Literature in Language Teaching SIG Conference, Sept. 2014

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Date: 7th September, 2014 Place: Aichi University, Toyohashi Campus 9.am – 5:30pm The heart of any balanced programme: integrating literature into a four-skills course In this presentation I will describe some methods for integrating literature into an EFL environment. Using Nation and Macalister’s curriculum design principles (2010) I will describe several programmes with literature integrated in language learning. Examples from the classroom will be introduced and participants will have an opportunity to consider applications in their own contexts at the end of the session. 2 Key points - Discussion of common problems facing curriculum designers/teachers wishing to integrate literature in the language classroom - The roles of literature and the good/bad reputation of literature - Some solutions to these issues - The Nation/Macalister curriculum design principles (selected as applicable) - Some examples of materials I have developed - Advice for teachers and curriculum developers http://liltsig.org

Transcript of Literature in Language Teaching SIG Conference, Sept. 2014

Integrating literature into a four skills course

Tara McIlroy!Literature in Language Teaching SIG

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Literature Integrated Language Teaching

iPad commercial, 2014: Your verse !

Why not?

• Time constraints

• Teacher’s skill and experience

• Lack of students’ background knowledge

• Language proficiency issues

!Private languages university !Content-based CLT curriculum

Content-based classes• Self-selected topic!

• At least 650 in TOEIC!

• 2 koma for 15 weeks (90 minutes per week)!

• 100% instruction in English.!

• CLT method. Focus on four skills. !

• Teacher autonomy encouraged

Nation & Macalister, 2010: 37-38

“A sensible basis to guide teaching and to help in the design of courses rests on following

principles. These principles must be based on research and theory, and must be general

enough to allow flexibility in their application”

Language Curriculum Design

The waterfall model!Ideal mode of curriculum design!

All aspects of course, from goals down!

Virtually no constraints on planning!

Reality!

Variety of learning goals!

Unbalanced skills through testing/washback!

Multi-level classes!

Weak critical reading skills!

Tools

Mobile readings

Communication

Multimodal support

!Suitable content

Scaffolding

Global Issues Through Literature!!Poetry in English and translation!!Linguistic Creativity

Current courses

Linguistic creativity

Carter, (2004) Model of literariness !

Conversation, jokes, Information

text

Poetry

Linguistic creativity: Course goals1 Show an understanding of creative language in English

Students will be able to demonstrate some awareness of language features used in a range of texts.  As well as becoming aware of these features, students will have some awareness of the same poetic devices in everyday English also.  

 

2 Show an understanding of the experience of reading

Using examples from the classroom activities and other student-choice of texts, students will be able to show an understanding of the ways that language affects the reader using the senses such as sound, sight, taste and feeling that make up the experience of reading creative texts.

 

3 Apply creative methods to write and respond to texts

Students will engage with texts and respond in ways which show their understanding of creativity in language use. Students will write and respond creatively to their choice of text for these activities.

Principle 1: Motivation

“As much as possible, the learners should be interested about learning the language and they should come to value this learning.”!

Nation & Macalister, 2010

Interpretation• Self-selection of texts to encourage autonomy

• Using tasks which contain built-in challenges

• Setting clear outcomes with expectation that can be achieved

• Creating small, manageable tests to show learners they can be successful

• Rewarding efforts through publishing workbased on Nation & Macalister, p.50-51

Example

Example: quote and picture task

Principle 2: The Four Strands

A course should include a roughly even balance of meaning-focused input, language-focused learning, meaning focused output and fluency activities!

Nation & Macalister, 2010

MEANING FOCUSED INPUT MEANING FOCUSED OUTPUT

FLUENCY DEVELOPMENTLANGUAGE FOCUSED LEARNING

Close reading Easy reading Multimodal input

Spoken & written reflections Discussion & debate Role plays

Strategy tasks Intensive reading Group work

Repeated reading Use of simplified material Speed writing

based on Nation & Macalister, p.51-52

Interpretation

Four strands can be balanced in a lesson, unit or course

MFOMFI

FD

LFL

Pentametron• Four-strand mini-unit

• Beginning with language focused tasks (rhythm, rhyme)

• Workshop style lesson included reading Shakespearean couplets

• Examples of creative language in everyday use

• Finished with writing own couplets

Principle 3: Comprehensible input

There should be substantial quantities of interesting comprehensible receptive activity in both listening and reading.

Interpretation

• Checking the learning burden of texts

• Deciding whether to have difficult words glossed

• Offering multimodal support that provides L1 assistance

• Using the flipped classroom approach

based on Nation & Macalister, p.52-54

W.B. Yeats John Lennon

Billy Collins presents animations of his poems

Principle 4: Fluency

A language course should provide activities aimed at increasing the fluency with which learners can use the language they already know, both receptively and productively

Interpretation• Encouraging use of known language

• Using familiar topics and concepts

• Writing, reading, speaking or listening

• Using L1 knowledge to scaffold

• Simple texts for speed reading and writing

based on Nation & Macalister, p.54-65

People !Some people talk and talk And never say a thing Some people look at you And birds begin to sing !Some people laugh and laugh And yet you want to cry Some people touch your hand And music fills the sky !Charlotte Zolotow

Principle 5: Output

The learners should be pushed to produce the language in both speaking and writing over a range of discourse types

Interpretation

• Short lectures are used. Student talking time is emphasised

• Making use of language across text types helps to vary language use (formal, informal, etc.)

• Genre-switching, imitating style and retelling stories in texts all make use of this feature

teach a poem to a friend task

Principles 6,7,8,9,10…20

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Literature Integrated Language Teaching

readtothinkandlearn.tumblr.com Twitter: @taramcendo

Thank you

Carter. R. 2004. Language and creativity: the art of common talk. London, UK: Routledge. !Collins, B. (2012)Everyday Moments, Caught in Time. TED.com https://www.ted.com/talks/billy_collins_everyday_moments_caught_in_time !Nation, I.S.P. & Macalister, J. (2010) Language Curriculum Design. London, UK: Routledge.

References