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Session 6 on book evaluation is an essential guide.

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  • Session 6-7 Coursebook evaluation and selection

    Nguyen Thu Huong (PhD) 37

    Session 6-7 SKILLS I. The four skills: Accuracy or Fluency?

    Task 1 Do you agree with the following statements? 1. Language proficiency can be defined in terms of accuracy and fluency. 2. In planning a unit of teaching, it is useful to separate the two aspects

    (accuracy and fluency) and define the learning objective at any given point in a lesson.

    3. The teaching of pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar will tend to be fluency-oriented.

    4. In teaching the four skills, the emphasis will usually be firmly on fluency. 5. Listening or reading texts are used in coursebooks for accuracy.

    Task 2 Categorize the following statements into two: accuracy and fluency activities 1. Tasks often simulate real-life situations. 2. Texts are usually used as they would be in real life: dialogues are spoken,

    articles, and written stories are read. 3. Tasks do not usually simulate real-life situations. 4. Texts may be used in any mode (skill), regardless of how they are used in

    real life (dialogues may be written, written texts used for listening). 5. The texts are usually composed of separate (discrete) items: sentences or

    words. 6. Performance is assessed on how well ideas are expressed or understood. 7. The texts are usually whole pieces of discourse: conversations, stories, etc. 8. Performance is assessed on how few language mistakes are made.

    Task 3 1. Together with a partner, determine the criteria to evaluate the ways the skills

    are presented in coursebooks. 2. Compare your ideas with those suggested by Cunningsworth (1995) on p. 38.

    II. Listening Listening material & strategies

    Task 4 Answer the following questions with a partner: 1. Can you list as many situations as you can think of where people are listening

    to other people in Vietnamese? (Refer to p. 40) 2. What are the uses of listening material? Can it be used on its own right or is

    it used to reinforce a grammatical structure? 3. What kind of listening material can be found in coursebooks? 4. How are listening tasks organized? (Refer to p. 40 for more ideas.) 5. When working on listening in the classroom, do you think it makes more

    sense to start with work on the small pieces (e.g. sounds and words and details) or on the big pieces (e.g. background topics, the overall structure and organization of a text, the general meaning, etc.)?

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    6. What are some factors that you have to consider when evaluating the listening skill in a coursebook?

    (Cunningsworth, 1995: 67) Types of activities

    Task 5 Go through the list of Types of listening activities taken from Ur (1996: 113-114) below. Mark activity types that seem useful to you. Then look at a coursebook that you are familiar with, and see how many of these are represented. Are there many that are totally neglected? Are there others that are over-used?

    Types of Listening Activities

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    Adapting coursebook listening activities

    Task 6 Below are descriptions of three listening tasks, each accompanied by the listening texts. What might you do to improve or vary them to suit a class you teach? Can you find out any possible problems?

    (Ur, 1996: 105)

    (Ur, 1996: 108)

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    Listening activity 1 (Adapting coursebook)

    Listening activity 2

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    Listening activity 3

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    III. SPEAKING

    Successful speaking activity

    Task 7 1. On your own, tick which items on the following list are characteristics of a

    successful speaking activity. 2. Share the results with a partner.

    a. Learners are often inhibited about trying to say things in a foreign language in the classroom.

    b. They cannot think of anything to say. c. As much as possible of the period of time allotted to the activity is in

    fact occupied by learner talk. d. In classes where all the learners share the same mother tongue, they

    may tend to use it. e. All get a chance to speak, and contributions are fairly evenly

    distributed. f. Learners are eager to speak because they are interested in the topic

    and have something new to say about it, or because they want to contribute to achieving a task objective.

    g. Some learners seem to dominate, while others speak very little or not at all.

    h. Learners express themselves in utterances that are relevant, easily comprehensible to each other, and of an acceptable level of language accuracy.

    Communicative activities

    Task 8 1. Consider some notions that have to do with communication:

    a. Communicative activities are classroom activities designed to set learners to speak and listen to one another.

    b. We typically communicate when one of us has information that another does not have.

    c. The aim of a communicative activity in class is to get learners to use the language they are learning to interact in realistic and meaningful ways, usually involving exchanges of information or opinion.

    2. Which of the following list is a communicative activity? a. Repeating sentences that you say b. Doing oral grammar drills c. Reading aloud from the coursebook d. Giving a prepared speech e. Acting out a scripted conversation f. Giving instructions so that someone can use a new machine g. Improvising a conversation so that it includes lots of examples of a

    new grammar structure h. One learner describes a picture in the textbook while the others look

    at it. 3. In coursebooks, the following two oral fluency activities are often found. Try

    them out in two groups, one after the other, allowing about five minutes for each. The other groups will act as observers by keeping an eye on how

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    things are going: how much people are talking, the kind of language they are using, how interested and motivated they seem to be.

    4. Can you find out the difference between the two activities performed? Which one is topic-based and which one is task-based?

    Task 9 1. Consider the following communicative activity types taken from Scrivener

    (2005: 153-155) and Ur (1995: 131-133). See how much you have used or found in coursebooks.

    2. Then consider the two extracts from two coursebooks that follow. See how they present the speaking activity. Can you see any communicative activity (mentioned in 1) represented? Any activity that is different from those presented?

    3. Can you work out guidelines for evaluating the speaking skill in coursebooks?

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    (Scrivener, 2005)

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    (Ur, 1995)

    Examples from Coursebooks 1. High Season: English for the Hotel and Tourist Industry

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    2. Reward Pre-Intermediate

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    IV. READING

    Criteria for assessing reading material

    Task 10 Together with a partner, answer the following questions: 1. What are some purposes in which reading texts can be used in coursebooks? 2. What are some general criteria that we can rely on to evaluate the reading

    content? 3. When analyzing the reading texts, what should we need to know? 4. From your experience, what are of some types or genres of text that can be

    found in coursebooks?

    Choosing reading activities

    Task 11 Which of the following seem to be useful reading activities and which not? Why? Briefly develop an alternative procedure for the less satisfactory ones. 1. The class reads a whole page of classified advertisements in the newspaper,

    using their dictionaries to check up all unknown words. 2. Students each have a copy of the Guardian Weekly newspaper. Ask them to

    find the word over somewhere on the front page. 3. Place a pile of local tourist leaflets on the table and explain that students, in

    groups of four, can plan a day out tomorrow. 4. Students read a short extract from a novel and answer five multiple-choice

    comprehension questions about fine points of detail.

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    Task 12 1. In Boxes 10.121-3, taken from Ur (1995:151-153), are three examples of

    texts in English for intermediate readers. Do you have any comments on these three examples?

    2. Compare your comments with those from Ur (1995).

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    V. WRITING

    Uses of writing

    Task 13 Tell whether the following writing activities are used as a means or an end or both. 1. Learners write a response to the reading of a controversial newspaper article 2. Learners note down new vocabulary. 3. Learners practice specific written forms at the level of word or sentence. 4. Write out answers to reading or listening comprehension questions. 5. Learners are invited to express themselves using their own words. 6. Learners write anecdotes to illustrate the meaning of idioms. 7. Learners write argumentative essays.

    Kinds of writing activities

    Task 14 1. What are the kinds of writing activities that can be found in coursebooks? Are

    they of the controlled kind or unguided kind? 2. What conventions of different sort of writing (i.e. genres) are frequently

    found in coursebooks? 3. What kind of emphasis should be given to the following kinds of writing

    work? Accuracy or Fluency?

    4. What kinds of knowledge should students be equipped with if they want to

    write an English essay?

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    Evaluation of textbook writing activities

    Task 15 1. From your experience, what makes a writing activity successful? 2. Are the criteria shown in the box below acceptable to you? Would you omit

    or change any of them, add more?

    3. Read the following types of writing tasks and Urs comments that follow (1995). See how much you agree with his. What types of writing tasks should have been included if writing is considered to be an end by itself?

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