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MOTIVATIO N AND PROGRESS

MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

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Page 1: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

MOTIVATION AND

PROGRESS

Page 2: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Factors influencing learner motivation1. Past learning experience.2. Success and reward.3. The content of the lesson.4. Self-confidence.5. Length of time studying English.6. Lack of challenge.7. A sense of difficulty.

Page 3: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Using English in the classroomSome of your students will not be used to an English-only classroom. It isadvisable for them to make the most of your mother-tongue status but it can sometimes be difficult to insist on English-only. In some school systems translation is used, particularly in a contrastive way, to highlight differences between the native language tense system or use of prepositions, etc. and the relative usage in English. These uses can be constructive but assistants are generally not called upon to present language, just to reinforce and practice it. Therefore your lessons should be in English, except in exceptional circumstances, like a student falling ill or major misunderstanding that can only be cleared up in the native language.

Page 4: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Tips for encouraging the use of English in the

classroom

Page 5: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

1. Always reply in English

Page 6: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

2. Try not to be too dogmatic

Page 7: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

3. Artificial motivators like the swear box for use of the students’ mother tongue can be introduced in a light-hearted way, or a list of forfeits which anyone not speaking in English must carry out. Use dice and a list of six forfeits (which you can vary throughout the year), e.g. ‘Count from twenty backwards very quickly’, ‘Sing a song you know in English’, etc.

Page 8: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

4. Points can be deducted…

Page 9: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

5. Make it clear to the students that you do not welcome the use of themother tongue in your classes. If this proves to be a problem, report itto the teacher in charge.

Page 10: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

6. Simplify the English you use

Page 11: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

7. Help students to make an effort to understand

Page 12: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Types Of Learner Error

Page 13: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Interference from the mother tongueAll languages are different and it is natural to assume that other languages might perform in the same way as our own. Our system of reality, which defines how we view the world, often collapses when we try to apply it to another. In European languages there may be two forms to denote the ‘you’ of English and these forms are used depending on how well you know someone in your own social hierarchy, such as using vous or tu in French and Lei or tu in Italian.

When a French or Italian learner says: ‘I am living in Nice with my parents’, rather than ‘I live in ...’, it is because their own language does not have two present tense forms to distinguish between permanent/fixed time and continuous/temporary fixed time. It is common for learners to ask ‘What is the future tense in English?’ as if looking for a direct translation. These assumptions show up in their errors and are natural.

Page 14: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

TranslationSometimes when speaking or writing, students may find they do not know a suitable expression, so they fall back on using a direct translation of their own language. This is a conscious decision, rather than the unconscious interference.

It is useful to develop communication strategies to get the message across, and this is more successful in the long term than staying silent. Experimentation is a vital part of the process towards fluency.

Page 15: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

False friendsSome words may have been borrowed from other European languages, notably Latin in origin, and look the same as a word in your own language.

This ‘false’ assumption leads us to think they mean the same and can be used in the same way.

Page 16: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Sound systemEach language has its own sounds, which are produced by using the throat, mouth, tongue, etc. This involves basic motor skills, which differ from one language to another and need time and effort to master.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6h36QW_bwM

Page 17: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

When and How to correct Errors

Page 18: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Fluency Vs. Accuracy

Page 19: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

When To Correct?

Page 20: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Correction Techniques

Page 21: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Feedback on Errors1. Verbal praise or encouragement in class2. Discussing progress with teachers3. Written praise of their written work4. Recording students

Page 22: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Visual Correction TechniqueUse hand gestures for clarification and for encouraging self-correction:

1. Use your index finger and thumb to indicate contractions.2. Use all the fingers on one hand to represent the words in a sentence or question.3. Use your arm or hand to gesture for inversion in question forms.

Page 23: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Encouraging peer or self-correction1. When correcting written work put a line to indicate where the error is, but don’t correct it. It helps if you indicate in the margin what type of error it is with symbols, e.g. w/o for word order, sp for spelling, etc. ‘My father like__ football but I don’t!’ (Third person?) The learners then have to puzzle over their errors, discuss with classmates and, if necessary, the teacher, to come up with a solution.

Page 24: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

2. You can use the same approach as above during oral feedback on the board. Select the main error types. Write four or five on the board with an indication of where the problem lies. Put students in pairs for a few minutes to correct the problems. This might be pronunciation, but with higher level groups you can also focus on appropriate context, e.g. ‘Wasthe expression polite enough?’ ‘Was it too formal?’

Page 25: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

3. Activities involving group writing will naturally involve a certain amount of peer correction as students contribute their knowledge to the group effort. To take this a step further, students can be encouraged to pass round their group work to be marked by another group before handing it in. This can be very motivating for teenagers who value the opinion of their peers.

Page 26: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

4. To reinforce feelings of progress get students to collect their most frequent errors weekly. Students copy the uncorrected phrase, question or word on a piece of card or paper and keep in an envelope or small box. Put a corrected version in another envelope or box. Encourage them to look at the uncorrected version frequently for five minutes every day.When they are sure that they are not making the mistake anymore, they remove the uncorrected version from their envelope and transfer it to the envelope with the corrected version to form a pair. Students may also like swapping error envelopes in class once a month and then try to correctthem orally or in writing. This gives teenagers a sense of control over their own progress.

Page 27: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Clarification techniques to use during feedbackDiagramsDiagrams are particularly useful in representing abstract concepts of time, quantity and degree. You can use them:

• to clarify confusion• to give a board summary which students can refer to• as prompts on the board for learners to use during controlled oral work or discussions.

Page 28: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Diagrams for degree. Draw on board or take five sheets of A4 paper and black marker. Stick each on to card and laminate or cover with self-adhesive plastic film so they can be re-used. Write the various uses on the back as they come up in your teaching.

‘Do you ever see films in English on television?’‘Yes, sometimes.’ / ‘No, never.’

Page 29: MOTIVATION AND PROGRESS. Factors influencing learner motivation 1.Past learning experience. 2.Success and reward. 3.The content of the lesson. 4.Self-confidence

Time-linesThese are very useful for:• contrasting tenses (past/present)He was an English teacher but now he’s an international pop star.• contrasting a period with a fixed point in time (future and past)It was raining when we arrived at Kate’s flat.• contrasting continuous with interrupted actionsHe left the village that night and has lived in London ever since.

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