Applied Linguistics: The Twentieth Century
Applied Linguistics: The Twentieth Century
Applied Linguistics: The Twentieth Century
Language teaching came into its own as a profession in the twentieth century.
The whole foundation on contemporary language teaching was developed during the early part of the twentieth century, as applied linguistic and others sought to develop principles and procedures for the design of teaching methods and materials, drawing on the developing fields of linguistics and psychology to support a succession of proposals for the more effective and theoretically sound teaching methods.
Vocabulary selection is based solely on the reading texts used, and words are taught through bilingual word lists, dictionary study, and memorization.
The sentence is the basic unit of teaching and language practice. The lesson is devoted to translating sentences into the target language with a focus on that sentence.
Grammar is taught deductively by the presentation of rules then practiced through translation exercises.
The students native language is the medium of instruction. It is used to explain new items and to enable comparisons to be made between the foreign language and the students native language.
Reform Movement
The spoken language is primary and language teaching should reflect an oral-based method. The findings of phonetics should be applied to teaching and to teacher training.
Learners should hear the language first, before seeing it in written forms.
Words should be presented in sentences, and sentences should be practiced in meaningful contexts that is, grammar should be taught inductively. Translation should be avoided except to check comprehension
Direct Method
Principles for language teaching out of naturalistic ways are seen as those of first language acquisition or to natural methods which led to the development of the Direct Method. Rather than analytical procedures that focus on explanation of grammar rules in classroom teaching, teachers must encourage direct and spontaneous use of the foreign language in the classroom. Learners would induce rules, and the teacher replaced textbooks in the early stages of learning. Speaking began with attention to pronunciation. Known words could be used to teach new vocabulary, using mime, demonstration, and pictures.
Behaviorism
The study of human behavior
The human being is an organism capable of a repertoire of behaviors The occurrence of these behaviors depends on three crucial elements in learning: - a stimulus, which serves to elicit behavior A response triggered by the stimulus and Reinforcement which serves to mark the response as being appropriate and encourages the repetition of the response in the future (Skinner).
Krashens Views
Acquisition is the basic process involved in developing language proficiency It is distinct from learning Acquisition refers to the unconscious development of the target language system as a result of using the language for real communication Learning is the conscious representation of grammatical knowledge that has resulted from instruction, and it cannot lead to acquisition