Ways of Teaching Grammar - Seminar Series PDF
Ways of Teaching Grammar - Seminar Series PDF
Ways of Teaching Grammar - Seminar Series PDF
Teaching
Grammar:
The ARTT of
grammar teaching
Dr Tim Taylor
HK Institute of Education
Dept of ELE
B4-LP-04
Saturday, 22nd November 2014
9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
from Language Learnability and Language Development by Steven Pinker, page 248
Language is a system of signs,
but who writes the rules?
Session One - What Is Grammar?
How Do We Learn It?
Grammar is a negotiated system of rules that
governs a system of systems.
Theoretical Grammar
The study of the essential components of any human language.
Theoretical grammar or syntax is concerned with making completely
explicit the formalisms of grammar, and in providing scientific
arguments or explanations in favour of one account of grammar
rather than another, in terms of a general theory of human language.
(A. Renouf and A. Kehoe, The Changing Face of Corpus Linguistics. Rodopi, 2003)
Mental Grammar
The generative grammar stored in the brain that allows a
speaker to produce language that other speakers can
understand. "All humans are born with the capacity for
constructing a Mental Grammar, given linguistic experience; this
capacity for language is called the Language Faculty (Chomsky,
1965). A grammar formulated by a linguist is an idealized
description of this Mental Grammar.“
(P. W. Culicover and A. Nowak, Dynamical Grammar: Foundations of Syntax II. Oxford Univ. Press, 2003)
Transformational Grammar
A theory of grammar that accounts for the constructions of a
language by linguistic transformations and phrase structures. In
transformational grammar, the term 'rule' is used not for a precept
set down by an external authority but for a principle that is
unconsciously yet regularly followed in the production and
interpretation of sentences. A rule is a direction for forming a
sentence or a part of a sentence, which has been internalized by the
native speaker.
(J. D. Williams, The Teacher's Grammar Book. Routledge, 2005)
Systemic-Functional Grammar
1. Experiential:
describe events and states and the entities involved in them.
e.g. Tom went to Macau last Saturday. vs. Andy went to Beijing last Sunday.
Actor Process Goal
2. Interpersonal:
interact with other people, to establish and maintain relations with them.
e.g. Tom went to Macau last Saturday. vs. Where did Tom go last Saturday?
Subject Predicator Complement Adjunct
3. Textual:
organize our messages in ways that indicate how they fit in with the other
messages around them.
e.g. Tom went to Macau last Saturday.
Theme Rheme
vs. It was Tom who went to Macau last Saturday.
Key characteristics
Systemic-Functional Grammar
FUTURE SIMPLE
Will you have one? Making an offer
OK, I’ll do it. Volunteering
I know - I’ll go to the film! Making a sudden decision
You’ll turn right at the Giving instructions
corner. Reassuring/Promising
You will enjoy yourself!
Describing an annoying
He will keep on habit
smoking… Making assumptions
That’ll be Peter!
(Doorbell)
…and even more
Reference Grammar
A description of the grammar of a language, with
explanations of the principles governing the
construction of words, phrases, clauses, and
sentences. Examples of contemporary reference
grammars in English include A Comprehensive
Grammar of the English Language, The Longman
Grammar of Spoken and Written English, and The
Cambridge Grammar of the English Language.
Traditional-Structural
Grammar
NP VP
NP
N Vt D N
Sentence-level analysis
Knowledge-based
ANY:
Use any for countable and
countable nouns in interrogative
sentences and negative sentences:
Examples:
Have you got any cheese?
He hasn't got any friends.
Sentence-level Forced Choices
(contrasts in language not meaning)
Sentence-level Forced Choices
(Activity 2)
1. I was suddenly instructed to ______ the
guard at the entrance of the embassy last
night.
AR - Awareness-Raising Grammar
Instruction (aka, Consciousness-Raising)
T - Text-based Grammar Instruction
T - Task-based Grammar Instruction
AR - Awareness-Raising
Grammar Instruction
Principles of Awareness-Raising Grammar
Also known as Consciousness-Raising (CR)
http://youtu.be/yR7bgBVrr4g
Task-based Grammar Teaching
(Littlewood, 2004)
8 principles of task-based teaching
Principle 1: Ensure an appropriate level of task difficulty
Principle 2: Establish clear goals for each task-based lesson
Principle 3: Develop an appropriate orientation to performing
the task in the students
Principle 4: Ensure that students adopt an active role in task-
based lessons
Principle 5: Encourage students to take risks
Principle 6: Ensure that students are primarily focused on
meaning when they perform a task
Principle 7: Provide opportunities for focusing on form
Principle 8: Require students to evaluate their performance
and progress
(Ellis, 2003)
How can you plan which grammar to teach in a task?
Text-based method:
“Dictogloss as an Interactive Method of Teaching Listening to L2 Learners”*
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxUfixsP1XzSajNXTXFCYVVmYmM/view?usp=sharing
Task-based method:
“Planning and Teaching Task-Related Grammar”
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxUfixsP1XzSZlhwQ3ZIUEphVnc/view?usp=sharing