Advantages of Direct Method in Teaching English
Advantages of Direct Method in Teaching English
Since the earliest times, there have been many changes in the ways of learning and teaching of
English language and because the grammar-translation method wasn’t very effective in
preparing students to use the target language communicatively, the direct method became
popular.
The Direct teaching method is a method of foreign and second language teaching which
consist that only the target language should be used in class and meaning should be
communicated “directly” by associating speech forms with action, objects, mime, gesture and
situations.
The method Direct is named “direct” because meaning should be connected directly with the
target language without translation in to the native language. Only target language is used and
a lot of teacher-students dialogues, later systematic teaching of grammar and vocabulary.
This is mainly speaking, both communication and stressed a grammatical syllabus. The direct
method has one very basic rule: no translation is allowed. In fact, the direct method receives
its name from the fact that meaning is to be connected directly with the English language,
without going through the process of translating in to the students’ native language.
It substituted “Language contact” for “Grammar recitation” and “Language use” for
translation. The direct method aims at establishing a direct bond between experience and
expression. According to the direct method, the students should think directly in English.
Audio-visual aids are used in the direct method. This makes the lesson interesting
On the other hand, inductive learning can be more time- and energy-consuming and
more demanding of the teacher and the learner. It is also possible that during the
process, the learner may arrive at an incorrect inference or produce an incorrect or
incomplete rule. Also, an inductive approach may frustrate learners whose personal
learning style and/or past learning experience is more in line with being taught via a
more teacher-centered and deductive approach.