Teaching
Speaking
Strategies for Developing Speaking Skills
Students often
think that the ability to speak a language is the product of language learning,
but speaking is also a crucial part of the language learning process. Effective
instructors teach students speaking strategies -- using minimal responses, recognizing
scripts, and using language to talk about language -- that they can use to help
themselves expand their knowledge of the language and their confidence in using
it. These instructors help students learn to speak so that the students can use
speaking to learn.
1. Using minimal responses
Language
learners who lack confidence in their ability to participate successfully in
oral interaction often listen in silence while others do the talking. One way
to encourage such learners to begin to participate is to help them build up a
stock of minimal responses that they can use in different types of exchanges.
Such responses can be especially useful for beginners.
Minimal
responses are predictable, often idiomatic phrases that conversation
participants use to indicate understanding, agreement, doubt, and other
responses to what another speaker is saying. Having a stock of such responses
enables a learner to focus on what the other participant is saying, without
having to simultaneously plan a response.
2. Recognizing scripts
Some
communication situations are associated with a predictable set of spoken
exchanges -- a script. Greetings, apologies, compliments, invitations, and
other functions that are influenced by social and cultural norms often follow
patterns or scripts. So do the transactional exchanges involved in activities
such as obtaining information and making a purchase. In these scripts, the
relationship between a speaker's turn and the one that follows it can often be
anticipated.
Instructors can
help students develop speaking ability by making them aware of the scripts for
different situations so that they can predict what they will hear and what they
will need to say in response. Through interactive activities, instructors can
give students practice in managing and varying the language that different
scripts contain.
3. Using language to talk about language
Language
learners are often too embarrassed or shy to say anything when they do not
understand another speaker or when they realize that a conversation partner has
not understood them. Instructors can help students overcome this reticence by
assuring them that misunderstanding and the need for clarification can occur in
any type of interaction, whatever the participants' language skill levels.
Instructors can also give students strategies and phrases to use for
clarification and comprehension check.
By encouraging
students to use clarification phrases in class when misunderstanding occurs,
and by responding positively when they do, instructors can create an authentic
practice environment within the classroom itself. As they develop control of
various clarification strategies, students will gain confidence in their
ability to manage the various communication situations that they may encounter
outside the classroom.
No comments:
Post a Comment