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Methodologies in English teaching

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THis is a document which looks at some of the most common methodologies existing now for teaching English to learners of the langauge

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Page 1: Methodologies in English teaching

Present, Practice, Produce: 4 Go to Strategies for Teaching Language Concepts

Whether you have taken teaching methods classes or you have put in the

effort to become a great teacher without the guidance of a college professor,

we all find a way that is comfortable to teach for us. Finding what works is

great, and being an effective teacher is even better, but sometimes we get

stuck in an educational rut – we fall on the same methods day after day and

never give our students or ourselves a challenge. Here are some standard as

well as some less common teaching methods you can use in the ESL

classroom. Some you may know and use. Others may be less familiar to you.

Either way, you can use these methods in your classroom to plan just about

any lesson and in the process ensure your students’ success.

Try These 4 Go to Strategies for Teaching Language Concepts

1. 1

What is the PPP Method/Model?

Page 2: Methodologies in English teaching

Present, practice, produce otherwise known as PPP is an

instructional model that has been used for decades. In this

method, you teach your students the grammatical concept you want

them to learn. Then you show them the language used in context.

Finally, you require your students to produce the language concept on

their own. For example, you might teach your students to add –ed to a

regular verb in English to show the past tense. Then, you would tell

them about your day yesterday, making all of your verbs end in –ed.

Finally, you would have them tell you or each other about their days

yesterday using regular past tense verbs. This approach is possibly

the most common, and you will find this patter in many of your ESL

texts.

2. 2

The Discovery Approach

The discovery approach is another teaching method which gives

students examples of language in context. However it does not

give an overt presentation of how that language works. After observing

the target structure in context, students try to figure out on their own

what the language rule is and in what context it is appropriate. In other

words, you don’t give a lesson on past tense verbs. You either tell

them about your day yesterday or have them read about it, and then

you challenge them to figure out the grammar rule that is used in the

passage. This is the start of the discovery approach and its

foundation. It may be too difficult for students to pick up grammatical

rules and concepts from a reading passage alone, especially with

more complicated grammatical structures. That is, they may not figure

out the past tense rule without a little help from you. If this is the case,

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you can give students an exercise meant to practice the concept you

want them to learn along with the answers. In other words, give them

questions eliciting the past tense form and the answers to go with

them. In this case, it might be questions such as Did you brush your

teeth yesterday? With the answers Yes, I brushed my teeth yesterday.

Students can then look at the answers to the questions and try to

figure out how and why the language works the way that it does. Once

students have figured out the language concept, you can teach it to

them directly so they can confirm or correct what they concluded in the

discovery session. So once your students have concluded that –ed on

a verb signals past tense, you teach the grammar lesson that tells

them just that.

3. 3

The Test Teach Test Approach

Test teach test (also known as TTT) is similar to the PPP

approach. In this method, however, you test your students on a

language concept before teaching it to them. By doing this, you get a

read on what they already know. It also gives your students a chance

to discover the language concept on their own (similar to the discovery

approach) before you teach it to them. If you were going to teach the

past tense using this method, you might give your students a test on

the past tense. While they take the test, your students can observe

how the past tense is used in context (as in the discovery approach) in

the test questions. After the pretest, you teach the grammatical

concept directly. You teach them to add –ed to a regular verb to make

the past tense in English. After teaching the concept, you test your

students again. So after your lesson on past tense formation in regular

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verbs, you give your students another test on it. In this way, they have

the opportunity to discover the language concept, learn it directly, and

then practice using it correctly in the final test.

4. 4

The Task Based Approach

The task based approach is another method English teachers can

use when presenting grammatical concepts to their students. In

essence, you give your students a task to accomplish. Then you give

them examples of language they can use to accomplish that task.

Students are then left to accomplish that task on their own. With this

method, you would give your students an exercise in which they would

have to use the past tense. While they are working on the exercise,

you give them examples of language which uses the past tense

correctly, examples they might use to complete the exercise. Then you

give them the freedom to use those examples as they complete the

exercise.