The document compares the Direct Method and Oral Approach for teaching English as a second language. The Direct Method used only the target language and relied on native or native-like teachers. It fell out of favor in the 1920s due to a lack of linguistic basis. The Oral Approach was developed to establish a more scientific foundation and included structured patterns and situations for language use. Both methods emphasize speaking skills and consider the teacher essential for modeling and correcting student speech.
The document compares the Direct Method and Oral Approach for teaching English as a second language. The Direct Method used only the target language and relied on native or native-like teachers. It fell out of favor in the 1920s due to a lack of linguistic basis. The Oral Approach was developed to establish a more scientific foundation and included structured patterns and situations for language use. Both methods emphasize speaking skills and consider the teacher essential for modeling and correcting student speech.
Original Description:
A brief comparison between the Direct Method and the Oral Approach.
The document compares the Direct Method and Oral Approach for teaching English as a second language. The Direct Method used only the target language and relied on native or native-like teachers. It fell out of favor in the 1920s due to a lack of linguistic basis. The Oral Approach was developed to establish a more scientific foundation and included structured patterns and situations for language use. Both methods emphasize speaking skills and consider the teacher essential for modeling and correcting student speech.
The document compares the Direct Method and Oral Approach for teaching English as a second language. The Direct Method used only the target language and relied on native or native-like teachers. It fell out of favor in the 1920s due to a lack of linguistic basis. The Oral Approach was developed to establish a more scientific foundation and included structured patterns and situations for language use. Both methods emphasize speaking skills and consider the teacher essential for modeling and correcting student speech.
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TESOL FINAL EXAM
Throughout this semester, we learned about different approaches and
methods used to teach English to speakers of other languages. In this paper, I will try to compare the Direct Method (the most widely known of the natural approaches) with the Oral Approach, which is mainly based on the first one. The objective of both approaches was to teach students to think in the target language and to communicate naturally with it. During the nineteenth century, linguists had begun to concentrate on child language learning and tried to build a methodology out of observations. All through history, several attempts have been made on making second language learning a lot like first language learning. Linguists Saveour and Frank provided justification for a monolingual approach to teaching and according to the second one, teachers had to encourage direct and spontaneous use of the target language. The Direct Method was then introduced and its basic principle was exclusive use of the target language in the classroom; this demanded native or native-like teachers and the entire course depended on their skills rather than on textbooks. This approach was well established and accepted in private language institutes in France and Germany and later on in the United States (Berlitz), but started declining in noncommercial schools around 1920. Linguists once more started questioning if this method had enough methodological basis to achieve natural and successful communication in the target language and got to the conclusion that it lacked rigorous basis in applied linguistics and thus rather amateur. After the Coleman Report, reading became the goal of most learning programs in the United States. A few years later, a group of linguists began another study to build a more scientific foundation for an approach to teach English. The result was a systematic study of the principles and procedures that could be applied to the selection and organization of the content of a language course. The Oral Approach began in its early stage. Through the Direct Method, only everyday vocabulary sentences were taught; after Harold Palmer and S. Hornbys study, and taking into account the increased emphasis on reading skills, vocabulary became one of the most important aspects when learning a foreign language. Studies show that the knowledge of words that occurred constantly on texts would greatly assist the reading of foreign languages; this was called Principles of Vocabulary Control. Choosing vocabulary content of the course (instead of teaching only everyday language) became the first attempt to establish principles of syllabus design. Now, there was an interest to carefully select the and grammar was seen as the underlying sentence language. Grammar (resembling in the Direct inductively and major grammatical structures sentence patterns (substitution tables).
content of the course
patterns of the spoken Method) was taught were classified into
The theory of language of both methods gave vast importance to the
speaking skill and input was always provided orally; also, the spoken language in the classroom was the target language. Vocabulary taught through the Direct Method was supposed to be acquired naturally and pronunciation was worked on from day one. The Oral Approach similarly considers speech as the basis of language but includes structure patterns
as the heart of the speaking ability. The knowledge of these structures
must be linked to a situation where the learner can use them. All materials used would be based on 4 concepts: word order, structural words, inflections of English and content words. The learning theory of the Oral Approach focused on the process of learning rather than on the conditions; that process had 3 main steps: receiving the knowledge, fixing it by repetition and then using it until it becomes a personal skill. The Direct Method tried to make students think in the target language as soon as possible. Since the spoken language in the classroom was the target language, students had to deduce meaning of words as well as the grammatical structure of sentences. One of the most criticized aspects of this approach was the fact that the teacher could not use the learners native language at all and regularly a lot of time was wasted trying to make students guess what the teacher wanted to convey; with the Oral Approach, meaning of words came from the use of them in a situation created by the teacher. Both Direct Method and Oral Approach rely on visual aids, the Direct Method used them for concrete vocabulary (were as for abstract vocabulary was taught through association of ideas) and in the Oral Approach they were considered a crucial aspect of teaching/learning. Teacher is the center of these approaches; he or she is expected to be a master of the textbook and any other materials used throughout the course. A teacher following the Direct Method had to have exceptional skills and be a native speaker, he or she was the director of the class activity and had to work with question and answer exercises paying careful attention to pronunciation and grammar. In addition to the previous points, a teacher using the Oral Approach had to model situations for the students to use the language; commands and useful cues were utilized to correct. It could be said that the teacher is essential for the success of both methods. Learners are quite passive on both methods but just a dash less on the Oral Approach. The Direct Method makes students work like partners with the teacher in the teaching/learning process and they are trained to answer questions were as on the Oral Approach, students repeat questions, answers and commands and after some time, they are expected to produce on their own but always in controlled situations. Materials used (like visual aids) are crucial for both methods, particularly on the Direct Method since the teacher needs them to demonstrate meaning. Other materials employed are books, realia, pictures, flashcards, stick figures, etc. As said before, the Direct Method declined during the 1920s and from that point the Oral Approach was created. The Situational Approach is considered to be an extension of the Oral Approach and it continues to be part of the standard set of procedures used in many British methodology texts still used in many parts of the world.
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