WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO TEACH A LANGUAGE?

1.- The decline of methods

BEFORE THE 1970s

AUDIOLINGUALISM

FROM 1970 TO THE 1980s

COMMUNICATIVE APPROACHES

TPR

THE SILENT WAY

COUNSELING LEARNING

TOP DOWN APPROACH

PRESCRIPTIVISM

TO THE END OF XX CENTURY

DECLINE OF THE METHODS

3.- Context and resources

NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND RESOURCES

INTERNET

SOCIAL MEDIA

MULTIMEDIA

CHANGES IN LEARNING CONTROL

ONCE TEACHER CENTERED NOW LEARNER CENTERED

CHANGES IN LEARNING ENVIRONMENT

NOT ONLY THE CLASSROOM BUT EVERYWHERE

THE END OF THE LANGUAGE LAB

THE BIRTH OF THE SMART CLASSROOM

QUESTIONS

What type of teaching methodology do you apply in your classroom: Top—down or Bottom up? Which do you think is better for your students?

If you are aware that one of the difficulties for L2 learning is the practice outside the classroom, what strategies would you apply for in the classroom and out of the classroom learning of the students? Why?

2.- Communicative approaches

STILL ON STAGE

DUE TO

examples of those principles are

Content Based Instruction

Cooperative Language Learning

Task—Based Instruction

THE GOAL OF LANGUAGE LEARNING IS COMMUNICATIVE COMPETENCE

LEARNERS LEARN A LANGUAGE THROUGH USING IT TO COMMUNICATE

AUTHENTIC AND MEANINFUL COMMUNICATION SHOULD BE THE GOAL OF CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES

FLUENCY AND ACCURACY ARE BOTH IMPORTANT DIMENSIONS OF COMMUNICATION

COMMUNICATION INVOLVES THE INTEGRATION OF DIFFERENT LANGUAGE SKILLS

LEARNING IS A GRADUAL PROCESS THAT INVOLVES TRIAL AND ERROR

4.- Influences from corporate sector

ORGANIZATIONAL

STRATEGIES

PLANNING

CORPORATE MANAGEMENT

RESOURCES

PERFORMANCE OUTCOMES

STANDARDS

PEDAGOGICAL CHANGES

before

TEACHERS DEVELOPMENT

COURSE DESIGN

TESTING

now

SYLLABUS & LP

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

MATERIAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

CONCLUSIONS

then

METHODS SEEN AS THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL LANGUAGE TEACHING

TOP—DOWN APPROACHES TO TEACHING

PRESCRIPTIVISM IN TEACHING

SCHOOLS AND INSTITUTIONS STILL INSTALLING LANGUAGE LABS

TEACHING AND LEARNING TOOK PLACE IN THE CLASSROOM

THE TEACHER WAS THE PRIMARY SOURCE OF INPUT

TEACHING LARGELY BOOK AND PAPER—BASED

now

POST—METHODS ERA

COMMUNICATIVE APPROACHES

BOTTOM—UP APPROACHES TO TEACHING

EXPLORATORY AND REFLECTIVE APPROACHES TO TEACHING

LANGUAGE LAB CONVERTED TO A MULTIMEDIA CENTER

VIDEO AND COMPUTERS A COMMON TEACHING AND LEARNING RESOURCE

LEARNING OCCURS INSIDE AND OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM

CLASSROOM ARE CONNECTED TO ONE ANOTHER AND TO THE WORLD

E—MAILS CONNECT STUDENTS WITH OTHER STUDENTS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD

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