Title: Grammar and Language Teaching
1Grammar and Language Teaching
- A professional development workshop
- UC Consortium on Language Learning and Teaching
2The standard view
- We used to do grammar and now we dont.
- Should we start doing grammar again?
- ..But this is the wrong view.
3The right way to look at the issue
- We know that learners develop their own
unconscious mental grammar. - Is there anything we can do to help (beyond lots
of input and interaction)? - If so, what?
4These are real questions
- The answers arent obvious.
- We dont know everything we would need to know
- but we do know some things, and that is what we
will learn about at this workshop.
5This is a live research area
- There are many things we dont know yet.
- There is disagreement about what we do know,
- And disagreement about how to implement
pedagogically what we do know.
6As a result
- Our speakers will agree about many things
- But they may disagree about some others.
- This is to be expected, and should make things
more interesting.
7Our goal is not to brainwash you
- This workshop will not try to present some party
line or single way of teaching. - You are the best judge of what is most
appropriate for your circumstances.
8What you should get from this workshop
- An understanding of what is known about the topic
and what is still unresolved. - Ideas on how to apply this understanding to
classroom practice.
9We want you
- To question your assumptions about language
teaching (even those very close to your heart). - To explore new and interesting ways of promoting
grammatical development in your students. - To choose and adapt the ideas that are a good
match for your class, program, institution.
10Much still remains to be discovered
- But we already know a lot.
- Here are some basic facts that everybody agrees
on (or should)
11What you teach ? What students learn
- The brain has its own syllabus.
- When exposed to a new language, your brain begins
to process the incoming information - New sounds
- New words
- New structures
- The brain has its own way of doing this. The
teacher and the learner have little direct
control.
12The implicit/explicit distinction
- When the brain processes information on its
own, this is implicit learning and it results
in implicit knowledge. - Ordinary language learning and use are mostly
implicit. - In language classrooms, students often acquire
conscious knowledge of how the language works.
This is explicit learning/knowledge.
13The implicit/explicit interface
- Clearly, you can have implicit knowledge of some
property of the language without explicit
knowledge. - E.g. You know something sounds right, but you
cant explain why. - You can also have explicit knowledge without
implicit knowledge. - E.g. You understand how some property of the
language works, but you cant actually do it in
spontaneous speech.
14The implicit/explicit interface
- Can implicit and explicit knowledge influence
each other (is there an interface)? - This is the big question. What is clear If
there is an interface, it is limited. - This is why you cant assume that what you teach
(explicitly) is what students learn (implicitly).
15The problem for language teachers
- Explicit knowledge can be taught and tested in a
relatively direct fashion. - Implicit knowledge can only be taught and tested
indirectly. - But for many people (teachers and students),
implicit knowledge is the main objective.
162. Anecdotes are not always reliable
- Acquiring a language is like acquiring a pot
belly. - Once you have acquired implicit knowledge of a
particular property of the language, it is hard
to know what caused that acquisition.
17Anecdotes
- Teachers and learners are often eager to report
what works and what doesnt, but how can they be
so sure? - Conclusion Reports of personal experiences are
often valuable and full of insight, but still
they must be taken with a grain of salt and
balanced against research results.
183. All languages have grammar
- Narrower definition of grammar
- How words are constructed
- How sentences are constructed
19Constructing words can be easy
- Mandarin Chinese pronouns
- wo I women we
- ni you nimen you pl.
- ta he/she tamen they
20or kind of hard
- Spanish verbs
- stem tense/aspect agreement
- com e s
- com a n
- com iera mos
- Mandarin Chinese verbs
- Ta lai-le.
- Ta lai.
21Constructing sentences can be easy
- Basic word order
- English
- The cat chased the mouse.
- Japanese
- Nekoga nezumio toraeru.
- cat mouse chased
22or kind of hard
- French causatives
- Jean a fait manger le gâteau par Marie.
- Jean made eat the cake by Marie
- Jean made Marie eat the cake.
23Broader definition of grammar
- All aspects of the structure of the language,
including pronunciation. - Mandarin Chinese
- hen hao hén hao very good
- Spanish
- dedo deðo finger
24Moral of the story
- No matter how you define grammar, all languages
have it.
254. Learners learn all languages in same way
- Basic processes and stages of learning seem to be
the same no matter what the language is. - No basis for idea that different languages
require significantly different teaching
techniques.
265. There is more to grammar than the grammar
- No book covers all the grammar.
- Many crucial topics are often ignored.
27An example from Spanish
- Las acelgas detesto, no las espinacas.
- Swiss chard I hate, not spinach.
- Las acelgas, las detesto.
- Swiss chard, I hate.
28An example from Spanish
- FOCUS
- Las acelgas detesto, no las espinacas.
- Swiss chard I hate, not spinach.
- TOPIC (Clitic Left-Dislocation)
- Las acelgas, las detesto.
- Swiss chard, I hate.
29More examples of focus
- Las acelgas detesto, no las espinacas.
- Algo hiciste. Nada compré.
- something you-did nothing I-bought
- You did something I bought nothing
30The two constructions compared
- Focus
- Las acelgas detesto, no las espinacas.
- NEW INFO OLD INFO
- Topic
- Las acelgas, las detesto.
- OLD INFO NEW INFO
31One more thing
- Focus Preverbal subject not possible.
- Las acelgas yo detesto, no las espinacas
- Las acelgas detesto yo, no las espinacas.
- Topic Preverbal subject possible.
- Las acelgas, yo las detesto.
- Las acelgas, las detesto yo.
32Lessons
- Textbooks often leave out major topics.
- We dont know how to explain everything
- Algo hiciste vs. Hiciste algo
- We sometimes simplify things in very misleading
ways. - Similar examples could be given for any
language.
33So beware of statements like
- I already taught them that I dont know why
theyre still making that mistake. - Reading aloud helped my pronunciation.
- My language doesnt have any grammar.
- You cant teach Chinese the same way you teach
Spanish. - We covered the whole grammar in one year.
34Conclusions
- Students development wont necessarily follow
our syllabus. - Implicit learning (our primary goal) cant be
taught directly. - This is true for all languages.
- What is useful for one language will probably be
useful for all. - No book contains all the grammar.
35Overview of workshop
- Today and tomorrow
- Public lectures and demonstrations
- Monday
- Closed sessions for funded UC participants.
- Small working groups, development of materials.
36Today
- Leonard Newmark Explanation vs. Experience
Time Economy in Language Teaching - Robert Kluender How Linguistic Knowledge Can
Ease Learning - Bill VanPatten Mental Representation versus
Ability in Second Language Acquisition (Part 1) - Georgette Ioup Putting Error Correction into
Proper Perspective
37Tomorrow
- Grant Goodall Fitting Grammar into the Language
Learning Experience - Victoria González Pagani Beyond Drills Web
Technology in Teaching Grammar - Bill VanPatten Mental Representation versus
Ability in Second Language Acquisition (Part 2) - Robert Kluender How students acquire things you
never teach them - Elke Riebeling and Patricia Zuker
Grammar-focused activities based on Internet
materials (demonstration) - Grant Goodall TPR and the teaching of grammar
(demonstration)