This module introduces a range of language teaching activities, materials and techniques and raises awareness of how a knowledge of methods and approaches can be used to plan lessons for specific contexts and groups of learners. Students will develop an understanding of lesson planning, task and materials design, techniques particularly useful for teaching of grammar and vocabulary and key aspects of classroom management.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
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A | Semester 2 2024-25 |
Subject content
Students who complete the course successfully should be able to:
plan lessons using standard ESOL approaches;
carry out effective classroom management appropriate to varying teaching contexts;
design effective tasks, activities and exercises for specific groups of learners;
evaluate materials in relation to methodology and teaching context;
relate practical issues of classroom teaching to relevant research and literature on teaching methodology
Academic and graduate skills
Engage critically with academic and language teaching publications
Formulate critical and balanced arguments orally and in writing
Participate in groupwork and problem-solving activities
Undertake and report appropriately short, empirical data collection and analysis work
Demonstrate effective planning and time management
Word-process,, manage files, use e-mail, VLE and the Web
Course Details
Describing Teaching Sequences
This session will introduce and demonstrate a number of approaches to describing and understanding lesson sequences. It will explore how approaches such as Presentation Practice Production and Task-Based Instruction differ in terms of these sequences, and provide insights into possible combinations of elements for teaching and learning.
Evaluating Teaching Techniques
This session will provide demonstration and discussion of a number of important teaching techniques used to good effect over the years. These include ‘Total Physical Response’, oral language drilling, and the use of teaching aids and visuals.
Teaching Grammar
This session will situate current practices in grammar teaching in terms of TESOL methods and approaches. It will demonstrate the differences between ‘deductive’ and ‘inductive’ approaches, introduce ‘consciousness raising’, reflect on the role of ‘practice’ in grammar teaching and look at how to carry out language analysis of form /meaning / use.
Approaches to Pronunciation
This session will begin by exploring the problem of ‘whose’ pronunciation to teach, the role of ‘models’ and the implications of an English as a Lingua Franca approach. It then focuses on techniques and strategies for teaching pronunciation, including demonstrations of how to use the phonemic chart, minimal pair tasks etc. to focus on individual sounds, with other activities for connected speech, stress, intonation and word linking.
Presenting and Teaching Vocabulary
The lexical approach and implications for teaching will be revisited before a range of methods and techniques for presenting new vocabulary are demonstrated. Ways of contextualising vocabulary will be considered, along with issues surrounding selection, practice recycling and testing.
Classroom Management
The session will look at how teachers manage the teaching environment and the teaching process. Teacher roles in terms of setting up activities, grouping learners and managing interaction will be discussed, with a consideration of teacher language in the classroom; this will deal specifically with how teachers give and check instructions and elicit responses, and consider the use of L1 versus L2 in the classroom.
Tasks, Activities and Exercises
Issues in the design of activities, tasks and exercises will be examined, with reference to examples from published coursebooks and home-grown materials. The questions of when and how to supplement coursebooks will be discussed, and there will be practice in designing instructional materials to teach receptive and productive skills.
Lesson Planning
This session will pull together ideas from earlier sessions and focus on planning by looking at how to identify and write aims, and matching materials and aids to aims and the learner. In particular, it will provide a review of some aspects of teaching sequences, designing tasks and classroom management. A standard lesson plan format for the assignment will be presented and discussed.
Dealing with Errors and Giving Feedback
This session focuses on techniques for error correction and it looks at ways in which teachers can give feedback. Various correction techniques for spoken errors will be presented and there will be a consideration of approaches to correcting written errors. Issues surrounding the assessment of grammatical accuracy in spoken and written work will also be addressed.
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
None
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
You will receive feedback in a range of ways throughout this module. This will include oral feedback in class, responses to posts on the VLE discussion board and written comments on work. You will have the chance to obtain feedback on your writing during the module, and you will have a short one-to-one meeting with a module tutor to discuss assessments.
You will be provided physical written feedback on assignment report sheets as well as them being readily available on the VLE. The feedback is returned to students in line with university policy. Please check the Guide to Assessment, Standards, Marking and Feedback for more information