Group 7 - Behaviorism: 1. Why Should We Study The Theories of Learning?
Group 7 - Behaviorism: 1. Why Should We Study The Theories of Learning?
Group 7 - Behaviorism: 1. Why Should We Study The Theories of Learning?
Members:
Trần Thị Ánh Linh
Hoàng Ngọc Minh
Phan Thanh Lộc
Tiêu Hà Cát Quân
Behaviourism Mentalism
To summarise:
Constructivism ...
• emphasises learning and not teaching
• encourages and accepts learner autonomy and initiative
• sees learners as creatures of will and purpose
• thinks of learning as a process
• encourages learner inquiry
• acknowledges the critical role of experience in learning
• nurtures learners natural curiosity
• takes the learner's mental model into account
• emphasises performance and understanding when
assessing learning
• bases itself on the principles of the cognitive theory
• makes extensive use of cognitive terminology such as
predict, create and analyze
• considers how the student learns
• encourages learners to engage in dialogue with other
students and the teacher
• supports co-operative learning
• involves learners in real world situations
• emphasises the context in which learning takes place
• considers the beliefs and attitudes of the learner
• provides learners the opportunity to construct new
knowledge and understanding from authentic experience
4. What is schema?
A schema describes both the mental and physical actions involved
in understanding and knowing. It contains groups of linked
memories, concepts or words. This grouping of things acts as a
cognitive shortcut, making storing new things in your long-term
memory and retrieval of them much quicker and more efficient.
b) Integrative motivation, on the other hand, derives from a desire on the part of
the learners to be members of the speech community that uses a particular language. It is
an internally generated want rather than an externally imposed need.
Example: a learner studies a language because he is interested in the people and
culture of the target language or in order to communicate with people of another culture
who speak it.
4. What are some common learning styles? Are there any differences
between learning styles and learning strategies?
Reid (1987) identified four learning styles: visual (seeing), auditory (listening),
kinesthetic (moving) or tactile (touching).
Visual (seeing): Visual learners learn through seeing. They prefer to see a teacher
during a lesson, learn by visuals: pictures, wall displays, diagrams, videos. They
make notes during lectures and use lists to organize their thoughts.
Auditory (listening): Auditory learners learn through listening. They prefer verbal
instructions, like dialogues, discussions and plays, solve problems by talking
about them, use rhythm and sound as memory aids.
Kinesthetic (moving): Kinesthetic learners learn through moving and doing. They
learn best when they are active. It is difficult for them to sit still for long periods.
Tactile (touching): Tactile learners learn through touching. They use writing and
drawing. They learn well in hands-on activities like projects and demonstrations.
5. How can teachers motivate learners to learn?
Teacher discourse: arousing curiosity or attention, promoting autonomy,
stating communicative purpose/ utility of activity.
Participation structure: group work/pair work
Activity design: individual competition, team competition, intellectual
challenge, tangible task product
Encouraging positive retrospective self-evaluation and activity design:
effective praise, elicitation of self/peer correction session, class applause.
Education should speak to the 'whole person', in other words, not just to a small
language-learning facility. In a humanist classroom, students are emotionally
involved in the learning; they are encouraged to reflect on how learning happens,
and their creativity is fostered. The teacher can achieve this by keeping criticism to
a minimum and by encouraging them, in plain terms, to feel good about
themselves. In a humanist classroom, learning a language is as much an issue of
personal identity, self-knowledge, feelings and emotions as it is about language.
Some humanist activities encourage students to speak from their 'inner' selves,
saying, for example, how they feel about their lives, their closeness to different
members of their families. John Morgan and Mario Rinvolucri describe such
activities as allowing students to 'exteriorise their own internal text' (1986:9). But
critics question whether it is the teacher's job to ask students to reveal things of a
private nature, and sometimes even to monitor and nurture the students' inner
selves. There is some criticism, too, that there is a strong cultural bias to this view
of teaching and learning which would be inappropriate in certain situations.
Furthermore, a concentration on the inner self may limit the range of language that
students can experience, with more emphasis being placed on interpersonal and
informal language at the expense of other kinds. Lastly, some doubters suggest,
paying too much attention to affective issues in learning may mean that teachers
neglect their students' cognitive and intellectual development.
It is certainly true that we want to create an unthreatening environment for our
students (just as we will want to foster their cognitive development). We should
also be concerned not to do anything which damages their self-esteem. But how far
we should act as moral guides and quasi-therapists as well as being teachers of
language is a more difficult question, and one which is intimately bound up with
our understanding of the role of teachers.
6. What are Stephen Krashen’s 5 hypotheses?
In the acquisition/ learning hypothesis, Krashen suggests that we 'acquire'
language as we are exposed to samples of language that we understand in much the
same way that children pick up their first language-with no conscious attention to
language form. We 'learn' on the other hand through conscious attention to form
and rule learning. In Krashen’s view, far more language is acquired than learned.
Next, according to the monitor hypothesis, second language users draw on what
they have acquired when they engage in spontaneous communication. They may
use rules and patterns that have 6een learned as an editor or 'monitor', allowing
them to make minor changes and polish what the acquired system has produced.
Such monitoring takes place only when the speaker/writer has plenry of time, is
concerned about producing correct language, and has learned the relevant rules.
The natural order hypothesis was based on the finding that, as in first language
acquisition, second language acquisition unfolds in predictable sequences, as we
saw in Chapter 2.The language rules that are easiest to state (and thus to learn) are
not necessarily the first to be acquired.
The comprehensible input hypothesis is that acquisition occurs when one is
exposed to language that is comprehensible and contains i + 1. The 'i' represents
the level of language already acquired, and the ‘+1’ is a metaphor for language
(words, grammatical forms, aspects of pronunciation) that is just a step beyond that
level.
Krashen's affective filter hypothesis is proposed to account for the fact that some
people who are exposed to large quantities of comprehensible input do not
necessarily acquire language successfully. The 'affective filter' is a metaphorical
barrier that prevents learners from acquiring language even when appropriate input
is available. Affect refers to feelings of anxiety or negative attitudes that, as we
saw in Chapter 3, may be associated with poor learning outcomes. A learner who is
tense, anxious, or bored may filter out input, making it unavailable for acquisition.
GROUP 7 – LEARNING AND ACQUISITION
Members:
Trần Thị Ánh Linh
Hoàng Ngọc Minh
Phan Thanh Lộc
Tiêu Hà Cát Quân
Grammatical foreigner talk The ice- cream --- you will not forget to
Finally, it was thought that foreign language learning would help students grow intellectually; it was
recognized that students would probably never use the target language, but the mental exercise of
learning it would be beneficial anyway.
How many types of questions did the teacher use? What are they?
In addition to questions that ask for the information contained within the reading passage, the students
answer two other types of questions. For the first type, they have to make inferences based on their
understanding of the passage. For example, one question is: 'Do you think the boy was ambitious? Why
or why not?' The other type of question requires the students to relate the passage to their own
experiences. For example, one of the questions based on this excerpt asks them, 'Have you ever thought
about running away from home?'
Read ten questions in reviewing the principles for class discussion, you do not need to type the answers.
List 3 techniques you think you can use in your teaching and state reasons.
Modify the following baseline talks:
- Although studies in animals have suggested that BA.2 infection wasn't entirely mild, data on
human infections from the UK, Denmark and South Africa shows that BA.2 isn't more likely to
result in hospitalization when compared with BA.1.
- The research on more than 1.8 million infections found only 1,739 cases in which people tested
positive for Covid-19 twice within a two-month window. Of those, 47 were BA.1 infections that
were followed by BA.2.
Findings in animals show that the BA2 type of Covid wasn’t fully easy to get over, but
there is less chance to go to the hospitals for BA2 positive people compared to BA1,
based on data from the UK, Denmark and South Africa.
Findings on 1.8 million positive cases show only 1739 times when people tested positive
twice in a time period of two months. 47 of them had BA, then BA2.
Mid term
Ý nghĩa việc học là gì ?
Lý thuyết về việc học
Vận dụng trong giảng dạy như nào ?
Reading : đọc hiểu
Nắm key words Learning theory
Learning and Acquisition : phân biệt 2 cái -> vận dụng để làm sao lý thuyết việc học trong lớp
như acquisition
Modified baseline talk
Cho đoạn reading đặt 3 loại câu hỏi
90 phút – đề mở - cá nhân
Show format đề - gửi tài liệu cho nhóm : slide thống nhất nội dung - đề mẫu
GROUP 7 – THE DIRECT METHOD
Members:
Trần Thị Ánh Linh
Hoàng Ngọc Minh
Phan Thanh Lộc
Tiêu Hà Cát Quân
The teacher was calling the class to order as they found seats toward the
back of the room. He had placed a big map of the United States in the front
of the classroom. He asked the students to open their books to a certain
page number. The lesson was entitled 'Looking at a Map.' As the students
were called on one by one, they read a sentence from the reading passage
at the beginning of the lesson. The teacher pointed to the part of the map
the sentence described after each had read his sentence.
c. Why did the teacher point to a part of the map after each
sentence is read?
Because he helped students to understand the meaning of the sentences
they had just read.
d. What kind of language was used? Why?
l. What was the topic of all the lessons? Was the syllabus based on
linguistic structures?
Student to student ?
GROUP 7_CLT_TBLT_Eclectic
1. When & Why did the CLT come into being?
In the 1970s, educators began to question if they were going about meeting the
goal in the right way. Some observed that students could produce sentences
accurately in a lesson, but could not use them appropriately when genuinely
communicating outside of the classroom. Others noted that being able to
communicate required more than mastering linguistic structures. Students may
know the rules of linguistic usage, but be unable to use the language (Widdowson
1978). It became clear that communication required that students perform certain
functions as well, such as promising, inviting, and declining invitations within a
social context (Wilkins 1976). In short, being able to communicate required more
than linguistic competence; it required communicative competence (Hymes 1971)
—knowing when and how to say what to whom. Such observations contributed to
a shift in the field in the late 1970s and early 1980s from a linguistic structure-
centered approach to a Communicative Approach (Widdowson 1990).
f. Describe how the language game was played. Are there any differences
between this game and the supermarket alphabet game in ALM?
g. Did students have a chance to express their opinions?
The students were asked how they feel about the predictions
h. How were errors treated?
The teacher and other students ignore them.
i. Why did the teacher ask students to work in groups to tell stories?
He wanted to establish situations likely to promote communication.
Communicative interaction encouraged cooperative relationships
among students. It gave students an opportunity to work on
negotiating meaning.
j. What did students do when they do a role play? Any benefits from this
activity?
k. Did students pay attention to form when they do a role play?
n. Are picture strip story and role play trully communicative activities?
- Name the features of the activities
- Indicate if they have 3 features: choice, information gap and feedback
5. What techniques of the CLT do you like to use in your future teaching
situations? Why?
6. Watch the clip and list what the teacher did in this class.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kRT-rsKxn4
7. What is an eclectic approach? What should teachers bear in mind when using
this approach?
- Eclectic approach is a method of language learning/teaching that combines
various approaches and methodologies to teach language depending on the
aims of the lesson and the abilities of the learners. In this approach teacher has
more flexibility & adaptability to choose best elements according to the needs
& aim of the students.
8. What is a task? What does task based language teaching (TBLT) focus on?
How many stages are there?
One way of looking at Task-based learning is to see it as a kind of 'deep-end'
strategy (see Johnson 1982), or, in the words of Jane Willis, 'like a sort of PPP upside
down' (Willis 1994:19). In other words students are given a task to perform and only
when the task has been completed does the teacher discuss the language that was used,
making corrections and adjustments which the students' performance of the task has
shown to be desirable. However, as Willis herself makes clear, Task-based methodology
is in fact considerably more complicated than this. She suggests three basic stages: the
Pre-task, the Task cycle, and Language focus.
Pre-task
Introduction to Topic and Task
Task – cycle
Task – planning
Report
Language Focus
Analysis Practice
3. Characteristics
of T/Learners
process
4. Interaction
5. Feelings
6. View of
Language /
culture
7. Language
areas/skills
8. L1
9. Evaluation
10. Errors
REVIEW
Read the passage used to teach a pre-intermediate class and answer the questions
below.
College life, however, is not at all fun. It has its serious side, as well. The ordinary
college student spends about fifteen hours a week in class. In addition to his regular
classes, the student is expected to participate in the various extra-curricular activities
offered by the school. Such activities include the newspaper, debating, and drama. Many
great journalists actually began their career in their college newspaper, and some people
who are known today as famous actors played their first role in a college dramatic
production. In some ways, these extra-curricular activities are just as important as
formal classes training your minds.
1. Ask 4 reading comprehension questions for this short text (2 for finding
information in the passage, 1 for making an inference and 1 for relating to personal
experience):
Comprehension questions:
How many hours a week does the ordinary college student spend in class?
What are just as important as formal classes training your minds?
Inference question:
Personal experience:
Do you take part in any extra-curricular activities?
3. List linguistic forms you can use for the function of requesting. Which would
you teach to a beginning class, an intermediate class, an advanced class? Why?
Beginning class:
We use could you … and would you … as polite ways of telling or asking someone to
do something:
Could you take a message, please?
Would you carry this for me, please?
can and will are less polite:
Can you take a message, please?
Will you carry this for me, please?
Intermediate class:
Would you mind ...ing (...)?
Advanced class:
It’s high time/It’s time + V (past simple form)
4. What are some of the characteristics of the Direct Method that make it so
distinctive from the Grammar Translation Method?
6. According to Jane Willis, Task Based Learning is ‘like a sort of PPP upside
down.’ What do you think about this idea?
7. Can you explain the difference between deductive and inductive treatments of
grammar?
8. Identify the structure in each of the following sentences and give 3 other
examples for each one:
a. If I had a lot of time, I would spend a long holiday in Nha Trang.
Conditional type 2
b. The teacher advised us to listen to the recording more often.
Reported Speech (Advice)
c. He would not only review his lessons carefully but also write down important
notes.
Not only…but also
d. Because of the heavy rain, they canceled the football match.
Because of + Noun/Gerund
e. She presented her ideas based on the information in her textbooks.
Reduced relative clause with Past participle
10. Suggest three shortcomings of the ALM and state how these weaknesses are
overcome by Communicative Language Teaching?
- Students practice lots of drill – that makes them become parrots
10. Describe the following utterances in terms of their grammatical form and
their communicative function.
FORM FUNCTION
Can you tell me where the post office is? Indirect Requesting
Of course, he may not pass the exam questions
Don’t do that again.
Please don’t do that again.
If I were you, I’d sell it.
If you eat any, I’ll smash you.
Warning
If you eat some, I’ll give you sixpence.
Conditional
Why don’t we go to the cinema? Giving
Type 1
I won’t have that man in my house again. suggestions
Conditional
Shall we go camping this weekend?
Type 1
You’ve got a terrific bike!
I can’t agree with you less. Giving
It might be a good idea to go over your speech suggestions
before you deliver it tomorrow.
11. Match the utterances (1-10) with the functions listed A-K. Mark the correct
letter (A-K) on your answer sheet. There is one extra option which you do not need
to use.
Utterances
1. Let's go to that new restaurant.
2. They might win - you never know in cup matches!
3. Watch out! That’s dangerous.
4. My son can speak three languages fluently.
5. Is it okay if I open the window?
6. Shall I show you how the camera works?
7. Could you pass me my bag?
8. You can say that again.
9. Peter will never go back to this shop.
10. Sally, you have been quite silent!
Functions
A. describing ability
B. describing possibility
C. asking for permission
D. requesting
E. asking for advice
F. suggesting
G. offering
H. warning
I. agreeing
J. predicting
K. asking for opinions
12. Name the technique and the method of the following activities.
Activity 1:
Go around the class and find out
Who ... ?
1. went to the cinema last week
2. bought some clothes last month
3. was fond of candies when (s)he was a child
Activity 2:
Put the adjectives in brackets in the correct comparative form:
1. John is (intelligent) than Bob.
2. Janet is (good) at Math than Mary.
Activity 3:
This book is on the table. What is on this chair, Nam?... Good. Now ask your friend what
is on something in our classroom…
Activity 4:
“What do you think about scary movies? I found them terrifying”. Now, Hung, ask Nga
the same question. Nga, give the answer. Good… Nga, ask Van that question… Go on,
everybody.
Activity 5:
What are the uses of the present perfect tense?
13. How would you modify the following baseline talks to a group of post-
elementary students?
Perhaps the most significant consequence of the agricultural revolution was the ability to
produce a surplus of food beyond the immediate needs of daily subsistence.
Maybe the most important result of the farming-based revolution was the ability to produce an
extra amount of food more than the immediate needs of daily living.