases for story telling.Unit 8 teaching vocabulary1.What does knowing a word involve?●Knowing its pronunciation and stress●Knowing its spelling and grammatical properties●Knowing its meaning●How and when to use it to express the intended meaning2.According to Hedge, vocabulary learning involves at least two aspect of meaning:●Understanding denotation and connotative meaning:✓Denotation meaningIt refer to those words that we use to label things as regards real objects,such as a name or a sign.✓Connotative meaningIt refers to the attitudes or emotions of a language user in choosing aword and influence of those on the listener or reader’s interpretation ofthe word.For example, animal itself has a connotative meaning often related tofriendship and loyalty.●Understanding the sense relations among words✓CollocationsIt is believed that teaching word collocations is a more effective way thanjust teaching one single word at a time.✓Synonyms, antonyms, and hyponyms✓Receptive/passive and productive/active vocabulary3.Ways of presenting vocabulary:●Try to provide a visual or physical demonstration whenever possible●Provide a verbal context to demonstrate meaning●Use synonyms and antonyms and hyponyms to explain meaning●Use word formation rules and common affixes to build up new lexicalknowledge.●Pre-fabricated formulaic items: to teach vocabulary in chunks. Chunks referto a group of words that go together to form meaning.4.Ways of consolidating vocabulary:●Labelling●Spot the difference●Describe and draw●Play a game●Use word series●Word bingo●Word association●Find synonyms and antonyms●Categories5.Developing vocabulary learning strategy●Review regularly●Guess meaning from the context●Organize vocabulary effectively●Use a dictionaryMonolingual dictionary should be encouraged than bi-lingual dictionary●Students should be guided constantly to self-evacuate the effectiveness of thestrategy.Unit 9 teaching listening1.Listening can be more difficult than reading because:●Different speaker produce different sounds in different ways. (Differentdialects, and accents, stress, rhythms, intonations……)●The listener has little or no control over the speed of the input of spokenmaterial;●Spoken material is often heard only once and in most cases, we cannot goback and listen again as we can when we read.●The listener cannot pause to work out the meaning of the hard material as canbe done when reading.●Speed is more likely to be distorted by the media which transmit sounds orthe background noise that can make it difficult to hear clearly.●The listener sometimes has to deal simultaneously with other task whilelistening, such as formal note-taking, writing down directions or messages from telephone calls, or operating while listening to instructions.2.Characters of listening characters:●Spontaneity: people speaking spontaneously and informally withoutrehearsing what they are going to say ahead of time.●Context: the situation helps us predict what we are going to hear.●Visual clues: most of the time, we can see the person we are listening to.(facial expressions, gestures, and other body language)●Listener’s response: we can interrupt the speakers and ask for repetition orclarification.●Speaker’s adjustment. (The speaker can adjust the way of speaking accordingto the listener’s reaction.)3.Many published textbooks have tended to focus on listening test rather thanfocusing on improving students’ listening performance. This approach has two problems:●It does not give students opportunities to develop listening skills with otherskills.●Listening compr ehension questions only test students’ level of comprehensionbut do not train students how to listening or how to develop effective listening strategies.4.Principles for listening:●Focus on process: people must do many things to process information thatthey are receiving. It is very important to design tasks which can show how well students comprehend the listening material.●Combine listening with other skills●Focus on comprehension of meaning (traditional textbook test on students’memory)●Grade and difficulty level appropriately:✓Type of language used✓Task or purpose in listening✓Context in which the listening occurs.5.Models for teaching listening:●Bottom-up model: listening comprehension is believed to start with sound andmeaning recognitions. Listeners construct meaning of what they hear based on the sound they hear.●Top-down model: listening for the gist and making use of the contextual cluesand background knowledge to construct meaning are emphasized.●Listening involves both bottom-up model and top-down model.Comprehension is the result of integrate of the information conveyed by the text with information and concepts already known by the listener.6.Three listening stages:●Pre-listening:✓Predicting✓Setting the scene (getting background information)✓Listening for the gist (ask students one or two questions that focus on the main idea or the tone or mood of the whole passage.)✓Listening for specific information✓Most of the time, we would only use only one pre-reading task. It couldn’t take muc h time.●While listening:✓No specific responses: giving students any task the first time they listening to a passage. It can take anxiety out of listening.✓Listen and tick: the task would be much easier.✓Listen and sequence: can be completed without understanding every word they hear. It can build confidence.✓Listen and act: total physical response✓Listen and draw: it works very well when there is an information gap between pairs. Related vocabulary should be pre-taught.✓Listen and fill: do not overdo this task because it may make students feel that they have to understand every word.✓It is helpful to provide a task for the students to do while they are listening. This gives the students a purpose to listen and helps them focuson the listening.●Post-listening:✓Multiple-choice questions: the teacher should balance his/her teaching in preparing students for traditional multiple-choice tests and preparingthem for using English in the real world.✓Answering questions: some types might lend themselves nicely to discuss in small groups.✓Note-taking and gap filling: while-listening and post-listening is combined.✓DictoglossPreparation: teachers introduces the topic and key words or asking general questions about the text.Dictation: three timesReconstructionAnalysis and correction✓There are many opportunities to integrate post-listening with other language style.Unit 10 teaching speaking:1.Four common features of spoken language:●Using less complex syntax●Taking short cuts, e.g. incomplete sentences●Using fixed conventional phrase/chunks●Using devices such as fillers, hesitation device to give time before speaking.2.Principles for teaching speaking:●Balancing accuracy-based with fluency-based practices●Contextualizing practice: people use language differently in different context,so it’s important to give students chance to experience language in meaningful contexts.●Personalizing practice: learn something that is close to students’ life●Building up confidence: only when students feel confident to expressthemselves, will they participate actively in the activities.●Maximizing meaningful interactions: (students practice in small groups andpairs)●Helping students develop speaking strategies●Making the best use of classroom learning environment to provide sufficientlanguage input and practice for the students.3.Other factors to consider when design speaking activities●Maximum foreign talk●Even participation●High motivation ( interesting topic/clear objective )●Right language level4.Types of speaking tasks: ( by Littlewood)Pre-communication activities: (controlled and semi-controlled)●Structural activities: pay attention to certain structures or functions so thatthese can be accurately produces.●Quasi-communication activities: focus more on meaning and communicationCommunicative activities: (communicative and more contextualization)●Functional communication activities●Social interaction activitiesStudents are more concerned on meaning.5.Example activities:●Information-gap activities●Dialogues and role-plays (✓Perform the dialogue in different moods.✓Success of role-play: the teachers’ enthusiasm; careful instruction;clear situations and roles; making sure students have the languagethey need.●Cue cards●Activities using pictures (work well with beginning level teachers for its clearobjective and a short time limit)●Problem solving activities (productive: there is a clear objective to be reachedor problem to be solved)●Find someone who●Human scramble.anizing speaking tasks:●Students talk a lot in foreign language●Designing small group speaking tasks (students are often feel shy speaking aforeign language in front the whole class)●Different groups can work at different levels. (Modify a given task to make iteasier for slower students and more challenging for more advanced students.)Unit 11 teaching writing1.What do effective readers do?●Have a clear purpose in reading●Read silently●Read phrase by phrase, rather than word by word●Concentrate on the important bits, skim the rest, and skip the insignificant parts●Use different speeds and strategies for different reading tasks●Perceive the information in the target language rather than mentally translate●Guess the meaning of new words from the context, or ignore them●Have and use background information to help understand the text2.What do we read:●If students have never had the experience of reading a particular type of text,how can they read it with ease in real life●We believe ESL/EFL reading textbook should have a variety of authenticmaterials, as much as the coverage allows3.There are two broad levels in the act of reading:● A recognition task of perceiving visual signal from the printed page througheyes● A cognitive task of interpreting the visual information, relating the receivedinformation with the reader’s own general knowledge, and reconstructing themeaning that the writer had meant to convey.4.Reading strategies:●specifying a purpose for reading●planning what to do / what steps to take●previewing the text●checking the predictions●skimming the text for the main ideas●scanning the text for specific information……5.the role of vocabulary●sight vocabulary: words that one is able to recognize immediately are oftenreferred to as sight vocabulary●The best and easiest way to develop vocabulary to read a great deal. Onlywhen an individual word is met and understood again and again in different contexts can it become a part of the learner’s sight vocabulary.●Instead of just using textbooks to reach the words and structures to thestudents, the teacher should try to introduce an extensive reading scheme whenever possible to encourage leaners to read more after class.●This automatic, rapid, and accurate process of word recognition should not beconfused with the strategy of slow, letter by letter, or syllable by syllable。

英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记

英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记

第三章、外语教学法的主要流派(八种)1.语法--翻译法A.从19世纪开始用于教学现代语言B.把目标语(外语)看成是一个规则系统,能在文本域句子中了解到,并与母语规则和意义有联系。

C.主要课堂教学活动:对整篇课文大意的译述,吧课文逐句从外语译成母语的活动,对课文中语法规则作演绎式的讲解,以及直接阅读课文以加深对课文的理解等活动。

E.重视词汇与语法的学习,强调阅读与写作能力的培养。

重视语言准确性的培养。

F.选材:外语的文学原著或简写本或改写本G.教师是课堂教学的权威,重视的传授者和课堂教学的组织者。

H.母语是教学语言,外语的意思是靠译成母语来理解。

2.直接法A.在19世纪末创立B.只使用目标语进行教学;意义通过语言、动作、物体等手段结合情景来表达;先教说,再教读与写;用归纳法讲授语法。

C.主要课堂教学活动:全外语教学--模仿、朗读和问答式主要的教学活动形式--作答均以完整的句子说出问句或答句。

E.培养学生使用外语进行交际的能力。

初级阶段重点在口语能力的培养F.选材:日常用语,以情景或某一话题为基础G.教师与学生是搭档关系,学生间可以进行对话并讨论问题H.全外语式教学,不在外语课堂上使用母语3.情景法(口语情景法)A.在20世纪30年代至60年代,英国应用语言学家创立(帕尔默&霍恩比)B.语言观是英国的结构主义,口语是语言的基础,结构式讲话能力的核心,应用情景中通过口头练习来学习语言结构。

(帕尔默&霍恩比)接受语言输入--重复操练记住--在实际练习中使之变成个人技能。

(帕尔默)C.主要课堂教学活动:《新概念英语》提出情景--学习语言--听说领会--反复操练--书面练习--巩固结构E.培养学生听说读写的能力,口语是第一性的,是笔头语的基础,重视语音语法的准确性。

F.教师是语言楷模,课堂活动的设计者与指挥官,学生是模仿者G.英语是教学语言4.听说法A.在第二次世界大战期间由美国语言学家建立B.在语言学理论方面是以结构主义作为其理论的基础,以行为主义的学习理论作为依据语言技能的获得通过刺激--反应--强化的过程。

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第1~3章【圣才出品】

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第1~3章【圣才出品】

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第1~3章【圣才出品】第1章语⾔和语⾔学习1.1 复习笔记本章要点:1. The way we learn languages我们习得语⾔的⽅式2. Views on language语⾔观点3. The structural view of language结构主义语⾔理论4. The functional view of language功能主义语⾔理论5. The interactional view of language交互语⾔理论6. Common views on language learning关于语⾔学习的普遍观点7. Process-oriented theories and condition-oriented theories 强调过程的语⾔学习理论和强调条件的语⾔学习理论8. The behaviorist theory⾏为主义学习理论9. Cognitive theory认知学习理论10. Constructivist theory建构主义学习理论11. Socio-constructivist theory社会建构主义理论12. Qualities of a good language teacher⼀个好的语⾔⽼师必备的素养13. Teacher’s professional development教师专业技能发展本章考点:我们如何习得语⾔;结构主义语⾔理论;功能主义语⾔理论;交互语⾔理论;关于语⾔学习的普遍观点;强调过程的语⾔学习理论和强调条件的语⾔学习理论;⾏为主义学习理论;认知学习理论;建构主义学习理论;社会建构主义理论;成为⼀个好的语⾔⽼师所要具备的基本素质;教师专业技能发展图。

本章内容索引:Ⅰ. The way we learn languagesⅡ. Views on language1. The structural view of language2. The functional view of language3. The interactional view of languageⅢ. Views on language learning and learning in general1. Research on language learning2. Common views on language learning and learning in general(1)Behaviorist theory(2)Cognitive theory(3)Constructivist theory(4)Socio-constructivist theoryⅣ. Qualities of a good language teacherⅤ. Development of a good language teacherⅥ. An overview of the bookThis chapter serves as an introduction for setting the scene for this methodology course. It discusses issues concerning views on language and language learning or learning in general with the belief that such views will affect teachers’ ways of teaching and thus learners’ ways of learning. The qualities of a good language teacher are also discussed in order to raise the participants’ awareness of what is required for a good English teacher.这⼀章主要是介绍教学法的⽅法论,其中讨论的问题涉及语⾔和语⾔学习的观点,或者⼀般学习及这些观点对教师教学⽅式和学习者学习⽅式的影响,本章也讨论了⼀个好的英语教师应具备的素质,以提⾼语⾔教学参与者对优秀英语教师相关要求的意识。

英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元).doc

英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元).doc

英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元)FLTM:foreignlanguageteachingmethodologyisasciencewhichstudiesthepr ocessesandpatternsofforeignlanguageteaching,aimingatrevealingthenatura landlawsofforeignlanguages.MajorapproachesinFLT:Grammar-translation method(deductive演绎法)Directmethod(inductive归纳法)Audio-lingualmethodHumanisticapproaches:thatemphasizethedevelop mentofhumanvalues,growthinself-awarenessandintheunderstandingofothe rs,sensitivitytohumanfeelingsandemotions,andactivestudentinvolvementin learningandinthewayhumanlearningtakespalaceThesilentwaySuggestoped iaCommunitylanguagelearning(CLL)Totalphysicalresponsemethod(TPR)l Thenaturalapproach(NA)lThecommunicativeapproach(CA)Anapproachis asetofcorrelativeassumptionsdealingwiththenatureoflanguageteachingadle aning.Approachisaxiomatic.Itdescribesthenatureofthesubjectmattertobtau ght.Methodisanoverallplanfortheorderlypresentationoflanguagematerial,n opartofwhichcontradicts,andallofwhichisbasedupon,theselectedapproach. Anapproachisaxiomatic,amethodisprocedural.Withinoneapproach,thereca nbemanymethods.Atechniqueisimplementation---thatwhichactuallytakesp laceinaclassroom.Itisaparticulartrick,stratagem,orcontrivanceusedtoaccom plishanimmediateobjective.Techniquesmustbconsistentwithamethod,andt hereforeIharmonywithanapproachaswell.Viewsonlanguage:Structuralview :thestructuralviewoflanguageseeslanguageasalinguisticsystemmadeupofvarioussubsystems:thesoundsystem(phonology);thediscreteunitsofmeaningp roducedbysoundcombinations(morphology);andthesystemofcombininguni tsofmeaningforcommunication(syntax).Functionalview:thefunctionalview notonlyseeslanguageasalinguisticsystembutalsomeansfordoingthings.Fun ctionalactivities:offering,suggesting,advising,apologizing,etc.Internationa lview:considerslanguagetobeacommunicativetool,whosemainuseistobuild upandmaintainsocialrelationsbetweenpeople.Therefore,learnersnotonlyne edtoknowthegrammarandvocabularyofthelanguagebutasimportantlytheyn eedtoknowtherulesforusingtheminawholerangeofcommunicativecontexts. Process-orientedtheories:areconcernedwithhowthemindorganizesnewinfor mationsuchashabitformation,induction,makinginference,hypothesistesting andgeneralization.Condition-orientedtheories:emphasizethenatureofthehu manandphysicalcontextinwhichlanguagelearningtakesplace,suchasthenum berofstudents,thekindofinputlearnersreceives,andtheatmosphere.Behavior isttheory,theideaofthismethodisthatlanguageislearnedbyconstantrepletiona ndthereinforcementoftheteacher.Mistakeswereimmediatelycorrected,andc orrectutteranceswereimmediatelypraised.Cognitivetheory,languageisnotaf ormofbehavior,itisanintricaterule-basedsystemandalargepartoflanguageac quisitionisthelearningofthissystem.Constructivisttheory,believesthatlearni ngisaprocessinwhichthelearnerconstructsmeaningbasedonhis/herownexpe riencesandwhathe/shealreadyknows.Socio-constructivisttheory,similartoc onstructivisttheory,socio-constructivisttheoryemphasizesinteractionandengagementwiththetargetlanguageinasocialcontextbasedontheconceptof“Zo neofProximalDevelopment”(ZPD)andscaffolding.Ethicdevotion,professio nalqualitiesandpersonalstylesCLT:communicativelanguageteachingTBLT: task-basedlanguageteachingThegoalofCLTistodevelopstudents’communicativecompetence,whichincludesboththeknowledgeaboutthelang uageandtheknowledgeabouthowtousethelanguageappropriatelyincommun icativesituations.P16Hedgediscussesfivemaincomponentsofcommunicativ ecompetence:linguisticcompetence,pragmaticcompetence,discoursecomp etence,strategiccompetence,andfluency.Howattproposesaweakandastrong versionofCLT.Weakversion:learnersfirstacquirelanguageasastructuralsyste mandthenlearnhowtouseitincommunication.---theweakversionregardsover tteachingoflanguageformsandfunctionsasnecessarymeansforhelpinglearne rstodeveloptheabilitytousethemforcommunication.Strongversion:languag eisacquiredthroughcommunication.Thelearnersdiscoverthestructuralsyste mintheprocessofleaninghowtocommunicate.---regardsexperiencesofusingt helanguageasthemainmeansornecessaryconditionsforlearningalanguageast heyprovidetheexperienceforlearnerstoseehowlanguageisusedincommunic municativeactivities:P24Tasksareactivitieswherethetargetlangu ageisusedbytheleanerforacommunicativepurpose(goal)inordertoachievean outcome.Fourcomponentsofatask:apurpose,acontext,aprocess,andaproduc tTasksfocusonthecompleteactofcommunication.(Purposefulaccuracywork ---needtointervenemoreHowtocorrect:directteachercorrection,indirectteachercorrection,self-correction,peercorrection,wholeclasscorrection.Goaloft eachingpronunciation:Consistency:thepronunciationshouldbesmoothandn aturalIntelligibility:thepronunciationshouldbeunderstandabletothelisteners Communicativeefficiency:thepronunciationshouldhelpconveythemeaningt hatisintendedbythespeaker.Aspectsofpronunciation:besidessoundsandpho neticsymbols,suchasstress(strongandweakform,wordstressandsentencestre ss),intonationandrhythm(variation).Perceptionpractice:usingminimalpairs, whichorder,sameordifferent?Oddandout,Completion.Productionpractice:li stenandrepeat,filltheblanks,makeupsentences,usemeaningfulcontext,usepi cture,usetonguetwisters.Grammarpresentation:Thedeductivemethod,thein ductivemethod,theguideddiscoverymethodGrammarpractice:mechanicalp racticeandmeaningful/communicativepractice.Mechanicalpractice:involve sactivitiesthatareaimedatformaccuracy.Studentspayrepeatedattentiontoake yelementinastructure.Substitutiondrillandtransformationdrills.Meaningful practice:focusontheproduction,comprehensionorexchangeofmeaningthou ghthestudentskeepaneyeonthewaynewlylearnedstructuresareusedinthepro cess.Itcomesaftermechanicalpractice.(Comparativesandsuperlatives).Usin gpictureprompts,usingmimesorgesturesasprompts,usinginformationsheeta sprompts,usingkeyphrasesorkeywordsasprompts,usingchainedphrasesfors torytelling,usingcreatedsituations.Whatdoesknowingawordinvolve?Denot ativemeaning;connotativemeaning;chunk/collocations;synonyms,antony msandhyponyms;receptiveandproductivevocabulary.Denotativemeaningofawordoralexicalitemreferstothosewordsthatweusetolabelthingsasregardsr ealobjects,suchasanameorasign,etc.inthephysicalworld.Primarymeaningof aword.Aconnotativemeaningofawordreferstotheattitudesoremotionsofalan guageuserinchoosingawordandtheinfluenceoftheseonthelistenerorreader’sinterpretationoftheword.Collocationsrefertowordsthatco-occurwithhighfr equencyandhavebeenacceptedaswaysfortheuseofwords.Forinstance,see,lo okat,watch.Hyponymsrefertowordswhichcanbegroundedtogetherunderthe samesuperordinateconcept.Receptive/passivevocabularyreferstowordsthat oneisabletorecognizeandcomprehendinreadingorlisteningbutunabletousea utomaticallyinspeakingorwriting.Thosewordsthatoneisnotonlyabletorecog nizebutalsoabletouseinspeechandwritingareconsideredasone’sproductive/activevocabulary.Waysofpresentingvocabulary:inductiveandd eductive.Waysofconsolidatingvocabulary:labeling;spotthedifference;descr ibeanddraw;playagame;usewordsseries;wordbingo;wordassociation;findin gsynonymsandantonyms;categories;usingwordnet-work;usingtheinternetr esourcesformoreideas.Developingvocabularylearningstrategies:reviewreg ularly,guessmeaningfromcontext,organizevocabularyeffectively,useadicti onary,andmanagestrategyuse.Principlesandmodelsforteachinglistening:foc usonprocess,combinelisteningwithotherskills(listeningcanbepracticewithn ot-taking,andanswers,roleplays,retelling,interviewing,discussions,orawriti ngtask),focusonthecomprehensionofmeaning,gradedifficultylevelappropri ately,principlesforselectingandusinglisteningactivities.Twoapproachesarefrequentlyusedtodescribedifferentprocessesoflistening.Bottom-upmodelan dTop-downmodel.Bottom-upmodel:从细节入手startwithsoundandmeaningrecognitions.Listenersconstructmeaningofwhat theyhearbasedonthesoundtheyhear,expectthelistenershaveaveryeffectivesh ort-termmemoryastheyhavetomakesenseofeverysoundinordertofigureoutt hemeaningofwords,phrase,andstructures.Ifthereareunfamiliarsounds,listen erswillfinditverydifficulttokeepupwithspeaker.---recognizingsoundsofwor ds,phrasesorstructures.Top-downmodel:着重概要listeningforgistandmakinguseofthecontextualcluesandbackgroundknowle dgetoconstructmeaningareemphasized.Listenerscanunderstandbetterifthey alreadyhavesomeknowledgeintheirmindaboutthetopic.Suchknowledgeisal sotermedaspriorknowledgeorschematicknowledge---mentalframeworksfo rvariousthingsandexperienceweholdinourlong-termmemory.---referringm eaningfrombroadcontextualcluesandbackgroundknowledge.Threeteaching stages:pre-listening—warmingup;while-listening---listeningcomprehensio n;post-listening---checkinganswers.TeachingspeakingLesscomplexsyntax, shortcuts,incompletesentences,devicessuchasfillers,hesitationdevicetogive timetothinkingbefore。

英语教学法王蔷笔记

英语教学法王蔷笔记

英语教学法王蔷笔记摘要:一、王蔷《英语教学法教程》概述二、英语学习的基本方法1.语言与学习的的关系2.学习语言的个体差异三、英语教学方法及步骤1.制定明确的教学目标2.情景教学法的应用3.常见英语教学方法的介绍四、总结与展望正文:一、英语学习的基本方法1.语言与学习的的关系语言是人类交流的基本工具,学习语言是一个持续的过程。

个体通过与他人的互动、参与各种语言活动,逐渐掌握语言技能。

2.学习语言的个体差异不同的人在学习语言过程中,由于认知能力、学习动机、语言环境等因素的不同,呈现出个体差异。

教师应关注学生的个性化需求,制定因材施教的教学策略。

二、英语教学方法及步骤1.制定明确的教学目标教学目标是课堂教学的出发点和回归点。

教师应根据学生的实际情况,制定具体、明确的教学目标,确保教学过程的有效性。

2.情景教学法的应用情景教学法是一种以生活场景为依托的教学方法。

教师应创设真实、生动、实用的情景,帮助学生将所学语言材料进行综合、创造性地表达交流。

3.常见英语教学方法的介绍(1)Task-Based Language Teaching(TBLT):以任务为导向的教学方法,强调学生在完成任务的过程中自然地学习语言。

(2)五步教学法:包括引入、练习、输出、反馈和巩固五个步骤,逐步引导学生掌握语言技能。

(3)五指教学法:一种针对听、说、读、写、译五个语言技能的教学方法,注重均衡发展学生的语言能力。

(4)3P教学法:包括呈现、实践、产出的教学过程,强调在实践中学习语言。

(5)交际型教学:以培养学生的交际能力为核心,注重语言运用的实际场景。

三、总结与展望王蔷的《英语教学法教程》为英语教师提供了丰富的教学理论和实践方法。

通过关注学生的个体差异、制定明确的教学目标,以及运用多样的教学方法,教师可以提高英语教学质量,培养学生的语言交际能力。

(完整word版)英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元),推荐文档

(完整word版)英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元),推荐文档

FLTM: foreign language teaching methodology is a science which studies the processes and patterns of foreign language teaching, aiming at revealing the natural and laws of foreign languages.Major approaches in FLT:Grammar-translation method (deductive演绎法)Direct method (inductive归纳法)Audio-lingual methodHumanistic approaches: that emphasize the development of human values, growth in self-awareness and in the understanding of others, sensitivity to human feelings and emotions, and active student involvement in learning and in the way human learning takes palaceThe silent waySuggestopediaCommunity language learning (CLL)Total physical response method (TPR)●The natural approach(NA)●The communicative approach(CA )An approach is a set of correlative assumptions dealing with the nature of language teaching ad leaning. Approach is axiomatic. It describes the nature of the subject matter to b taught.Method is an overall plan for the orderly presentation of language material, no part of which contradicts, and all of which is based upon, the selected approach. An approach is axiomatic, a method is procedural. Within one approach, there can be many methods.A technique is implementation---that which actually takes place in a classroom. It is a particular trick, stratagem, or contrivance used to accomplish an immediate objective. Techniques must b consistent with a method, and therefore I harmony with an approach as well.Views on language:Structural view: the structural view of language sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystems: the sound system (phonology); the discrete units of meaning produced by sound combinations (morphology); and the system of combining units of meaning for communication (syntax).Functional view: the functional view not only sees language as a linguistic system but also means for doing things. Functional activities: offering, suggesting, advising, apologizing, etc. International view: considers language to be a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary of the language but as importantly they need to know the rules for using them in a whole range of communicative contexts.Process-oriented theories: are concerned with how the mind organizes new information such as habit formation, induction, making inference, hypothesis testing and generalization.Condition-oriented theories: emphasize the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place, such as the number of students, the kind of input learners receives, and the atmosphere.Behaviorist theory, the idea of this method is that language is learned by constant repletion and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakes were immediately corrected, and correct utterances were immediately praised.Cognitive theory, language is not a form of behavior, it is an intricate rule-based system and alarge part of language acquisition is the learning of this system.Constructivist theory, believes that learning is a process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his/her own experiences and what he/she already knows.Socio-constructivist theory, similar to constructivist theory, socio-constructivist theory emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of “Zone of Proximal Development” (ZPD) and scaffolding.Ethic devotion, professional qualities and personal stylesCLT: communicative language teachingTBLT: task-based language teachingThe goal of CLT is to develop students’communicative competence, which includes both the knowledge about the language and the knowledge about how to use the language appropriately in communicative situations. P16Hedge discusses five main components of communicative competence: linguistic competence, pragmatic competence, discourse competence, strategic competence, and fluency.Howatt proposes a weak and a strong version of CLT.Weak version: learners first acquire language as a structural system and then learn how to use it in communication. --- the weak version regards overt teaching of language forms and functions as necessary means for helping learners to develop the ability to use them for communication.Strong version: language is acquired through communication. The learners discover the structural system in the process of leaning how to communicate.---regards experiences of using the language as the main means or necessary conditions for learning a language as they provide the experience for learners to see how language is used in communication.Communicative activities: P24Tasks are activities where the target language is used by the leaner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.Four components of a task: a purpose, a context, a process, and a productTasks focus on the complete act of communication. (Purposeful & contextualized communication). Exercises focus the students’attention on the individual aspects of language, such as vocabulary, grammar or individual skills. (Focus on individual language items) Exercise-task comes halfway between tasks and exercises, consists of contextualized practice of language item.PPP: for teaching a new structure-based lesson, content lesson, presentation (introduces new vocabulary and grammatical structures), practice (the lesson moves from controlled practice to guided practice and exploitation of the texts when necessary) and production(the students are encouraged to use what they are learned and practiced to perform communicative tasks)The importance of lesson planning: 1. an unprepared teacher begins of a disastrous lesson.2. An unprepared teacher receives less trust and cooperation from the students. 3. The students are different, the time is different, and the mood is different.Lesson Planning: is a framework of a lesson in which teachers make advance decisions about what they hope to achieve and how they would like to achieve it. In other words, teachers need to think about the aims to be achieved, materials to be covered, activities to be organized, and techniques and resources to be used in order to achieve the aims of the lesson.Principles for good lesson planning: aim, variety, flexibility, learnability, and linkage. Variety: planning a number of different types of activities and where possible,introducing students to a wide selection of materials so that learning is always interesting, motivating and never monotonous for the students.Flexibility: preparing some extra and alternative tasks and activities at the class does not always go according to the plan so that teachers always have the option to cope with the unexpected situations rather than being the slaves of written plans or one methodology. Learnability:within capability of the students, not be too easy or beyond or below the students’ coping ability.Linkage: easy task followed by a comparatively difficult one, or do a series of language-focused activities to get the students prepared linguistically.Components of a lesson planning: background information, teaching aims, language content and skills, stages and procedures, teaching aids, assignments, and teacher’s after-lesson reflection.For skill-oriented lesson, focusing on developing skills, the model is applicable---pre-(reading), while-, post-. (Pre-step, while-step, post-step)Classroom management is the way teachers organize what goes on in the classroom.The role of the teacher: controller, assessor (evaluator, correcting mistakes and organizing feedback), organizer (organize and design task that students can perform in the class), prompter推动者(give appropriate prompts and give hints), participant, resource-provider, teacher’s new roles.There are rules to follow for making instructions effective.●The first is to use simple instructions and make them suit the comprehensive level of thestudents.●The second rule is to use the mother-tongue only when it is necessary.●Give students time to get used to listening to English instructions and help the make an effortto understand them.●Use body language to assist understanding and stick to it each time you teach the class. Student grouping: whole class group—same activity at the same rhythm and pace, lockstep, pair work, group work, individual studyDiscipline: refers to a code of conduct which binds a teacher and a group of students together so that learning can be more effective.Questioning in the classroom:Classification of question types: 1.closed questions and open questions 2.display questions and genuine questions 3.lower-order questions and higher-order questions 4.taxonomyClosed questions refer to those with only one s ingle correct answer while open questions may invite many different answers.Display questions are those that the answers are already known to the teacher and they are used for checking if students know the answer, too. Genuine questions are questions which are used to find out new information and since they often reflect real context, they are more communicative. Lower-order questions refer to those that simple require recalling of information or memorization of facts while higher order questions require more reasoning, analysis, and evaluation.Simple question and difficult questionA mistake refers to a performance error that is either a random guess or an “a slip of tongue”, it’s a failure performance to a known system.An error has direct relation with the learners’language competence. Results from Lack of knowledge in the target language. Language error cannot be self-corrected no matter how much attention is paidDealing with spoken errors: tasks or activities are focusing on accuracy or fluency. Balance between accuracy-based activities and fluency-based activities..When to correct: fluency work---not to interrupt, after the student’s performance; accuracy work---need to intervene moreHow to correct: direct teacher correction, indirect teacher correction, self-correction, peer correction, whole class correction.Goal of teaching pronunciation:Consistency: the pronunciation should be smooth and naturalIntelligibility: the pronunciation should be understandable t o the listenersCommunicative efficiency: the pronunciation should help convey the meaning that is intended by the speaker.Aspects of pronunciation: besides sounds and phonetic symbols, such as stress (strong and weak form, word stress and sentence stress), intonation and rhythm (variation).Perception practice: using minimal pairs, which order, same or different? Odd and out, Completion.Production practice: listen and repeat, fill the blanks, make up sentences, use meaningful context, use picture, use tongue twisters.Grammar presentation: The deductive method, the inductive method, the guided discovery methodGrammar practice: mechanical practice and meaningful/ communicative practice.Mechanical practice: involves activities that are aimed at form accuracy. Students pay repeated attention to a key element in a structure. Substitution drill and transformation drills.Meaningful practice: focus on the production, comprehension or exchange of meaning though the students keep an eye on the way newly learned structures are used in the process. It comes after mechanical practice. (Comparatives and superlatives). Using picture prompts, using mimes or gestures as prompts, using information sheet as prompts, using key phrases or key words as prompts, using chained phrases for story telling, using created situations.What does knowing a word involve? Denotative meaning; connotative meaning; chunk/collocations; synonyms, antonyms and hyponyms; receptive and productive vocabulary.Denotative meaning of a word or a lexical item refers to those words that we use to label things as regards real objects, such as a name or a sign, etc. in the physical world. Primary meaning of a word.A connotative meaning of a word refers to the attitudes or emotions of a language user in choosing a word and the influence of these on the listener or reader’s interpretation of the word.Collocations refer to words that co-occur with high frequency and have been accepted as ways for the use of words. For instance, see, look at, watch.Hyponyms refer to words which can be grounded together under the same superordinate concept. Receptive/passive vocabulary refers to words that one is able to recognize and comprehend in reading or listening but unable to use automatically in speaking or writing. Those words that one is not only able to recognize but also able to use in speech and writing are considered as one’s productive/active vocabulary.Ways of presenting vocabulary: inductive and deductive.Ways of consolidating vocabulary: labeling; spot the difference; describe and draw; play a game; use words series; word bingo; word association; finding synonyms and antonyms; categories; using word net-work; using the internet resources for more ideas.Developing vocabulary learning strategies: review regularly, guess meaning from context, organize vocabulary effectively, use a dictionary, and manage strategy use.Principles and models for teaching listening: focus on process, combine listening with other skills (listening can be practice with not-taking, and answers, role plays, retelling, interviewing, discussions, or a writing task), focus on the comprehension of meaning, grade difficulty level appropriately, principles for selecting and using listening activities.Two approaches are frequently used to describe different processes of listening.Bottom-up model and Top-down model.Bottom-up model: 从细节入手start with sound and meaning recognitions. Listeners construct meaning of what they hear based on the sound they hear, expect the listeners have a very effective short-term memory as they have to make sense of every sound in order to figure out the meaning of words, phrase, and structures. If there are unfamiliar sounds, listeners will find it very difficult to keep up with speaker. ---recognizing sounds of words, phrases or structures.Top-down model: 着重概要listening for gist and making use of the contextual clues and background knowledge to construct meaning are emphasized. Listeners can understand better if they already have some knowledge in their mind about the topic. Such knowledge is also termed as prior knowledge or schematic knowledge---mental frameworks for various things and experience we hold in our long-term memory. ---referring meaning from broad contextual clues and background knowledge.Three teaching stages: pre-listening—warming up; while-listening---listening comprehension; post-listening---checking answers.Teaching speakingLess complex syntax, short cuts, incomplete sentences, devices such as fillers, hesitation device to give time to thinking before speaking, false start, spontaneous, time-constraint.Types of speaking: pre-communicative activities—mechanical activities; communicative activities---meaningful activities.Controlled activities, semi-controlled activities, communicative activities:Information-gap activities; dialogues and role-plays; activities using pictures; problem-solving activities; change the story; human scrabbleOrganizing speaking tasks: use small group workTeaching readingThe construction of meaning from a printed or written message.Two broad levels in the act reading.1). A recognition task of perceiving visual signals from the printed page through the eyes.2). A cognitive task of interpreting the visual information revealing the received information with the reader’s own general knowledge, and reconstructing the meaning that the writer had meant to convey.For teaching: intensive/extensive readingIn terms of methods: skimming/scanning/predictingFor reading practice: reading aloud/silent readingThe role of vocabulary in reading: sight vocabulary: words that one is able to recognize immediately are often referred to as sight vocabulary.Principles and models for teaching reading: bottom-up model; top-down model; interactive modelPre-reading activities: predicting (predicting based on the tile/ based on vocabulary/based on the T/F questions) setting the scene, skimming, and scanningWhile-reading activities: TD (a transition device)Reading comprehension questions: 1. questions of literal comprehension 2. Questions involving reorganization or reinterpretation 3. Questions for inference (what is implied but not explicitly stated) 4. questions for evaluation or appreciation (making judgment about what the writer is trying to do and how successful he/she is in achieving his/her purpose) 5. Questions for personal responseIntensive reading is an accuracy-oriented activity involving reading for detail; the main purpose is to learn language embedded in the reading texts, which are usually short. Extensive reading is a fluency activity. The main purpose is to achieve global understanding. Te reading texts usually contains less new vocabulary and is longer than those intended for intensive reading.Teaching writingWriting for consolidating language, writing for communication, between writing for learning and writing for communication, imaginationNot have a real communicative purpose; for language skill; a little bit communicative; communicative approach; neither restrictions in contents nor in word limit; more communicative; more motivatedCA: communication approachA Productive approach to writing 成果法/a prose model approach---fruitlessA Process approach to writing 过程法: The teacher provides to guide students through the process that they undergo when they are writing. This kind of guidance should be gradually withdrawn so that the students can finally become independent writers.Main procedures of process writing include: creating a motivation to write, brainstorming, mapping, freewriting, outlining, drafting, editing, revising, proofreading and conferencing.。

英语教学法教程主要知识点归纳-(自动保存的)

英语教学法教程主要知识点归纳-(自动保存的)

Unit 1Knowledge:sth that can be learnedSkills: sth that only can be gained through practice or training,Language skills:listening, speaking, reading and writingLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication。

Views on language:1、Structural view (language competence)—The founder:Saussure—The structural view of language sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystems:1、the sound system(phonology)2、sound combinations(morphology)3、meaning for communication(syntax)—Learning the language is to learn the structural items,study the inner structure and rule of language,ignore the social functions of the language。

2 、Functional view— Representative:Johnson、marrow、swain canal (the core: grammar)—The function view not only sees language as a linguisticsystem but also a means for doing things—Learners learn a language in order to be able to doing things with itUse the linguistic structure to express functions3、Interactional view (communicative competence)— Emphasis:appropriateness— Language is a communicative tool,which main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people—Learners need to know the rules for using the language in certain context—The structural view limits knowing a language to knowing its structural rules and vocabularyLanguage teacher qualifications:1、a good command of spoken and written language2、formulate theory presupposition3、language background and experience4、know how languages are learnt5、the ability to use methods in various situations6、deep understanding of cultural background7、understanding the principles of teachingThese elements can be categorized into three groups:ethic devotion,professional qualities and personal stylesView on language learning1. Psycholinguistic: the relationship between language and thinking.1) Thinking in language2)Language is necessary for thought.3)Language acquisition(语言习得)4)Learners in their earlier years acquire control over essentialstructure of their language without special teaching and learning in a effortless and almost an unconscious way (like the formation of a habit) people prefer first language acquisition to first language learning.2. Cognitive theory: the rule for people to aware to cognizesth.Cognitive processes:Process: input----absorb----outputLanguage learning is not just stimulate-reflection, but the using of our subjective capabilities, the using of our cognitive ability to think the language and studying it actively.3. Constructivist theory: learning is a process of meaning construction based on learner’s own knowledge and experience.S ----------AT------------R(刺激) (反应)Stimulus: assimilation ①and accommodation②①把外部知识纳入自身②纳入自身后也不相符,就要对原有知识进行改变,也就是一种原有知道和外部知识保持联系的创新的过程。

英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记

英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记

英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记第一篇:英语教学法教程手稿重点笔记第三章、外语教学法的主要流派(八种)1.语法--翻译法A.从19世纪开始用于教学现代语言B.把目标语(外语)看成是一个规则系统,能在文本域句子中了解到,并与母语规则和意义有联系。

C.主要课堂教学活动:对整篇课文大意的译述,吧课文逐句从外语译成母语的活动,对课文中语法规则作演绎式的讲解,以及直接阅读课文以加深对课文的理解等活动。

E.重视词汇与语法的学习,强调阅读与写作能力的培养。

重视语言准确性的培养。

F.选材:外语的文学原著或简写本或改写本G.教师是课堂教学的权威,重视的传授者和课堂教学的组织者。

H.母语是教学语言,外语的意思是靠译成母语来理解。

2.直接法A.在19世纪末创立B.只使用目标语进行教学;意义通过语言、动作、物体等手段结合情景来表达;先教说,再教读与写;用归纳法讲授语法。

C.主要课堂教学活动:全外语教学--模仿、朗读和问答式主要的教学活动形式--作答均以完整的句子说出问句或答句。

E.培养学生使用外语进行交际的能力。

初级阶段重点在口语能力的培养F.选材:日常用语,以情景或某一话题为基础G.教师与学生是搭档关系,学生间可以进行对话并讨论问题H.全外语式教学,不在外语课堂上使用母语3.情景法(口语情景法)A.在20世纪30年代至60年代,英国应用语言学家创立(帕尔默&霍恩比)B.语言观是英国的结构主义,口语是语言的基础,结构式讲话能力的核心,应用情景中通过口头练习来学习语言结构。

(帕尔默&霍恩比)接受语言输入--重复操练记住--在实际练习中使之变成个人技能。

(帕尔默)C.主要课堂教学活动:《新概念英语》提出情景--学习语言--听说领会--反复操练--书面练习--巩固结构E.培养学生听说读写的能力,口语是第一性的,是笔头语的基础,重视语音语法的准确性。

F.教师是语言楷模,课堂活动的设计者与指挥官,学生是模仿者G.英语是教学语言4.听说法A.在第二次世界大战期间由美国语言学家建立B.在语言学理论方面是以结构主义作为其理论的基础,以行为主义的学习理论作为依据语言技能的获得通过刺激--反应--强化的过程。

英语教学综合专硕考研王蔷《英语教学法教程》考研复习笔记

英语教学综合专硕考研王蔷《英语教学法教程》考研复习笔记

英语教学综合专硕考研王蔷《英语教学法教程》考研复习笔记一、语言和语言学习复习笔记要点:1. The way we learn languages我们习得语言的方式2. Views on language语言观点3. The structural view of language结构主义语言理论4. The functional view of language功能主义语言理论5. The interactional view of language交互语言理论6. Common views on language learning关于语言学习的普遍观点7. Process-oriented theories and condition-oriented theories强调过程的语言学习理论和强调条件的语言学习理论8. The behaviorist theory行为主义学习理论9. Cognitive theory认知学习理论10. Constructivist theory建构主义学习理论11. Socio-constructivist theory社会建构主义理论12. Qualities of a good language teacher一个好的语言老师必备的素养13. Teacher’s professional development教师专业技能发展本章考点:我们如何习得语言;结构主义语言理论;功能主义语言理论;交互语言理论;关于语言学习的普遍观点;强调过程的语言学习理论和强调条件的语言学习理论;行为主义学习理论;认知学习理论;建构主义学习理论;社会建构主义理论;成为一个好的语言老师所要具备的基本素质;教师专业技能发展图。

本章内容索引:Ⅰ. The way we learn languagesⅡ. Views on language1. The structural view of language2. The functional view of language3. The interactional view of languageⅢ. Views on language learning and learning in general1. Research on language learning2. Common views on language learning and learning in general(1)Behaviorist theory(2)Cognitive theory(3)Constructivist theory(4)Socio-constructivist theoryⅣ. Qualities of a good language teacherⅤ. Development of a good language teacherⅥ. An overview of the bookThis chapter serves as an introduction for setting the scene for this methodology course. It discusses issues concerning views on language and language learning or learning in general with the belief that such views will affect teachers’ways of teaching and thus learners’ways of learning. The qualities of a good language teacher are also discussed in order to raise the participants’awareness of what is required for a good English teacher.这一章主要是介绍教学法的方法论,其中讨论的问题涉及语言和语言学习的观点,或者一般学习及这些观点对教师教学方式和学习者学习方式的影响,本章也讨论了一个好的英语教师应具备的素质,以提高语言教学参与者对优秀英语教师相关要求的意识。

(完整)小学英语教学法教程第二版期末复习知识点,推举文档

(完整)小学英语教学法教程第二版期末复习知识点,推举文档

(完整)小学英语教学法教程第二版期末复习知识点,推举文档.docx《小学英语教学法教程》期末复习知识点Unit1 children as language learners1、How do children acquire their first language in general?(p2) By imitations 、repetitions 、listening to stories ......Discussion point : language learning is a socializingprocess,interaction and experimenting with the language in communication are important ways for language learning2、What are the differences and similarities between learning L1 and L2?(p6D:the length of time 、 opportunities for experimenting with language S:Rich context and input ,opportunities for using thelanguage ,interaction withothers ,etc.are important in learning any languages .3、Children ’s characteristics/suggestions for teachers(p10)4、Ways to nurture children ’s motivation (p11 五点会推断即可 )5、P12 discussion point 、p20 1.5.1 (明白、会推断即可 )6、How do you understand humanistic education?(p21-22 ) Humanistic education requires teachers to treat children as human beings who have their own thoughts and needs.Teachers should never try to force their ideas into children ’s minds and should always try to think the same level as children.Discussion point : Children need to learn to try new languages and become independent learners.7、What is a good primary English teacher like?P24: you should be competent in English ,need to be good at usingdifferent teaching techniques which work with children ,need to be versatile,need to be able to organize games and activities.P25:need to understand how children think and learn ,need to care for the whole child ,need to help children to develop in an all round way .......A good primary school English teacher need to develop competence in at least three areas :the English language ,the understanding of children ,the techniques and methods for teaching English to children . Unit2 understanding the national English curriculum1、overall aim for English language teaching (p42)(九年制义务教学英语教学目标 )AffectLearning strategiesLanguage skillsLanguage knowledgeCultural understanding2、P43 小学英语教学时期目标(三个小黑点部分)Unit 3 classroom management1、What is classroom management?(p65)Classroom management refers to the way teachers organize whathappens in the classroom .2、What influence children ’s learning?(p65)Attitudes and motivation3、Two kinds of motivations(p66)Intrinsic and extrinsic motivations4、Some good ideas for motivating children in learning English(p69-70)5、Lesson planning (p71)Reasons p71-72(a-l)Advantages first of all,p71discussion point (第一段 ) ,moreover, ,thirdly,,last,6、Principles of lesson planning(1)clear aims or objectives(2)enough variety(3)with flexibility(p76)7、Why don’twe teach children in English?(p79三个小黑点部分)8、Five steps towards better instructions (p82)9、Types of question classification(p87)Closed and open questionsDisplay and genuine questionsLower-order and higher-order questions10、Some tips for engaging pupils to ask questions in class (p89-90)11、Some suggestions on creating good learning atmosphere (p94 小黑点部分)12、P95 discussion point( 教师备课时应思考的因素(小黑点部分)、课堂中有学生创造烦恼时能够采取的方法(1)-(6))13、Teaching large classes大班教学Problems:p98 discussion point14、Four forms of interactions (p100)Whole class workPair workGroup workIndividual study15、Activitiesstirring and settling activities(p108)physically-engaged and mentally-engaged activities(p110)16、We should think about three phases of an activity when we organizeit. (111)The preparation phase,the main activity phase,the follow-up or consolidation phase17、the differences between an error and a mistake(p115)A mistake refers to a performance error that is either a random guess or a “slip of tongue”,and it is a fail ure performance to a known system .A mistake has nothing to do with the language competence, it results from carelessness or temporary breakdown and it can be self-corrected.An error has direct relation with the learners’language competence,it results from the lack of knowledge in the target language and it can ’tbe self-corrected .Unit4 teaching vocabulary ,grammar and pronunciation1、p129 In most beginning level primary English text books,vocabulary is often presented with pictures and illustrations.2、What does knowing a word involve?(p130)Word meaning ( meaning in context ,some relations)Word use(metaphor and idiom,collocation,style and register)Word information (parts of speech,prefixes and suffixes,spelling and pronunciation)Word grammar (noun:countable/uncountable,verb complementation/ phrasal verbs,etc,adjectives and adverbs ,position,etc.(p130 discussion point 是对上面的解释)3、What methods/techniques can be used to present new words?(p131) Using real objectsUsing pictures or illustrationsProviding demonstration or givingexamples Involving learners in actionsP133 An important principle that we should bear in mind is that “studentsneed to see words in context to s ee how they are used”.In other words,they need to “see or hear those words inaction ”.Therefore,the best way to present new words is to provide a meaningful context andgive children the chance to observe,to think ,to act .4、What activities can be used for practicing vocabulary?(p133-134) Look and match,Listen and point,The odd one out/which one is different? Put the words into boxes,Tape recorder,Bingo game5、p135 discussion point 第三段 Cameron and Nation 两个人的观点6、Principles in teaching grammar p138四个小黑点部分7、How should grammar be presented? p138-139deductive (演绎 )or inductive(归纳)P139 两个例子分不是演绎法和归纳法的教学,要会推断这两种办法。

英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元),推荐文档

英语教学法教程知识点总结(1-12单元),推荐文档

FLTM: foreign language teaching methodology is a science which studies the processes and patterns of foreign language teaching, aiming at revealing the natural and laws of foreign languages.Major approaches in FLT:Grammar-translation method (deductive演绎法)Direct method (inductive归纳法)Audio-lingual methodHumanistic approaches: that emphasize the development of human values, growth in self-awareness and in the understanding of others, sensitivity to human feelings and emotions, and active student involvement in learning and in the way human learning takes palaceThe silent waySuggestopediaCommunity language learning (CLL)Total physical response method (TPR)The natural approach(NA)The communicative approach(CA )An approach is a set of correlative assumptions dealing with the nature of language teaching ad leaning. Approach is axiomatic. It describes the nature of the subject matter to b taught.Method is an overall plan for the orderly presentation of language material, no part of which contradicts, and all of which is based upon, the selected approach. An approach is axiomatic, a method is procedural. Within one approach, there can be many methods.A technique is implementation---that which actually takes place in a classroom. It is a particular trick, stratagem, or contrivance used to accomplish an immediate objective. Techniques must b consistent with a method, and therefore I harmony with an approach as well.Views on language:Structural view: the structural view of language sees language as a linguistic system made up of various subsystems: the sound system (phonology); the discrete units of meaning produced by sound combinations (morphology); and the system of combining units of meaning for communication (syntax).Functional view: the functional view not only sees language as a linguistic system but also means for doing things. Functional activities: offering, suggesting, advising, apologizing, etc.International view: considers language to be a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people. Therefore, learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary of the language but as importantly they need to know the rules for using them in a whole range of communicative contexts.Process-oriented theories: are concerned with how the mind organizes new information such as habit formation, induction, making inference, hypothesis testing and generalization.Condition-oriented theories: emphasize the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place, such as the number of students, the kind of input learners receives, and the atmosphere.Behaviorist theory, the idea of this method is that language is learned by constant repletion and the reinforcement of the teacher. Mistakes were immediately corrected, and correct utterances were immediately praised.Cognitive theory, language is not a form of behavior, it is an intricate rule-based system and alarge part of language acquisition is the learning of this system.Constructivist theory, believes that learning is a process in which the learner constructs meaning based on his/her own experiences and what he/she already knows.Socio-constructivist theory, similar to constructivist theory, socio-constructivist theory emphasizes interaction and engagement with the target language in a social context based on the concept of “Zone of Proximal Development” (ZPD) and scaffolding.Ethic devotion, professional qualities and personal stylesCLT: communicative language teachingTBLT: task-based language teachingThe goal of CLT is to develop students’communicative competence, which includes both the knowledge about the language and the knowledge about how to use the language appropriately in communicative situations. P16Hedge discusses five main components of communicative competence: linguistic competence, pragmatic competence, discourse competence, strategic competence, and fluency.Howatt proposes a weak and a strong version of CLT.Weak version: learners first acquire language as a structural system and then learn how to use it in communication. --- the weak version regards overt teaching of language forms and functions as necessary means for helping learners to develop the ability to use them for communication.Strong version: language is acquired through communication. The learners discover the structural system in the process of leaning how to communicate.---regards experiences of using the language as the main means or necessary conditions for learning a language as they provide the experience for learners to see how language is used in communication.Communicative activities: P24Tasks are activities where the target language is used by the leaner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.Four components of a task: a purpose, a context, a process, and a productTasks focus on the complete act of communication. (Purposeful & contextualized communication). Exercises focus the students’attention on the individual aspects of language, such as vocabulary, grammar or individual skills. (Focus on individual language items) Exercise-task comes halfway between tasks and exercises, consists of contextualized practice of language item.PPP: for teaching a new structure-based lesson, content lesson, presentation (introduces new vocabulary and grammatical structures), practice (the lesson moves from controlled practice to guided practice and exploitation of the texts when necessary) and production(the students are encouraged to use what they are learned and practiced to perform communicative tasks)The importance of lesson planning: 1. an unprepared teacher begins of a disastrous lesson.2. An unprepared teacher receives less trust and cooperation from the students. 3. The students are different, the time is different, and the mood is different.Lesson Planning: is a framework of a lesson in which teachers make advance decisions about what they hope to achieve and how they would like to achieve it. In other words, teachers need tothink about the aims to be achieved, materials to be covered, activities to be organized, and techniques and resources to be used in order to achieve the aims of the lesson.Principles for good lesson planning: aim, variety, flexibility, learnability, and linkage.Variety: planning a number of different types of activities and where possible,introducing students to a wide selection of materials so that learning is always interesting, motivating and never monotonous for the students.Flexibility: preparing some extra and alternative tasks and activities at the class does not always go according to the plan so that teachers always have the option to cope with the unexpected situations rather than being the slaves of written plans or one methodology. Learnability:within capability of the students, not be too easy or beyond or below the students’ coping ability.Linkage: easy task followed by a comparatively difficult one, or do a series of language-focused activities to get the students prepared linguistically.Components of a lesson planning: background information, teaching aims, language content and skills, stages and procedures, teaching aids, assignments, and teacher’s after-lesson reflection.For skill-oriented lesson, focusing on developing skills, the model is applicable---pre-(reading), while-, post-. (Pre-step, while-step, post-step)Classroom management is the way teachers organize what goes on in the classroom.The role of the teacher: controller, assessor (evaluator, correcting mistakes and organizing feedback), organizer (organize and design task that students can perform in the class), prompter推动者(give appropriate prompts and give hints), participant, resource-provider, teacher’s new roles.There are rules to follow for making instructions effective.The first is to use simple instructions and make them suit the comprehensive level of the students.The second rule is to use the mother-tongue only when it is necessary.Give students time to get used to listening to English instructions and help the make an effort to understand them.Use body language to assist understanding and stick to it each time you teach the class. Student grouping: whole class group—same activity at the same rhythm and pace, lockstep, pair work, group work, individual studyDiscipline: refers to a code of conduct which binds a teacher and a group of students together so that learning can be more effective.Questioning in the classroom:Classification of question types: 1.closed questions and open questions 2.display questions and genuine questions 3.lower-order questions and higher-order questions 4.taxonomyClosed questions refer to those with only one s ingle correct answer while open questions may invite many different answers.Display questions are those that the answers are already known to the teacher and they are used for checking if students know the answer, too. Genuine questions are questions which are used to find out new information and since they often reflect real context, they are more communicative. Lower-order questions refer to those that simple require recalling of information or memorization of facts while higher order questions require more reasoning, analysis, and evaluation.Simple question and difficult questionA mistake refers to a performance error that is either a random guess or an “a slip of tongue”, it’s a failure performance to a known system.An error has direct relation with the learners’language competence. Results from Lack of knowledge in the target language. Language error cannot be self-corrected no matter how much attention is paidDealing with spoken errors: tasks or activities are focusing on accuracy or fluency. Balance between accuracy-based activities and fluency-based activities..When to correct: fluency work---not to interrupt, after the student’s performance; accuracy work---need to intervene moreHow to correct: direct teacher correction, indirect teacher correction, self-correction, peer correction, whole class correction.Goal of teaching pronunciation:Consistency: the pronunciation should be smooth and naturalIntelligibility: the pronunciation should be understandable t o the listenersCommunicative efficiency: the pronunciation should help convey the meaning that is intendedby the speaker.Aspects of pronunciation: besides sounds and phonetic symbols, such as stress (strong and weak form, word stress and sentence stress), intonation and rhythm (variation).Perception practice: using minimal pairs, which order, same or different? Odd and out, Completion.Production practice: listen and repeat, fill the blanks, make up sentences, use meaningful context, use picture, use tongue twisters.Grammar presentation: The deductive method, the inductive method, theguided discovery methodGrammar practice: mechanical practice and meaningful/ communicative practice.Mechanical practice: involves activities that are aimed at form accuracy. Students pay repeated attention to a key element in a structure. Substitution drill and transformation drills.Meaningful practice: focus on the production, comprehension or exchange of meaning though the students keep an eye on the way newly learned structures are used in the process. It comes after mechanical practice. (Comparatives and superlatives). Using picture prompts, using mimes or gestures as prompts, using information sheet as prompts, using key phrases or key words as prompts, using chained phrases for story telling, using created situations.What does knowing a word involve? Denotative meaning; connotative meaning; chunk/collocations; synonyms, antonyms and hyponyms; receptive and productive vocabulary.Denotative meaning of a word or a lexical item refers to those words that we use to label thingsas regards real objects, such as a name or a sign, etc. in the physical world. Primary meaning of a word.A connotative meaning of a word refers to the attitudes or emotions of a language user in choosing a word and the influence of these on the listener or reader’s interpretation of the word.Collocations refer to words that co-occur with high frequency and have been accepted as ways for the use of words. For instance, see, look at, watch.Hyponyms refer to words which can be grounded together under the same superordinate concept. Receptive/passive vocabulary refers to words that one is able to recognize and comprehend in reading or listening but unable to use automatically in speaking or writing. Those words that oneis not only able to recognize but also able to use in speech and writing are considered as one’s productive/active vocabulary.Ways of presenting vocabulary: inductive and deductive.Ways of consolidating vocabulary: labeling; spot the difference; describe and draw; play a game; use words series; word bingo; word association; finding synonyms and antonyms; categories; using word net-work; using the internet resources for more ideas.Developing vocabulary learning strategies: review regularly, guess meaning from context, organize vocabulary effectively, use a dictionary, and manage strategy use.Principles and models for teaching listening: focus on process, combine listening with other skills (listening can be practice with not-taking, and answers, role plays, retelling, interviewing, discussions, or a writing task), focus on the comprehension of meaning, grade difficulty level appropriately, principles for selecting and using listening activities.Two approaches are frequently used to describe different processes of listening.Bottom-up model and Top-down model.Bottom-up model: 从细节入手start with sound and meaning recognitions. Listeners construct meaning of what they hear based on the sound they hear, expect the listeners have a very effective short-term memory as they have to make sense of every sound in order to figure out the meaningof words, phrase, and structures. If there are unfamiliar sounds, listeners will find it very difficultto keep up with speaker. ---recognizing sounds of words, phrases or structures.Top-down model: 着重概要listening for gist and making use of the contextual clues and background knowledge to construct meaning are emphasized. Listeners can understand better if they already have some knowledge in their mind about the topic. Such knowledge is also termedas prior knowledge or schematic knowledge---mental frameworks for various things and experience we hold in our long-term memory. ---referring meaning from broad contextual clues and background knowledge.Three teaching stages: pre-listening—warming up; while-listening---listening comprehension; post-listening---checking answers.Teaching speakingLess complex syntax, short cuts, incomplete sentences, devices such as fillers, hesitation device to give time to thinking before speaking, false start, spontaneous, time-constraint.Types of speaking: pre-communicative activities—mechanical activities; communicative activities---meaningful activities.Controlled activities, semi-controlled activities, communicative activities:Information-gap activities; dialogues and role-plays; activities using pictures; problem-solving activities; change the story; human scrabbleOrganizing speaking tasks: use small group workTeaching readingThe construction of meaning from a printed or written message.Two broad levels in the act reading.1). A recognition task of perceiving visual signals from the printed page through the eyes.2). A cognitive task of interpreting the visual information revealing the received information withthe reader’s own general knowledge, and reconstructing the meaning that the writer had meant to convey.For teaching: intensive/extensive readingIn terms of methods: skimming/scanning/predictingFor reading practice: reading aloud/silent readingThe role of vocabulary in reading: sight vocabulary: words that one is able to recognize immediately are often referred to as sight vocabulary.Principles and models for teaching reading: bottom-up model; top-down model; interactive modelPre-reading activities: predicting (predicting based on the tile/ based on vocabulary/based onthe T/F questions) setting the scene, skimming, and scanningWhile-reading activities: TD (a transition device)Reading comprehension questions: 1. questions of literal comprehension 2. Questions involving reorganization or reinterpretation 3. Questions for inference (what is implied but not explicitly stated) 4. questions for evaluation or appreciation (making judgment about what the writer is trying to do and how successful he/she is in achieving his/her purpose) 5. Questions for personal responseIntensive reading is an accuracy-oriented activity involving reading for detail; the main purpose is to learn language embedded in the reading texts, which are usually short. Extensive reading is a fluency activity. The main purpose is to achieve global understanding.Te reading texts usually contains less new vocabulary and is longer than those intended for intensive reading.Teaching writingWriting for consolidating language, writing for communication, between writing for learningand writing for communication, imaginationNot have a real communicative purpose; for language skill; a little bit communicative; communicative approach; neither restrictions in contents nor in word limit; more communicative; more motivatedCA: communication approachA Productive approach to writing 成果法/a prose model approach---fruitlessA Process approach to writing 过程法: The teacher provides to guide students through the process that they undergo when they are writing. This kind of guidance should be gradually withdrawn so that the students can finally become independent writers.Main procedures of process writing include: creating a motivation to write, brainstorming, mapping, freewriting, outlining, drafting, editing, revising, proofreading and conferencing.。

英语教学法复习要点.doc

英语教学法复习要点.doc

1 .Structural view on language:sees language as a linguistic system made up ofvarious subsystems: the sound system(phonology); the discrete units of meaningproduced by sound combinations (morphology), the system of combining units of meaning for communication(syntax). Each language has a finite number of suchstructural items. To learn a language means to learn these structural items so as to be able to understand and produce language. When。

o o was combined with thestimulus-response principles of behavioristic psychology, the audiolingualapproach to language learning emerged.2, Interactional view on language: to be a communicative tool, whose main use is to build up and maintain social relations between people.learners not only need to know the grammar and vocabulary but how to use thelanguage appropriately in communicative situations.r 3, Communicative competence: The goal of CLT is to develop students* which includes both the knowledge about the language& how to use the languageappropriately in communicative situations. 5main components of...: linguistic competence, pragmatic..., discourse..., strategic..., fluency4.Task in English language teaching: TBLT is a further development of CLT.lt believeslanguage should be learned as close as possible to how it is used in real life. H,it has stressed the imp to combine form-focused teaching &Y communicative-focused teaching.5.Overall language ability:•Learning: cognitive; self management; communication; resourcing•Language learning:听说读写•Language: phonetics; gra; voca; functions; topics•Cultural: knowledge; understanding; awareness•Affect: international; perspectives; patriotism; confidence; motivationponents of a lesson plan:1, background information, 2, teaching aims // 3, language contents and skills 4, stages and procedures 5, teaching aids, 6, end of lesson summary, // 7, optional activities and assignments, 8, after-lesson reflection.7.The role of the teacher: assessor, controller, facilitators, guides, organizer,prompter, participant, resource-provider, researchers (9)8.Errors : 有关the learners* language competence. 不因carelessness nor hesitation,而是lack of knowledge in the target language. 。

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第4~6章【圣才出品】

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第4~6章【圣才出品】

王蔷《英语教学法教程》笔记和课后习题(含考研真题)详解-第4~6章【圣才出品】第4章教案设计与书写4.1 复习笔记本章要点:1. The significance of lesson planning课程计划的重要性2. Principles for good lesson planning做好课程计划的准则3. Macro planning vs. micro planning宏观计划和微观计划4. Components of a lesson plan课程计划的构成因素5. Sample lesson plans课程计划的样本本章考点:课程计划的重要性;做好课程计划的准则;宏观计划和微观计划;课程计划的构成因素;课程计划的样本。

本章内容索引:Ⅰ. The significance of lesson planning1. Definition of lesson planning2.The necessity of lesson planning for teachers3. Benefits of lesson planningⅡ. Principles for good lesson planningⅢ. Macro planning vs. micro planning1. Two levels of lesson planning2. The advantage of a concrete teaching planⅣ. Components of a lesson plan1. Background information2. T eaching aims3. Language contents and skills4. Stages and procedures5. T eaching aids6. End of lesson summary7. Optional activities and assignments8. After lesson reflectionⅤ. Sample lesson plansⅥ. ConclusionⅠ. The significance of lesson planning(课程计划的重要意义)1. Definition of lesson planning课程计划的定义Lesson planning means making decisions in advance about what techniques,activities and materials will be used in the class.课程计划就是提前决定在课堂上使⽤什么技巧、材料、进⾏什么活动。

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