1. Diane Larsen-Freeman second edition



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  • 31. 42 Th e Audio-lingnai Method The Audio-Lit/glial Method 43 THINKI NG ABOUT THE EXPER I ENCE Although it is true that this was a very brief experi ence with the Audio- Lingual Method, let's sec if we can make some observations about the behavior ofthe teacher and the techniques she used. From these we shou ld he ableto figure out the principles underlying the method. We willmakeour observations in order, following the lesson plan of the class we observed. the other students before him. If the student has difficulty think ing of an item, the other students or the teacher helps. 8 A presentation by the teacher on supermarkets in the United States fol- lows the game. The teacher tr ies very hard to get meaning across in English. The teacher answers the student's questions about the differ- ences between supermnrkers in the United States and open-air markets in Mali. They also discuss briefly the differences between American and Malian football. The students seem very interested in the discus- sion. The teacher pro mises to continue the discussion of popular American sports next week. Observations The teacher introduces a new dialog. 2 The language teacher uses only the target language in the classroom. Actions, pictures, or realia are used to give meaning: otherwise. 3 Th elanguage reacher intro- duces the dialog by modeling it two times; she introduces the drills by modeling the correct answers; at other times, she corrects mispronunciation by modeling the proper sounds ill the target language. Principles Language forms do not occur by them selves; they occur most naturally within a context. The native language and the target language have separate linguistic svsrcms. Thev shou ld be kept apart so that 'the students' nati ve language interferes as little as possible with the students' attempts TO acquire the target language. One of the language teacher's major roles is thnr of u model of (he tar get language. Teachers should provide students with a good model. By listening to how it is supposed to sound, students should be able ro mimic the model. Observations 4 The students repeat each line of the new dialog several times. 5 The stude nts stumble over one of the lines of the dialog, The teacher uses a backward build- up drill with this line. 6 Th e teacher initiates a chain drill in which each student greets another. 7 The teacher uses single-slot and mult iple-slot substitution drills. 8 The teacher says, 'Very good,' when the students answer correctly. 9 The reacher uses spoke n cues and picture cues" Io The teacher conducts transformation and question- and-answer drills. 11 When the students can handl e it, (he reacher poses the questions to them rapidly. Principles Language learning is a process of habit formation. The more often something is repeated. the stronger the habit and the greater the learning. It is important to prevent learners from making errors. Errors lead to the formation of bad habits. When errors do occur, they should be im- mediately corrected by the teacher. Th e purpose of language learning is to learn how to use the language to commun icate. Part icular parts of speech occupy part icular 'slots' in sentences. In ord er to create new sentences. students must learn which part of speech occup ies which slot. Positive reinforcement helps the students 10 develop correct habits. Students should learn to respond to hoth verba l and nonverbal stimuli. Each language has a fi nite num ber of patterns. Pattern practice helps students to form habits which enable the students to usc the patterns. Students should 'ove rlearn: i.e. learn to answer automatically without stopping to think.

  • 32. REVIEWING THE PRINCIPLES 44 The Andio-lingnal tvietbod Observations 12 The teacher provides the students with cues; she calls on individuals; she smiles cncouragcrncnr: she holds up pictures one after another. 13 New vocubulury is introduced thro ugh lines of the dialog; voca bulary is limited. Principles The teacher should be like an orchestra leadcr-c-conducring, guiding, and controlling the students' behavior in the target language. The major objective of langua ge reaching should be for students to acquire the structural patterns; students willlearn vocabulary afte rward. Observations 17 The superma rket alphabet game and a discussion of American supermarkets and football arc included. The Audio-Ungual Method 45 Principles Language cannot he sepa rated from culture. Culture is not only lirerarure and the arts, hut also the everyda y behavior of the people who usc the target language. One of the teacher's responsibilities is to present inform ation about that culture. 14 Students are given no grammar rules; grammatical points arc taught through examples and drills. 15 The teacher docs a contrastive analysis of the target language an d the students' native language in order to locate the places where she anticipates her students will have trouhle. 16 The teacher writes the dialog on the blackboard toward the end of the week. The students do some limited wrinen work with the dialog and the sentence dr ills. Th e learning of a foreign language should be rhe same as the acquisition of the native language. We do not need to memorize rules in order to use ou r native language. The rules necessary to lise the target language will be figured out or induced from examples. The major challenge of foreign language reach ing is getting students to overcome the habi ts of their native language. A comparison between the native and target language will tell the teacher in what areas her students will probab ly experience difficulty. Speech is more basic to language than the written fonn . The 'uarural order'- the order children follov..· when learning their native language- of skill acquisition is: listening, spea king, read ing. and writing. At this point we should tu rn to the ten questions we have answered for each method we have considered so far, 1 What are the goals of teachers who use the Audio-Lingual Method? Teachers want their students to he able to use the target language communicatively, In order to do this, they believe students need to overlearn the target language, to learn to usc it automatically without stopping to think, Their students achieve this hy forming new habits in the target language and overcomin g the old habits of their native language. 2 What is the rote of the teacher?What is the role of the students? The teacher is like an orchestra leader, directing and con trolling the language behavio r of her srudenrs. She is also responsible for providing her srudcnts with a good model for imitation. Students arc imitators of the teacher's model or (he tapes she supplies of model spea kers. They follow the reacher's direction s and respond as accurately and as rapidly as possible. 3 What are some characteristics of the teaching/learning process? New vocab ulary ;1I1d structura l patterns arc presented through dialogs. The dia logs arc learn ed through imitation and repetition. Drills (such as repetition, backward build-up. chain, substitution, rrunsformarion, and question-and-answer) art' conducted based upon the patterns present in the dialog. Students' successful responses arc positively reinforced. Gra mmar is induced from the examples given; exp licit grammar rules are not provided. Cultural information is

  • 33. 46 The Audio-Lingual Method conrcxrualized in the dialogs or presented by the teacher. Students' reading and written work is based upon the oral wo rk they did earlier. 4 What is the nature of student- teacher interaction? What is the nature of student-student interactio n? There is student-to-student interaction in cha in drills or when students take different roles in dialogs, but this inte raction is teac her-directed. Most of the interaction is between teacher and students and is init iated by the teacher. 5 How are the feelings of the students dealt with? There arc no principles of the metho d that relate to this area. 6 How is the langu age viewed? How is the culture viewed? The view of language in the Audio-Lingual Method has been influ- enccd by descriptive linguists. Every language is seen as having its own unique system. The system is comprised o f several different levels: phonological, morphological, and syntactic. Each level has its own dis- tinctive patterns. Everyday speech is emphasized in the Audio-lingual Method . The level of complexity of the speech is graded, however, so that begin- ning students are presented with only simple patte rns. Culture consists of the everyday behavior and lifestyle of the target language speakers. 7 What areas of language are emphasized? What Language skills are emphasized? Vocabulary is kept to a minimu m while the students arc mastering the sound system and gra mmatica l patterns. A grammatical pattern is not the same as a sentence. For instance, underlying the following three sente nces is the same grammatical pattern: Meg called, 'l1) C Blue jays umn, The team practiced. The natural order of skills presentation is adhered to: listening, speaking. readi ng, and writing. The oral/aural skills receive most of the attention . Wha t students write they have first been introduced to orally, Pron unciation is ta ught from the beginning , often by students working in language laborato ries on discriminating between members of minimal pairs. The Audio-Lingual Method 47 8 What is the role of the students' native language? The habits of the students' native language are thought to interfere wit h the students' attempts to master the ta rget language. Therefore, the target language is used in the classroom, not the students' native language. A contrastive analysis between the students' native lan- guage and the ta rget language will reveal where a teacher should expect the most interference. 9 How is evaluation accomplished ? The answer to this question is not obvious because we did nor actually observe the students in this class taking a formal test. If we had, we would have seen that it was discrete-point in nature, tha t is, each ques- tion on the test wou ld focus on only one point of the language at a time. Students might be asked to distinguish between words in a min ima l pair, for example, or to supp ly an appropriate verb form in a sentence. 10 How does the teacher respond to student errors? Student errors are to be avoided if at all poss ible throu gh the teacher's awareness of where the students will have difficulty and restriction of what they are taught to say. REVIEWING THE TECH NIQUES Ifyou agree with the above answers, you may wish to implement the follow- ing techniques; ofcourse, even if you do nor agree, there may be techniques described below that you are already using or can adapt to your approach . Dialog memorization Dialogs or short con versations between two people are often used to begin a new.."lesson. Students memorize the dialog through mimicry; stu- dents usually take the role of one person in the dia log, and the teacher the ot her. After the students have learned the one person 's lines, they switch roles and memorize the other person's parr. 1uor her wayof pra cticing the two roles is for half of the class to take one role and the ot her half co tak e the other. After tilt' dialog has been memorized, pa irs of individual stu- dents might perform the dial og for the rest of the class. In the Audio-Lingual Method, certai n sentence patterns and gra mmar points arc included within the dialog. These patterns and points are later pract iced in drills based on the lines of the dia log.

  • 34. 48 The Audio-Lingual Method Backward build-up (expansion) drill This dri llis used when a long line of a dialog is giving students tro uble. The teacher breaks down the line into several parts. The students repeat a part of the sentence, usually the last phrase of the line. The n, following the teacher's cue, the students expa nd what they arc repeating part by part until they are able to repeat the entire line. The teacher begins wit h the part at the end of the sentence (and works backward from there) to keep the into- nation of the line as natural as possible. This also direc ts more student attention to the end ofthe sentence, where new information typically occurs. Repetition drill Students are asked to repeat the teacher's model as accura tely and as qu icklyas poss ible. This drill is often used to teach the lines of the dialog. Chaindrill A chain dri ll gets its name from the chain of conversation that forms around the room as students, one-by-one, ask and ans wer questions of each oth er. The teacher begins the chain bygreeting a pa rticular student, or asking him a question. That student responds, then turns to the student sitting next to him. The first student greets or asks a question of the sec- ond student and the chain continues. A chain drill allows some contro lled communication, even though it is limited. A chain drill also gives the teacher an opportunity to check each student's speech. Single-slot substitution drill The teacher says aline, usually from the dialog. Next, the teacher says a word or a phrase-s-called the cue. The students repeat the line the teacher has given them, substituting the cue into the line in its proper place. The major purpose of this drill is to give the students practice in fi nding and fi lling in the slots of a sentence. Multiple-slot substitution drill Th is drill is similar ro the single-slot substitution drill. The difference is that the teacher givescue phrases, one at a time, tha t fit into different slots in the dialog line. The students must recognize what part of speech eac h cue is, or at least, where it fits into the sentence, and make any other changes, such as subject-verb agreement. The)' then say the line, fitting the cue phrase into the line where it belongs. The Audio- Lingual Mctlmd 49 Transformation drill The teacher gives students a certain kind of sentence pattern, an affirma- tive sentence for example. Students arc asked to transform this sentence into ;1 negative sentence. Other examples of transformations to ask of stu- dents arc changing a statement into a question, an active sentence into a passive one, or direct speech into reported speech. Question-and -answer drill This drill gives students practice with answering questions. The students should answer the teacher's questions very quickly. Although we did nor see it in our lesson here, it is also possible for the teacher to cue the students to ask questions as well.Thisgives students practice with rhe qucsrion pattern. Use of minimal pairs The teacher works with pairs of wo rds which differ in onl yone sound; for example, 'ship/sheep.' Students are first asked to perceive the difference between the two words and later to he able to say the two words. The teacher selects the sounds to work on after she has done a contrastive analysis, a compa rison between the students' native language and the language they are studying. Complete the dialog Selected words are erased (rom a dialog students have learned. Students complete the dialog by fill ing the blanks with the missing wo rds. Grammargame Games like the supermarket alphabet game described in this chapter are used in rhe Aud io-Lingual Method. The games are designed to get stu- dents to practice a gra mmar point within a context. Students arc able to express themselves, alt hough it is rather limited in this game. Notice there is also a lor of repetition in this game. CONCLUSION Wc've looked at both the techniques and the principles of the Audio - Lingual Method. Try now ro make the bridge betwee n this hook and vnur teaching situa tion. . Does it make sense to you that langu age acquisition results from habit

  • 35. 50 Tbe Audio-Lingual Metbod formation? If so. will the habits of the native language interfere with tar- get language learning? Should the commission of erro rs be prevented as much as possible? Should the major focus be on the structural pancms of the target language? Which of these or the other principles of the Audio- Lingual Method arc acceptable to you? Is a dialog a useful way to intro duce new material ? Should it he memo- rized through mimicry of the teacher's model? Are structure drill s valuable pedagogical act ivities?I~ working on pron unciation through minimal-pair dril ls a worthwhile activity? Would you sa)' these techniques (or any ot hers of the Audio-Lingual Method)arc ones that you can use as described ?Could you adapt any of them to your own teaching approach and situation? ACTIVITIES A Check your understanding of the Audio-lingual Method. 1 Which of the follow ing techniques follows from rhe principles of the Audio-Lingual Method , and which ones don't? Explain the reasons for your answer. a Th e teacher asks beginning-level students to write a composition about the system of transporta tion in their home co unt ries, If they need a vocabulary wo rd that they don 't know, they are to ld to loo k in a bilingual dictio nary for a translat ion. b Tow ard the end of the third week o f the cou rse, the teacher gives st u- dents a reading passage. The teacher asks the students to read the passage and to answer certai n questions based upon it. The passage co ntains words and structures introduced during the first three weeks of the course. c Th e teacher tells the students that they mu st add an's' to third per- son singular verbs in the present tense in English. She then gives the students a list of verbs and asks them to change the verbs into the third person singular present tense form. 2 Some people believe that know ledge of a first and second lan guage can be helpful to learners who arc try ing to learn a th ird language. W hat vould an Audio-Lingual teacher say about this? Why? B Apply what you have understood about the Audio-Lingual Method. Read the following dial og. What subsenrencc pattern is it trying to teach ? The Audio-Lingual Method 5 I SA M Lou 's going to go to college next fall. B ET T Y Where ishe going? SA M He's going to Sta nford. A [ T T Y What is hegoing to study? SA M Biology. He's going to be a doctor. Prep are a series of dr ills (backward build-up, repetition, chain, single- s!Ot substitution, mul~iple-sl()t substitution, rransformanon, and qucs- non-and-answer] designed to give beginning level EFl students some practice with thi s structure. If the target language that you teach is not English, y~u may wish to write your own dialog first. It is not easy to prepare d rills. so to check yours, you might want to try giving them to some other teachers. 2 Prepare your own dialog to introduce your students to a sentence or subsentence pattern in the target language you teach. REFERENCES AND ADDITIONAL RESOURCES Brooks, Nelso n. 1964. Language and LllfJguage Learning: Theory and Practice. (2nd edn. ) New York : Harcourt Brace. Chasrai~, Kenneth . 1988. Developing Second Language Skills. (3rd edn. ) San DIego, CA: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Finocch!aro. M ary. 1974. English as a Second Language: From Theory to .Practlce. (2nd cd n.) 62-72, 16!'!-72. Ne w York: Regents Publishing. Fries, Charles C. 1945. Teaching and Learning English as a Foreign Language. Ann Arbor: University of Mi ch igan Press. l.ado, Robert. 1957. Linguistics across Cultures: App lied Linguistics (o r Language Teachers. Ann Arbor; University of Michigan Press. Lado, Robert. 1964. Language Teaching: A Scientitic Approach. New York: ~kGraw-Hill. Paulsron, Christina Bratt. 1971. 'The sequ encing of structural pattern dr ills.' TESOL Quarterly 513, 197- 208. Prater, Clifford. 1965. 'Development o f a manipulative-communication sca le' in Campbell, R. und H . Allen (eds.}: Teaching English as a Second Lallguage. New Yor k: McGra w.l lill. Rivers. Wilga. 1968. Teaching Foreign l.angnage Sk ills. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Skinner. B. F. 1957. Verbal Behavior, New York: Appleton- Century- Crofts.

  • 36. 5 The Silent Way INTRODUCTION Although people did team languages through the Audio-Lingual Method (and indeed it is still practiced today), one problem wit h it was students' inability to readily transfer the habi ts they had mastered in the classroom to communicative use outside it. Furthermore, the idea that learning a langua ge meant forming a set of habits was seriously challenged in the early 19605. Lingui st Noarn Chomsky argued th ar language acquisition could not possibly take place through habit formation since people create and understand utteran ces they have never heard before. Chomsky pro- posed instead that spea kers have a knowledge of underl ying abstract rule s, wh ich allow them to understand and create novel urreranccs. Thus, Chomsky reasoned, language must not he considered a product of ha bit for mation, but rather of rule formation. Accordingly,language acquisition mu sr be a pro cedure wh ereby peo ple lise their own th inking processes, or cogn ition , to discover the ru les of the language they arc acquiring. The emphas is on human cognition led to the establishment of the Cognitive App roach (Colee-Murcia 199 1). Rather than simply being responsive to stimuli in the environment, learners were seen to be much more actively responsible for thei r own learn ing, engaged in formulating hypotheses in orde r to discover the rules of the target language. Errors were inevitable and were signs tha t learners were actively testing their hypotheses. For a while in the early 197{)s there was great interest in applying this new Cognitive Approach to language teachin g and materi- als were developed with deductive {learners arc given the rule an d asked to apply it}an d ind uct ive (learners discover the ru les fro m the ex amples an d then practice it) grammar exe rcises. However, no language teaching met hod ever really developed directly from the Cognitive Approach; instead, a number of ' innovative methods' emerged. In the next few chap- ters we will rake a look at these. Altho ugh Ca leb Gatteguo's Silent Way did not stem directly fro m the Cognitive Approach, it shares certain princip les wit h it. For example, one of the basic pr inciples of the Silent Way is tha t 'Teaching sho uld be

  • 37. 54 The Silent Way subordinated to learn ing.' In other words, Cartcguo believed that TO teach means to serve the learn ing process rather than to dominate it. This pr inciple is in keeping with the active sea rch for rules ascribed to the learner in the Cognitive Approac h. Carrcgno looked at lan guage learning from the perspective of the learner by stu dying the way babi es and young childre n learn. He concluded that learning is a process whi ch we initiate by ourselves by mobilizing our inner resources (ou r perception, aware- ness, cognition, imagination, int uition, creativity, etc.] TO meet the chal- lenge at hand. In the co urse of our learning, we integrat e into ourselves whatever 'new' that we create, and we use it as <1 step ping stone for fur - ther learning. In order to explor e the Silent Way, we will observe the first day of an English class in Brazil. There are twent y-four secondary school st udents in th is class. The clas s meets for tw o hours a day, three days a week. EXPERIENCE As we take our scats, the teac her has just finished introducing the Silent Way in Port uguese. Th e teacher wa lks to the from of the room, ta kes out a metal pointer and points to a chart hanging above the blackboard. T he chart has a black background and is co vered with sma ll rectan gular blocks arranged in ro ws. Each block is a different color. This is a sound-color chart. Each rectangle represents one English sound. T here is a white horizontal line approx imately ha lfwa y down the chart separating the upper rectangles, whi ch represent vowel sounds, fro m those below the line, which represent consonant sounds . Without sayi ng anything, the teacher points in succession to each of five blocks of color -above the line. T here is silence. The teacher repeats The pattern , pointing to the same five blocks of color. Again,_no one says anything. The third time the reacher docs the pointing, he says lal as he touches the first block. Th e teacher continues and raps the four other bloc ks of color with the pointer. As he does this, several students say leI, IiI, 10/, luI. He begins with these vowels since they are the ones students will already know. (These five so unds are the simple vovvels of Port uguese and every Brazilian schoolchild learn s them in th is ordc r.l T he reacher points to the rectangle that represents leI. lie purs his two palm s together, then spreads them apart to indica te that he wa nts the stu- dent s to lengthen this vowel sound. By moving his pointer, he shows that there is ,1 smooth gliding of the tongue necessary to change this Portuguese lei into the English diphthong ley/. He works with the stu- dents until he is satisfie d that their pronunciation ofleyl closely app rox i- The Silent Way 55 mates the English vowe l. He works in the same way with liyl, lowl, and luw/. T hen the teacher hand s the pointer to a girl in the front row. She comes to the front of the room and points to the white block in the top row. Th e class responds with la/. On e-by-one, as she point s to the next three blocks, the class responds co rrectly with leyl, liyl, low/. But she has trou- ble finding the last block of color and points to <1 block in t he th ird row. A few students yell, 'NO!' She tries ano ther block in the sarnc row; her classmates yell, 'NO!' again. Finally a boy from the fro nt row says, A esquerda (Port uguese for 'to the left'). As the girl moves the pointer one block to the left, the class shouts luw/. The teacher signals for the girl to do t he series aga in. T his time she goes a hit more quickly and has no trou - ble finding the block for luw/. T he teac her signals to another stu dent to replace the girl and point to the five blocks as th e cla ss responds. T hen the teacher brings individuals to the fron t of the r00111, each one tapping out the sequence of the sounds as he says them. The teach er works with the students through gestures, and somet imes through instructions in Portuguese, to get them to produce the English vowel sounds as accu- rately as possible. He docs no t say the sounds himself. Apparently satisfied that the students ca n produce the five sounds accu- rately, (he teac her next points to the five blocks in a different order. A few students hesitate, bur most of the st udents seem able to co nnect the

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