methods & approaches in teaching
APPROACH, METHOD &
    TECHNIQUE
     WARM UP..
WHAT IS AN APPROACH,
METHOD & TECHNIQUE?
 THE NATURE OF
APPROACHES AND
   METHODS
THE NATURE OF APPROACHES AND METHODS
When linguists and language specialists ought to improve the quality
of language teaching in the late nineteenth century, they often did so
   by referring to general principles and theories concerning how
 languages are learned, how knowledge of language is represented
   and organized in memory, or how language itself is structured.
 In 1963, a scheme was proposed by the American applied linguist
Edward Anthony. He identi ied three levels of conceptualization and
 organization, which he termed approach, method, and technique.
                   f
                      APPROACH:
“. . . An approach is a set of correlative assumptions dealing with the
nature of language teaching and learning. An approach is axiomatic.
   It describes the nature of the subject matter to be taught. . . .”
                        METHOD:
   “. . . 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 . . .”
                      TECHNIQUE:
“. . . A technique is implementational – that which actually takes place
in a classroom. It is a particular trick, stratagem, or contrivance used
     to accomplish an immediate objective. Techniques must be
     consistent with a method, and therefore in harmony with an
                          approach as well.
      SO…
WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
LET’S GET IT SIMPLE!
    APPROACH, METHOD& TECHNIQUE
    According to Anthony’s model, approach is the level at which
    assumptions and beliefs about language and language learning are
    speci ied; method is the level at which theory is put into practice and
    at which choices are made about the particular skills to be taught, the
    content to be taught, and the order in which the content will be
    presented; technique is the level at which classroom procedures are
    described.
f
    Three different theoretical views of language and the nature of language pro iciency
    explicitly or implicitly inform current approaches and methods in language teaching:
            Structural view                       Functional view                            Interactional view
    The view that language is a        The view that language is a vehicle             It sees language as a vehicle for
                                       for the expression of functional
    system of structurally related                                                     the realization of interpersonal
                                       me aning. The communic ative
    elements for the coding of                                                         relations and for the
                                       movement in language teaching
    meaning. The target of language                                                    performance of social
                                       subscribes to this view of language
    learning is seen to be the         This theory emphasizes the                      transactions between
    mastery of elements of this        s e m a n t i c a n d c o m m u n i c at i ve   individuals. Language is seen as
    system, which are generally        dimension rather than merely the                a tool for the creation and
    de ined in terms of phonological   grammatical characteristics of                  maintenance of social relations.
    units                              language,
f
                                                                                             f
    Three different theoretical views of language and the nature of language pro iciency
    explicitly or implicitly inform current approaches and methods in language teaching:
           Structural view                Functional view           Interactional view
    1. phonological units:
                                      1. The semantic and        1. Creation and
      phonemes                           communicative              maintenance of social
    2. grammatical units:                dimension                  relations.
      clauses, phrases, sentences
                                      2. Speci ication and       2. Interaction analysis
    3. grammatical operations:           organization
      adding, shifting, joining, or
                                                                 3. Conversation analysis
      transforming elements           3. Language teaching
                                         content by categories   4. patterns of moves, acts,
    4. lexical items:                                               negotiation, and
      function words and              4. Meaning and function       interaction
      structure words
f
                                                                      f
APPROACH
 Language Teaching
         REFLECT..
“IS THERE MORE THAN ONE
 WAY TO CRACK AN EGG?"
      APPROACH: PERSPECTIVES
The different teaching approaches can be classi ied into four
theoretical orientations or perspectives: structural, cognitive,
psychological and functional.
                                           f
                       APPROACH
                            STRUCTURAL:
Structural approaches believe that language can be reduced to a
learnable set of building blocks. There are rules, known as grammar and
syntax, that govern how to combine these basic elements. These rules
can be memorized to achieve a high level of pro iciency in a language.
Grammar textbooks are the most commonly used material in this
category.
                                       f
                         APPROACH
                                COGNITIVE:
The cognitive perspective in learning a language puts the learner smack in the
center of everything. Cognitive approaches look to answer questions like:
   - How can a language be effectively learned?
   - How does one make a set of vocabulary words memorable and get them
   embedded in the long-term memory?
Learning a language is a conscious, rational, information-processing event.
                       APPROACH
                          PSYCHOLOGICAL:
Here, language learning is seen through issues like learner
motivation and predisposition, a location’s conduciveness to
learning, teacher-student dynamics, stress levels, etc.
   - Is the teacher supportive enough to the students?
   - Is the classroom dynamic facilitating or inhibiting the acquisition
   of the language?
                          APPROACH
                     FUNCTIONAL / COMMUNICATIVE:
Functional approaches often emphasize spoken language over written
language, and profess that language isn’t a set of grammar rules but
rather a tool for communication. This has tremendous implications for the
types of activities or the materials employed.
Communicative approaches often eschew grammar textbooks in exchange
for speaking drills and question-and-answer interactions where students
get a feel for what speaking the language in conversation is really like.
      APPROACH: ASSUMPTIONS
1. Language is a group of sounds with speci ic meaning and organized by
gramatical rules (The Silent Way)
2. Language is the everyday spoken utterance of the average person at the
normal speed (Audio lingual method)
3. Language is a system for the expression of meaning (communicative
language teaching)
4. Language is a set of gramatical rules and language consist of language
chunks ( Total Physical Responses)    f
APPROACH: THE NATURE OF LANGUAGE LEARNING
                                 Behaviorism:
stimulus - response - reinforcement            drilling, exercise, repetition.
                                   Nativism:
A child naturally has a language acquisition device. (Kodrati)
                               Constructivism:
A child acquired a language through interaction between the child and the
environment (Piaget)
METHOD
Language Teaching
                           METHOD
The plan of language teaching which consistent with the theories. (Edward
Anthony, 1963).
Method may mean different things to different people(Mackey, 1975):
    - A set of teaching procedures
    - The avoidance of teaching procedures.
    - The primary of a language skill.
    - The type and amount of vocabulary and structure.
                         METHOD
According to Mackey (1975:157) all teaching (whether good or bad)
must include some sort of selection, gradation, presentation and
repetition. Therefore all methods should include the four steps of
teaching language. (Selection, gradation, presentation and repetition)
According to Richards and Rodgers (2001) a method is theoretically
related to an approach, organized by design , and practically realized
in procedure.
TECHNIQUE
 Language Teaching
                      TECHNIQUE
Carry out a method, it’s implementational, meaning that the
technique is something that actually takes place in language
teaching or learning in the classroom.
                     TECHNIQUE
Technique (H.D. Brown 2007: 180):
A task: task that usually refers to a specialized form of techniques
closely allied with communicative curricula, and as such must
minimally have communicative goals. It is focused on the authentic
use of the language for meaningful communicative purpose beyond
the language classroom.
                              TECHNIQUE
Technique (H.D. Brown 2007: 180):
An activity: May refer to virtually anything that learners do in the classroom. We usually
refer to a reasonable uni ied set of students behaviour, limited time, preceded by some
direction from the teacher, with a particular objective.
Activities include role plays , drills, games, peer - editing, small group information-gap
exercise, and ,much more.
Because the activity implies some sort of activity performance on the part of the
learners, it is generally not used to refer to certain teaching behaviors, like saying “good
morning”, maintaining eye contact, with the students, explaining a grammar point or
writing a list of words on the board.
                f
                        TECHNIQUE
Technique (Richards and Rodgers (2001):
Procedure: ”The actual moment to moment techniques, practices,
and behaviour that operate in teaching a language according to a
particular method.”
Procedures from this de inition, include techniques. Thus , for
Richard and Rodgers, this appears to be a catchall term, a thing for
holding many small objects or a group or description that includes
different things and does not state clearly what is include or not.
                    f
                          TECHNIQUE
Technique (Richards and Rodgers (2001):
Practice: behaviour, exercise, strategy, etc…
In language - teaching literature, these terms, and perhaps some others, all
appear to refer, in varying degrees of intensity, to what is de ined as technique.
The language teaching literature generally accepted technique as a
superordinate term to refer various activities that either teacher or learner
perform in the classroom, in other words, technique include all tasks and
activities.
                                                     f
                     APPROACH
                                      •   Theory of language
                                      •   Theory of learning
  Edwards
  Anthony’s          METHOD
                                      •   An overall plan for the orderly presentation of language material, no part or
                                          which contradictions, and all of which is based upon , the selected approach.
   Model
                    TECHNIQUE         •   The actual implementation in the language classroom.
                          APPROACH
                                      •   Theory of language
                                      •   Theory of learning
                                      •   Objectives
                                      •   Syllabus type
                                      •   Activity Types
                           DESIGN
  Richards &
                METHOD                •   Learner Roles
Rodgers Model                         •   Teacher Roles
                                      •   Role of materials
                                      •   Techniques
                          PROCEDURE   •   Practices
                                      •   Behaviors
  TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE
   TEACHING TECHNIQUES
(CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
     TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
            (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
1. Warm Up: This activity gets the students stimulated, relaxed,
motivated, attentive, or otherwise engage and ready for the lesson. It
does not necessarily involves the target language.
ex.: Mimes, dance, songs, jokes, play.
      TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
             (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
2. Setting: Focusing on lesson topic. Teacher directs attention to the topic
by verbal or non verbal evocation of the context relevant to the lesson by
questioning or miming or picture presentation, possibly by recording of
situations and people.
3. Organizational: Structuring of lesson or class activities includes
disciplinary action, organization of class furniture and seating, general
procedures for class interaction and performance, structure and purpose of
the lesson, etc.
     TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
            (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
4. Content explanation: Grammatical, phonological, lexical
(vocabulary), sociolinguistic, pragmatic, or any other aspect of the
language.
5. Role - play Demonstration: Selected students or teacher illustrate
the procedure(s) to be applied in the lesson segment to follow.
Includes brief illustration of language or other content to be
incorporated.
     TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
            (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
6. Dialogue/Narrative presentation: Reading or listening passage
presented for passive reception. No implication of student
production or other identi ication of speci ic target forms or
functions (students may be asked to "understand")
7. Dialogue/Narrative recitation: Reciting a previously known or
prepared text, either in unison or individually.
                       f
                                          f
       TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
              (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
8. Reading aloud: Reading directly from a given text.
9. Checking: Teacher either circulating or guiding the correction of students' work,
providing feedback as an activity rather than within another activity.
10. Question-answer display: Activity involving prompting of students responses by
means of display questions. Distinguished from referential questions by the likelihood
of the questioner's knowledge of the response and the speaker's awareness of that fact.
(i.e. teacher or questioner already knows the response or has a very limited set of
expectations for the appropriate response).
               TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
                      (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
        CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
        11. Drill: Typical language activity involving ixed patterns of teacher prompting and
        student responding, usually with repetition, substitution, and other mechanical
        alterations. Typically with little meaning attached.
        12. Translation: Student or teacher provision of L1 or L2 translation of given text.
        13. Dictation: Student writing down orally presented text.
        14. Copying: Student writing down text presented visually.
        15. Identi ication: Student picking out and producing /labeling or otherwise identifying a
        speci ic target form, function, de inition, or other lesson-related item.
f
    f
                                f
                                               f
       TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
              (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
16. Recognition: Student identifying forms, as in identi ication, but without a verbal
responses. (i.e., checking off items, drawing symbols, rearranging pictures)
17. Review: Teacher-led review of previous week/month/or other period as a formal
summary and type of test of student recall performance.
18. Testing: Formal testing procedures to evaluate student progress.
19. Meaningful drill: Drill activity involving responses with meaningful choices, as in
reference to different information. Distinguished from information exchange by the
regulated sequence and general form of responses.
                                               f
SEMI - CONTROLLED
   TECHNIQUES
       TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
              (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
SEMI - CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
20. Brainstorming: A form of preparation for the lesson, like Setting, which involves free,
undirected contributions by the students and teacher on a given topic, to generate multiple
associations without linking them; no explicit analysis or interpretation by the teacher.
21. Storytelling (especially when student-generated): Not necessarily lesson-based, a
lengthy presentation of story by teacher or student (may overlap with Warm-up or
Narrative recitation), May be used to maintain attention, motivate, or as lengthy practice.
22. Question-answer, referential: Activity involving prompting of responses by means of
referential questions (i.e., the questioner does not know beforehand the responses
information). Distinguished from Question-answer, display.
        TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
               (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
SEMI - CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
23. Cued narrative/Dialogue: Cued narrative/Dialogue: Student production of narrative or dialogue
following cues from miming, cue cards, pictures, or other stimuli related to narrative/dialogue (e.g.,
metalanguage requesting functional acts).
24. Information transfer: Application from one mode (e.g., visual) to another (e.g., writing), which
involves some transformation of the information (e.g., student ills out diagram while listening to
description). Distinguished from Identi ication in that the student is expected to transform and
reinterpret the language or information.
25. Information exchange: Task involving two-way communication as in information-gap exercise,
when one or both parties (or a larger group) must share information to achieve some goal.
Distinguished from Question-answer, referential in that sharing of information is critical for the task.
                              f
                                                        f
      TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
             (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
SEMI - CONTROLLED TECHNIQUES
26. Wrap-up: Brief teacher- or student-produced summary of point and/or
items that have been practiced or learned.
27. Narration/Exposition: Presentation of a story or explanation derived
from prior stimuli. Distinguished from Cued narrative because of lack of
immediate stimulus.
28. Preparation: Student study, silent reading, pair planning and rehearsing,
preparing for later activity. Usually a student- directed or -oriented project.
FREE TECHNIQUES
          TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
                 (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
    FREE TECHNIQUES
    29. Role play: Relatively free acting out of speci ied roles and functions.
    Distinguished from Cued dialogues by the fact that cueing is provided only
    minimally at the beginning, and not during the activity.
    30. Games: Various kinds of language game activity not like other previously
    de ined activities (e.g., board and dice games making words).
    31. Report: Report of student-prepared exposition on books, experiences, project
    work, without immediate stimulus, and elaborated on according to student
    interests. Akin to Composition in writing mode.
f
                                                   f
        TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
               (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
FREE TECHNIQUES
32. Problem solving: Activity involving speci ied problem and limitations of means to
resolve it; requires cooperation on part of participants in small or large group.
33. Drama: Planned dramatic rendition of play, skit, story, etc.
34. Simulation: Activity involving complex interaction between groups and individuals
based on simulation of real-life actions and experiences.
35. Interview: A student is directed to get information from another student or students.
36. Discussion: Debate or other form of grouped discussion of speci ied topic, with or
without speci ied sides/positions prearranged.
    f
                                      f
                                                               f
     TAXONOMY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING TECHNIQUES
            (CROOKES & CHAUDRON, 1991)
FREE TECHNIQUES
37. Composition: As in Report (verbal), written development of ideas,
story, or other exposition.
38.A propos: Conversation or other socially oriented interaction/
speech by teacher, students, or even visitors, on general real-life
topics. Typically authentic and genuine.
                                    ACTIVITY #2
Remember your last practices and give an example of…
1. …a controlled activity applied
2. …a semi - controlled activity applied
3. …a free activity applied
Related to the practices and the taxonomy of language teaching techniques, make the next analysis:
•   Name of the activity & type of technique (relate it to the taxonomy)
•   Selection of the activity (justify the selection)
•   Objective of the activity (what was the intention to this activity?)
•   Description of the activity (procedure)
•   Analysis of the activity ( problems, successes, improvements)
           APPROACH THEORIES
Theories of Language:
1. Behavioral Theory (SKINNER)
2. Cognitive Theory (PIAGET)
3. Nativist Theory (CHOMSKY)
4. Interactionist Theory (BRUNER)
           APPROACH THEORIES
Theories of learning (second-language acquisition):
1. The Acquisition-Learning hypothesis
2. The Monitor hypothesis
3. he Natural Order hypothesis, The Input hypothesis
4. The Affective Filter hypothesis
                                ACTIVITY #3
 According to Richards & Rodgers Model and the information for your practices, complete the chart
                                     RICHARDS & RODGERS MODEL
             APPROACH       Theory of language & Theory of learning:
                            - Objectives:         - Learner Roles:
METHOD        DESIGN        - Syllabus type:      - Teacher Roles:
                            - Activity Types:     - Role of materials:
                            Techniques:
            PROCEDURES      Practices:
                            Behaviors: