Zusammenfassung der Ressource
So You Want to Teach English as a Second
Language
- Learn the Acronyms!
- ELL = English Language Learner
- SLA = Second Language Acquisition
- ESL = English as a Second Language
- What factors influence SLA?
- The learner's background
- Naming practices
- Age
- First Language Proficiency
- Previous L2 experience
- Assessed L2 Level
- Lkes/Dislikes
- Academic Success
- Psychological Factors
- Motivation
- Self-Esteem
- Anxiety
- Attitudes
- Our role as educators is to make our students feel comfortable
- Interlanguage Theory
- Selinker hypothesis theory 1972, 1991
- Learner's language is creative
- It has its own unique rules!
- Represents a learner variety of the language
- Draws from three sources
- the rules from their own language (phonemes)
- A general knowledge of the way languages work
- Rules of the new language acquired gradually
- Allowing students in the classroom to make language mistakes as a learning process
- Social Constructionist Theory
- Lev Vygotsky
- Importance of social interaction in the development of language and thought
- Need to understand a student's zone of proximal development
- Teachers have to adapt to the level of the students
- Learn language and culture through watching behavior
- Facilitate social interaction between classmates
- Communicative Competence Theory
- Homes 1972
- Competent speakers know when to use language appropriately
- In each social context
- Task-Based Learning
- Having a student write a personal letter
- Use fun commutative games in class!
- Requesting, greeting refusing, storytelling, etc.
- Interactionist Model
- Long, 1980
- Peer conversation to enrich learning
- Students need to hear and enjoy English
- Face-to-face contact with Native speakers
- In multiple situations
- The more they converse, the more they comprehend and break down the language
- Provide plenty of opportunities for ELLs to converse in pairs with Native speakers
- Input Hypothesis
- Krashen, 1985
- Language needs "comprehensible" input
- the affective filter hypothesis addresses emotional variables such as anxiety
- allows the comprehensible input to reach the learner
- Simple immersion isn't enough on its own
- As a teacher it is important to assess that the ELLs have comprehended what is being taught