English For Specific Purposes
English For Specific Purposes
English For Specific Purposes
Type: Article
Colin Barnett offers suggestions for effective error correction and language improvement in one-to-one classes.
Introduction
'I teach one-to-one at various levels, but the biggest problem I have is with error correction (especially during
conversation). Is there a structured way to go about this so that the student gets something out of class (than just
talking in English)?'
'What do you do during one-to-one classes? I bring in interesting materials to discuss, but I wish I could do more
(like grammar and increasing vocab) to really make my students feel like they've made some progress.'
'With advanced students, I know they're using the level of English which enables them to communicate without
making mistakes. But I feel I should make them go beyond that. With lower levels, jeez! They make so many mistakes,
I don't know where to stop them and elaborate...'
'I'm really at a loss at times. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.'
Several years ago I was in a fast food restaurant in London. As a teacher I couldn’t help but notice a one-to-one session
taking place. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing and hearing. A teacher and a student sitting down chatting – where
were the paper cut-ups, PPP and photocopies that were key ingredients during my CELTA training? They were just
talking!
Just talking is, after all, fluency practice. There comes a time, though, when we need or want to go beyond 'just talking'
in conversations. Whether the need or the want is our own or the learner's is a topic for another day. In this article,
though, you’ll find out or be reminded of:
Giving corrections either during or after a conversation in a one-to-one situation is useful. There are, of course,
different ways of going about it. Correction is only one filter we can use to help develop our learners. Williams and
Burden in Psychology for Language Teachers talk about 'informational feedback', or feedback that provides
opportunities to develop. Having the objective of feedback as a filter offers more options:
Increasing motivation
Increasing accuracy
Extending repertoire
Providing feedback allows us to give the learner more than 'just talking'. The interesting part is how we can provide
feedback both during and after conversations.
'Good listening' we are told 'is vital in spoken interactions … and goes beyond understanding words and key points…
Active listening includes the non-verbal physical expressions, gestures and movements, and verbal ‘back channeling’
devices … Active listening also involves paraphrasing and summarizing.' (Developments in English for Specific
Purposes p.106).
Using verbal active-listening skills in one-to-one situations can be a huge boon. In addition to letting the speaker know
they have been heard and understood it also allows us to teach new language and offer corrections. Paraphrasing what
the learner said is similar to reformulating. Back-channelling or echoing in a slightly modified version what the learner
has just said can be seen as recasting.
l find that some learners can interpret all comments from the teacher during the conversations as corrections. Flagging
up the paraphrase with the expression in other words gets round this problem and merely informs that learner that
what you are saying is a paraphrase not a correction.
My next step is to note what the learner originally said on the Language Improvement Sheet (see below).
Here the correction was offered and it was up to Ariane whether to use it immediately or not. My next step is to get a
record of what the learner said by noting it on the Language Improvement Sheet for later practise. I explain at the
beginning of each conversation that I’ll be taking notes so that the learner can concentrate on talking. I did have one
student, though, who was a fantastic multi-tasker and could take part in the conversation and note down (and employ)
new or improved language. I just had to be present and use active-listening skills.
Paraphrases get grouped into the first category and modified echos/recasts in the second group.
Conversational drilling
Once you have a record of examples there are, of course, many things to do with it:
Give it to the learner to see if they can give the variation/improvement by themselves.
Test the learner: 'You said …… Can you remember what I said?'
Ask the learner to dictate the variations or improvements to you and you note on the back of the sheet. The
learner can then note corrections and check with the 'key' (on the back).
Create a recording of the Language Improvement Sheet. For the variations, you or the learner can say the
original followed by a long enough pause for the variation to be said/thought, followed by the variation itself.
For the improvements, a possibility might be to get the learner to translate the improved version into their
language and record the translation, followed by a pause, then the target language version of the improvement.
Further oral practice can be achieved using a conversational drill process. An example might be useful here:
Jean-Luc: It was cancelled. The guy I was supposed to meet was a bit sick.
Teacher: Oh dear. So in other words, he was a bit under the weather, was he?
Teacher: Yes, that’s right… (teacher notes expression on the sheet) OK, thank you. I enjoyed that
conversation and I understood everything you said. Let’s go over some of the things we wrote down.
You said that the guy you were supposed to meet was a bit sick. Do you remember the other expression I
used? No? OK… Just answer my questions. This guy: he wasn’t sick or he was sick?
Jean-Luc: He was sick.
Teacher: OK, so he was sick OR, in other words, he was a bit under the weather? Was he a bit under the
weather?
Teacher: So, when was the last time you were a bit under the weather?
Conversational drill
1. Outframe – State your intention and that you understand that the activity is not wholly communicative as both
of you know the answers to most of the questions. Get agreement that the activity is to help the learner really get
their tongue around the new language.
2. Remind them of the original – Draw attention to the original utterance. Allow the learner to recall the
alternative if they can.
3. Check intended meaning – Ask an either/or question – using the positive/ negative verbs ('You met the
manager or you didn’t meet the manager?') or expression/opposite expression (e.g. 'The manager came or the
manager left?').
4. (Re-)Introduce the new phrase – Use the structure 'So you like giving presentations OR you’re keen on
giving presentations?' It’s important to emphasise the OR to indicate that what follows is a near synonym.
5. Get agreement on new phrase – Ask a yes/no question using the new phrase. This models the language
further.
6. Check meaning and elicit the new phrase – Ask an either/or type question. Ask the same question again if
the learner needs to clean up the pronunciation, is missing a word, etc.
7. Elicit the new phrase again using a Who...? question
8. Elicit the new phrase without modelling the language – A question like 'What can you tell me
about…?' usually does this.
9. Extend content – Asking WH-questions such as 'When was the last time you…?' can draw this out.
It helps to sort out the 'need to knows' from the 'nice to knows' when doing this exercise so that you can give restricted
practice in the essential/most useful language.
What I have suggested is that using feedback rather than just correction offers more choices. It can help motivate,
inform and develop learners. Moreover, by using verbal active listening strategies not only can we model what good
listeners do – in Anglophone cultures, at least – but we can give learners an experience of partaking in meaningful
dialogue as well as experience new/improved language in their own meaningful contexts. This can be done by use of
flagged up paraphrase and/or recasting.
Using a Language Improvement Sheet serves as a record of language encountered. It can also serve a basis for
informational feedback. The Language Improvement Sheet can be followed up in a variety of ways, such as
conversational drilling to give restricted oral practice of language met during the conversation. The sheet also acts as a
product that the learner can take away.
Thinking back to that teacher in the fast food restaurant – there may have been much more method to their (what
seemed to me as) madness.
References
Developments in English for Specific Purposes: A Multi-disciplinary Approach (Cambridge Language Teaching
Library): Tony Dudley-Evans, Maggie Jo St. John.
Psychology for Language Teachers: A Social Constructivist Approach (Cambridge Language Teaching Library),
Marion Williams, Robert L. Burden.
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