To help students develop communicative efficiency in speaking, instructors can use a balanced activities approach that combines language input, structured output, and communicative output.
Language input comes in the form of teacher talk, listening activities, reading passages, and the language heard and read outside of class. It gives learners the material they need to begin producing language themselves.
Language input may be content oriented or form oriented.
- Content-oriented input focuses on information, whether it is a simple weather report or an extended lecture on an academic topic. Content-oriented input may also include descriptions of learning strategies and examples of their use.
- Form-oriented input focuses on ways of using the language: guidance from the teacher or another source on vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar (linguistic competence); appropriate things to say in specific contexts (discourse competence); expectations for rate of speech, pause length, turn-taking, and other social aspects of language use (sociolinguistic competence); and explicit instruction in phrases to use to ask for clarification and repair miscommunication (strategic competence).
Structured output focuses on correct
form. In structured output, students may have options for responses, but
all of the options require them to use the specific form or structure
that the teacher has just introduced.
Structured output is designed to make learners
comfortable producing specific language items recently introduced,
sometimes in combination with previously learned items. Instructors
often use structured output exercises as a transition between the
presentation stage and the practice stage of a lesson plan. textbook
exercises also often make good structured output practice activities.
In communicative output, the learners'
main purpose is to complete a task, such as obtaining information,
developing a travel plan, or creating a video. To complete the task,
they may use the language that the instructor has just presented, but
they also may draw on any other vocabulary, grammar, and communication
strategies that they know. In communicative output activities, the
criterion of success is whether the learner gets the message across.
Accuracy is not a consideration unless the lack of it interferes with
the message.
In everyday communication, spoken exchanges take place because
there is some sort of information gap between the participants.
Communicative output activities involve a similar real information gap.
In order to complete the task, students must reduce or eliminate the
information gap. In these activities, language is a tool, not an end in
itself. In a balanced activities approach, the teacher uses a variety of activities from these different categories of input and output. Learners at all proficiency levels, including beginners, benefit from this variety; it is more motivating, and it is also more likely to result in effective language learning.
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