Teaching Methods
Teaching Methods
Teaching Methods
Listed below are brief summaries of some of the more popular second language teaching methods of
the last half century. For a more detailed analysis of the different methods, see Approaches and
Methods in Language Teaching Richards, J. and Rodgers, T (1986) CUP Cambridge.
Eclectic approach
In the move away from teachers following one specific methodology, the eclectic approach is the label
given to a teacher's use of techniques and activities from a range of language teaching approaches and
methodologies. The teacher decides what methodology or approach to use depending on the aims of the
lesson and the learners in the group. Almost all modern course books have a mixture of approaches and
methodologies.
Example
The class starts with an inductive activity with learners identifying the different uses of synonyms of
movement using a reading text. They then practise these using TPR. In another class the input is
recycled through a task-based lesson, with learners producing the instructions for an exercise manual.
In the classroom
A typical lesson might combine elements from various sources such as TPR and TBL (the examples);
the communicative approach, e.g. in communication gap activities; the lexical approach, e.g. focusing
on lexical chunks in reading; and the structural-situational approach, e.g. establishing a clear context
for the presentation of new structures.
Grammar-translation
Learning is largely by translation to and from the target language. Grammar rules are to be memorized
and long lists of vocabulary learned by heart. There is little or no emphasis placed on developing oral
ability. [More]
Audio-lingual
The theory behind this method is that learning a language means acquiring habits. There is much
practice of dialogues of every situations. New language is first heard and extensively drilled before
being seen in its written form. [More]
Immersion
This corresponds to a great extent to the situation we have at our school. ESL students are immersed in
the English language for the whole of the school day and expected to learn math, science, humanities
etc. through the medium of the target language, English.
Immigrant students who attend local schools find themselves in an immersion situation; for example
refugee children from Bosnia attending German schools, or Puerto Ricans in American schools. Click
here for many links to information about bilingual/immersion programs.
- Another summary
.. of these methods, plus one or two more.
- Wikipedia's review of language teaching methodologies