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Teaching in the Target Language: Benefits, Challenges, Strategies
UW-WhitewaterSheila Turek, Ph.D.Associate Professor of FrenchAugust 6, 2014
+Benefits
Target Language use in the classroom and flossing
http://dentalhealing.com/sitebuild/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/woman-flossing1.jpg
+Benefits
“Target language input has been identified as the overarching concept that permeates all second language acquisition theory (ACTFL, 2010; Burke, 2010; Chavez, 2006; Gass, 1997; Lightbown, 2000; Lightbown & Spada, 2006; Shrum & Glisan, 2010; Wilbur, 2007).” (Ceo-DiFrancesco 1)
+Benefits
“Exposing students to significant amounts of comprehensible input has proven to be crucial to the development of student proficiency and essential for the establishment of mental linguistic representations of the language (Ceo-DiFrancesco 1)
+ACTFL Position Statement on Use of the Target Language in the Classroom Research indicates that effective language instruction
must provide significant levels of meaningful communication and interactive feedback in the TL in order for students to develop language and cultural proficiency.
The American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) therefore recommends that language educators and their students use the target language as exclusively as possible (90% plus) at all levels of instructional time and, when feasible, beyond the classroom.
(http://www.actfl.org/news/position-statements/use-the-target-language-the-classroom-0)
+Theory vs. Practice
“In the case of target language use in the world language classroom . . . [t]here is a tension between policy, research, and practice” (Ceo Di Francesco 2), and teachers have difficulty achieving the 90% goal.
+
What do you see as the biggest challenges to teaching in the target language?
(http://www.fotosearch.com/clip-art/talk.html#comp.asp?recid=56136866&xtra=http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-RTG6jgLEc)
Discussion
Question #1
+Challenges
Typical concerns:
student comprehension
too difficult
not enough time
(Crouse, “How to Stay in the Target Language,” 23)
+Self-Reported Obstacles to TL Usage in the Classroom
Obstacles Beyond Teacher Control
Obstacles Involving Student Factors
Obstacles Involving Teaching Training
(Based on a survey of 237 instructors: 11.8% university instructors, 74.3% high school, 19.4% middle school, 9.7% elementary school, representing 7 languages: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish. Ceo-DiFrancesco, D. (2013)).
+Obstacles Beyond Teacher Control*
(* Self-reported obstacles by teachers responding to a survey conducted by Diane Ceo-DiFrancesco, “Instructor Target Language Use,” 5).
+Obstacles Involving Student Factors
(Ceo-DiFrancesco 5).
+Obstacles Involving Teaching Training
(Ceo-DiFrancesco 5).
+Dangers of using English for “important” information: the “blah blah Ginger” syndrome
(http://blahblahginger.tumblr.com/)
(Gary Larson, The Far Side)
+
What strategies do you use to get students speaking the target language? Discuss in groups of three.
(http://www.fotosearch.com/clip-art/talk.html#comp.asp?recid=56136866&xtra=http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-RTG6jgLEc)
Discussion
Question #2
+Strategies Suggested by ACTFL to Facilitate Comprehension (1)
provide comprehensible input that is directed toward communicative goals;
make meaning clear through body language, gestures, and visual support;
conduct comprehension checks to ensure understanding;
negotiate meaning with students and encourage negotiation among students;
(http://www.actfl.org/news/position-statements/use-the-target-language-the-classroom-0#sthash.40Zi9qNZ.dpuf)
+Strategies Suggested by ACTFL to Facilitate Comprehension (2)
elicit talk that increases in fluency, accuracy, and complexity over time;
encourage self-expression and spontaneous use of language;
teach students strategies for requesting clarification and assistance when faced with comprehension difficulties; and
offer feedback to assist and improve students’ ability to interact orally in the target language.
(http://www.actfl.org/news/position-statements/use-the-target-language-the-classroom-0#sthash.40Zi9qNZ.dpuf)
+Other strategies**
Explain importance of staying in TL to class at the beginning of the year; follow up with motivational chats and reward students when they use the TL;
Plan lessons so as to eliminate idle time, which can lead students to chat in English;
Change seating often so students pair with different classmates
(**Culled from blogs, online discussion lists, and previous issues of Language Educator : Crouse 27)
+Other strategies
Design info gap activities in a way that students must use the TL to obtain missing information;
Post high-frequency phrases around the class that students can use if they get stuck;
When students speak to you in English, give a quizzical look and say you don’t understand.
(Crouse 27)
+Other strategies
Use activities such as inside-outside circles that allow students to practice common expressions and structures in rapid sequence.
http://www.theteachertoolkit.com/index.php/tool/inside-outside-circles
Try a reward system in which students can earn points for maintaining the TL.
Encourage students to come up with silly stories as part of a survey or TPRS activities.
(Crouse 27)
+Making Input Comprehensible
Sensorial Supports Paraverbals Non-Verbals
•Visuals•Graphics•Realia•Pictures•Graphic organizers
•Exaggerated pronunciation
•Slower than normal speech
•Purposeful pauses•Intonation•Enunciation•Slowed speech for
emphasis•Key word emphasis
•Gestures •Facial expressions•Pantomime•Demonstration•Routine•Context clues
Fortune, Tara. ACTFL Webinar 2012, cited in Terrill, L.
+Using visuals for grammar explanations: a mini-example
Les adjectifs
S’accordent en genre : masculin ou féminin
et en nombre : (singulier/pluriel) avec les noms :
Les étudiantes intelligentes. (féminin, pluriel)
L’étudiant intelligent. (masculin, singulier)
(follow up with exercises, examples, group activity)
+
What specific assignments or activities do you use/plan to use in your own classroom to achieve the 90% goal?
(http://www.fotosearch.com/clip-art/talk.html#comp.asp?recid=56136866&xtra=http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-RTG6jgLEc)
Discussion
Question #3
+Resources
ACTFL. (2014). Position Statement: Use of the Target Language in the Classroom. Accessed on 20th July Web. 20 July 2014.
Ceo-DiFrancesco, D. (2013). Instructor Target Language Use in Today’s World Language Classrooms. MultiTasks, MultiSkills, MultiConnections: CSCTFL Reports, 1-19.
Chambers, G.N. (2013). The Target Language Revisited. Teaching and Teacher Education 36: 44-54.
Crouse, D. (2012). Going for 90% Plus: How to Stay in the Target Language. The Language Educator 7, 22-25.
Dickson, P. (1996). Using the Target Language: A View From the Classroom. Slough: NFER.
Glisan, E. (2013). On Keeping the Target Language in Language Teaching: A Bottom-up Effort to Protect the Public and Students. The Modem Language Joumal 97:2, 541-44.
Granville, P. (2008). Entering an English Free Zone. Learning Languages 8:1, 9-12.
Terrill, Laura. Maintaining Target Language in the Classroom. lauraterrill.wikispaces.com/Presentations. Accessed on 30 July 2014.
Viakinnou-Brinson, L., Herron, C., Cole, S.P., and Haight, C. (2012). The Effect of Target Language and Code-Switching on the Grammatical Performance and Perceptions of Elementary-Level College French Students.” Foreign Language Annals 45:1, 72-91.