Microskills by Richards 1983
Microskills by Richards 1983
Microskills by Richards 1983
7- Monitor your own oral production and use various strategic devicespauses, filleres, self-corrections, backtracking- to enhance the clarity of
the message.
8- Use grammatical word classes (noun, verbs, etc.), systems (e.g., tense,
agreement, and pluralization), word order, patterns, rules, and elliptical
forms.
9- Produce speech in natural constituents in appropriate phrases, pause
groups, breath groups, and sentences.
10-Express a particular meaning different grammatical forms.
11-Use cohesive devices in spoken discourse.
12-Accomplish appropriately communicative functions according to
situations, participants, and goals.
13-Use appropriate registers, implicature, pragmatic conventions, and other
sociolinguistic features in face to face conversations.
14-Convey links and connections between events and communicate such
relations as main idea, supporting idea, new information, given
information, generalization, and exemplification.
15-Use facial features kinesics body language, and other nonverbal cues
along with verbal language to convey meaning.
16-Develop and use battery of speaking strategies, such as emphasizing
key words, rephrasing, providing a context for interpreting the meaning
of words, appealing for help, and accurately assessing how well your
interlocutor is understanding you.
Reading microskill:
1. Discriminate among the distinctive graphemes and orthographic
patterns of English.
2. Retain chunks of language of different lengths in short-term memory.
3. Process writing at an efficient rate of speed to suit the purpose.
4. Recognize a core of words, and interpret words order patterns and
their significance.
5. Recognize grammatical words classes. (Nouns, verbs, etc.), systems
(e.g., tense, agreement, pluralization), patterns, rules, and elliptical
forms.
6. Recognize that a particular meaning may be expressed in different
grammatical forms.
7. Recognize cohesive devices in written discourse and their role in
signaling the relationship between and among clauses.
8. Recognize the rhetorical forms of written discourse and their
significance for interpretation.
9. Recognize the communicative functions of written text, according to
form and purpose.
10.Infer context that is not explicit by using background knowledge.
11.Infer links and connections between events, ideas, etc. Deduce
causes and effects, and detect such relations as main idea,
supporting idea, new information, given information, generalization,
and exemplification.