Fluency and accuracy: It is
important for the students
to learn to use english used
by majority of fluent,
educated speakers in the
international communication.
Different styles and englishes: We need to
make sure that our teaching programmes
include exposure to a range of styles in order
to raise students' awareness of the
differences between them.
Vocabulary: We have to
supplement such incidental
acquisition with deliberate
teaching and review of
lexical items.
Writing: We need to invest more
effort in helping our students
achieve written, as well reading
fluency. Master their basic spelling,
the use of punctuation and so on.
English as an
international language
Language standars: We must teach
lexical, grammatical, pholological and
ortographical forms that are most likely
to be understood and used worldwide.
The native and non-native english
teacher: If teachers who speaks the
language as an additional are fully
competent and fluent are likely to be
a better model for their students.
English literature and Culture: Most
learners nedd to become aware of
diverse international cosmopolitan set
of cultural customs, literature, art
forms and so on.
L1: There is no particular
reaseon to ban the use of L1
in the classroom. It is likely
to play a valuable role in the
acquisition of english.
Theories and teaching
methodologies
Theories of language acquisition:
-Intuitive acquisition.
-Habit-formation. -Cognitive
process. -Skill-learning.
Approaches and methodologies:
-Grammar-translation.
-Audio-lingualism.
-Communicative approach.
Computerized teaching materials
It provides flexibility, adaptability to
the individual, enormous range of
informational sources and various
interactive options of computer
hard-and software.
Motivation
Integrative and instrumental motivation: The desire to learn in order
to integrate into the community of speaker of that language. By the
othe hand, the need to learn a language for material benefit.
Exthrinsic ans intrinsic motivation:
-Extrinsic. The perceived benefits of succes
in learning and penalties of failure.
-Intrinsic. Associated with the activity of
language learning itself.
Self and personal identity: How we
see ourselves or wish to see
ourselves in the future.