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Robert J. Dickey Keimyung University, S. Korea

TBLT Lesson Planning

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Task-based language teaching requires an understanding of "what is a task" as well as a plan to ensure people do what they should, and not what they shouldn't. This powerpoint includes materials relating to lesson planning. Lesson plans are more than "what and when students do in the classroom." Instead we must consider who does what, when, how, and why, and with what. This means conceptualizing the learning experience before filling out that form that many schools require.

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Page 1: TBLT Lesson Planning

Robert J. DickeyKeimyung University, S. Korea

Page 2: TBLT Lesson Planning

Lesson Conceptualization

• Aims/Objectives –

Why are you teaching this class?– Linguistic– Content– Other

Page 3: TBLT Lesson Planning

Purpose of the Lesson Plan

• a clear working document, another teacher could pick up it and use

• Coverage of subject matter– Comprehensive

– Organized

• Cohesion & Variety

• Inter-lesson consistency?

• Exploitation of materials

Page 4: TBLT Lesson Planning

Pre-Planning (Harmer, 1983)

Page 5: TBLT Lesson Planning

Lesson Development Framework

1. Identify the specific course & group of students to teach.

2. Identify the content to be utilized.

3. Identify why the students should care.

4. Identify the specific “leaning ojective.”

5. Develop/locate an exemplar text.

6. Design student responses to the text.

7. Students check their own work, and of their peers.

8. Groupwork.

9. Students create new stories / endings, and tell groupmates.

10.Testing.

Page 6: TBLT Lesson Planning

What is a task?

Page 7: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task = Doing for a purpose

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Language Learning Objective(s)

• Not just an activity or exercise

• Not just language practice

• Not “teaching time”• Intimately connected to current

language-learning syllabus objectives (i.e., this is a language learning classroom)

Page 9: TBLT Lesson Planning

How is a Language-Learning Task different from an Activity or

Exercise?

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Task-based Defined - Willis

• Activities where the target language is used by the learner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome.

• is central to the methodological cycle

• learners are free chose whatever language form they wish

Page 11: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task-based - Ellis

• A workplan (plan for learning)

• Primary focus on meaning • Real-world processes of language

use (even if task is artificial)

• Any of the 4 language skills

• Involves cognitive processes

• Clearly-defined communicative outcome

Page 12: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task-based - Nunan

• Syllabus is centered NOT on an ordered list of linguistic items but on a collection of tasks

• Distinction between– Real-world tasks

– Pedagogical tasks• Mobilizing grammatical knowledge in order

to express meaning

Page 13: TBLT Lesson Planning

Pedagogical Task - Nunan

a piece of classroom work that involves the learners in comprehending, manipulating, producing or interacting in the target language while their attention is focused on mobilizing their grammatical knowledge in order to express meaning, and in which the intention is to convey meaning rather than to manipulate form.“

(Nunan, 2004, p.4).

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Task Types (open/closed)

• Closed tasks– Highly structured, specific goals

• Open tasks– Loosely structured, non-specific goals

• Anything in-between

J. Willis, 1996

Page 15: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task Types (focus)

• Focused tasks– encourage the use of particular linguistic

items through noticing in pre-task

• Unfocused tasks– allow learners to use an array of

language features or structures

• Blending is possible

Page 16: TBLT Lesson Planning

J. Willis’ “Framework” (1996)

Page 17: TBLT Lesson Planning

3 Stages (phases) of TBLL

1. Pre-Task– Preparation– A mini-task

2. Task – during the “main” task– Outcome is principal focus– Language-learning Objective

3. Post-Task– Language-learning support

Page 18: TBLT Lesson Planning

1. Pre-Task stage

• Motivation• “Framing” the task

– Inform what the learners will do– Nature of the outcome– Signposts along the way

• Preparation to perform the task• How much? (time)

Addressing Cognitive Load in Task

Page 19: TBLT Lesson Planning

Students should understand that they have to “multi-task”

Page 20: TBLT Lesson Planning

Preparation to Perform Task

• Similar Task– Teacher-led practice

– Observe a model (oral or written)

– Easier task, broken in parts

– “Task-designed to fail”

• Strategic Planning

• Non-task preparation

Page 21: TBLT Lesson Planning

Non-Task Preparation

• Pre-teaching vocabulary, grammar – Strong vs. Weak forms of TBLL

(Ellis’ Task-Supported Language Learning)

• Examine similar but different functions/setting

Page 22: TBLT Lesson Planning

2. Task (main) stage

a. Task Performance Options (planned before class)

b. Task Process Options (determined “live” inside the task event)

Page 23: TBLT Lesson Planning

a. Task Performance Options

• Time limit?– Strictly enforced? Re-negotiated? More

time more accuracy? (Lang, Content)

• Access to data during the task?– How complex is the data?– Can see notes or whole data, or nothing?

• Surprise? (change something)

• Pairs/Groups, moving around

Page 24: TBLT Lesson Planning

b. Task Process Options

• Classroom participants must forget where they are and why they are there

• Classroom participants must believe in learn by doing rather than by studying

• Teacher monitors learners’ performance to impact future teaching and tasks

• Focus-on-Form classroom with teacher interaction in tasks (error-correction)

Page 25: TBLT Lesson Planning

3. Post-task (stage)

• Repeat performance

• Reflecting on performance– Individually or in groups

• Focus on Forms– Consciousness-Raising– Noticing– Review of Errors (Explicit, Non-explicit)– Production Practice activities/exercises

Page 26: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task Input

• Data– “Text” (Written or Oral)

– Non-verbal materialsRealia, pictures, diagrams, tables,or other…

– Specific to the task (model) or less-specific

• Procedures– Consider “setting” (groups, etc)

Page 27: TBLT Lesson Planning

Factors Affecting Task Difficulty

• Context & Abstractness• Degree of cognitive demand• Access to background knowledge• Level of learner support available• Language complexity• Emotional stress in task completion• Interest and Motivation of the learner

Page 28: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task Varieties

• Listing• Ordering & Sorting• Comparing• Problem-solving• Sharing personal experiences• Creative tasks (projects)

J. Willis, 1996

Page 29: TBLT Lesson Planning

Critique of TBLL

• Learners might be led to focus on– meaning over form,

– “fluent” rather than challenging language

• “Practice” of inaccurate or simplistic language

• Time away from instruction (new materials)

Page 30: TBLT Lesson Planning

Observations on Willis ‘96

• “Event” (task) very short (1-5 min)

• Planning time for report of event is substantial (though this too is a task)

• Reporting on the event is a third type of task

• Language Focus (post-task) is approx ½ of lesson period

Page 31: TBLT Lesson Planning

Lesson Plan Stages (Phases)

• PPP(+P)• XXX(+X)• IDC• TTT• ARC• ESA• OHE & I-I-I• Deep-end Strategy

Page 32: TBLT Lesson Planning

PPP

• PresentationLecture

• PracticeExercises, Drills

• ProductionControlled,

Substitutions

Presumption of “linear development”

Page 33: TBLT Lesson Planning

PPP(+P?)

• PresentationLecture

• PracticeExercises, Drills

• ProductionControlled,

Substitutions

• Personalization?Not Traditional

Page 34: TBLT Lesson Planning

XXX(+X)?

• X – eXplain

• X – eXample

• X – eXercise

• X - eXamination

Page 35: TBLT Lesson Planning

IDC

• Introduction(Less than 5 minutes)

• Development

• Consolidation

Page 36: TBLT Lesson Planning

Test-Teach-Test

• Pre-test (Do I need to teach this?)– Eliciting – “Who knows this?”– “Mini-Task”– How well do they know this (comparison)?

• Teach(Method not specified)

• Post-Test (assess Learners & Lesson)– Did they learn – Do I need to re-teach?

Page 37: TBLT Lesson Planning

ARC (J. Scrivener)

• Authentic use(e.g., a communicative activity)

• Restricted use(e.g., Drills, guided writing, elicited dialogue)

• Clarification & focus(e.g., Explaining grammar, giving examples,

analyzing errors)

mix the order

Page 38: TBLT Lesson Planning

ESA (J. Harmer)

• Engageteachers try to arouse the students’ interest

• Studystudents focus on language / construction

• Activatestudents use language as freely and as

communicatively as they can

mix the order

Page 39: TBLT Lesson Planning

OHE (M. Lewis)

• Observe(read or listen to language) which will then provoke them to

• Hypothesizeabout how the language works before going on to

• Experimenton the basis of that hypothesis

Page 40: TBLT Lesson Planning

I-I-I (McCarthy & Carter)

• Illustrationexamining real data in specific contexts

• Interactionconsciousness-raising activities designed to focus on the inter-personal use of language and the negotiation of meaning

• Inductionencouraging students to notice the different functions of the lexio-grammatical features

Page 41: TBLT Lesson Planning

Other Elements to consider

• Warmer

• Review last class

• Elicitation

• Check Homework

• Peer-Coaching

• Extension

• Homework Assignment

• Review this class

• Preview next class

• Fillers

• Wind-down

Page 42: TBLT Lesson Planning

One Lesson Pattern (Blend)

Page 43: TBLT Lesson Planning

Classroom Tools

• Visual Aids (more than powerpoint)– visual impact– helpful– replace words– fun– show students you

understand their difficulties

• Multimedia & Audio Aids

Page 44: TBLT Lesson Planning

Instructional Techniques

• Consciousness-Raising – Activities

• Teacher (or Learner) -driven

– Drawing awareness to

– Language properties

– for FUTURE noticing

• Noticing– Where “input” may become

“intake”

Page 45: TBLT Lesson Planning

Features of a Lesson Plan

• Aims

• Timing

• Stages (Phases)

• Motivations

• Teacher does

• Learners do

• Assumptions

• Classroom Setting

• Materials needed– Book/handouts– Visuals/realia– Audio/multimedia

• Classroom setting• Number of learners• Anticipated

– Problems– Outcomes

Page 46: TBLT Lesson Planning

Other Considerations

• Learner Focus– not just “teaching steps”

• Interactions– T-Ss, S-S, Ss-Ss(4s)…

• Recent Work

• Share aims and usefulness (and steps? with the learners?

• Instructional Scripts

Page 47: TBLT Lesson Planning

Lesson Plan Features (TKT)

(A boring lesson?) TKT [book] (2005)

Page 48: TBLT Lesson Planning

Lesson Planning Template

Page 49: TBLT Lesson Planning

TBLL in a nutshell

• Pre-Task

• Task

• Post-Task

Matthew Walker, 2010

• Objectives

• Options

• Definition

• Types

Page 50: TBLT Lesson Planning

Pre-Task

Stage Objectives• attention on how to

complete the task• motivation

Stage Options• non-task• task instructions• modeling

(passive/active)

• similar task• strategic planning

no planning focus on language focus on content

Page 51: TBLT Lesson Planning

Task

Definition of Task• meaning• gap• resources• defined outcome

other than the use of language

• language as the means not the end

• learner’s experience

Task Types• open / closed• focused / unfocused• input / output/ 4-skills

• Performance Options

• time pressures• access to input• surprise element

Page 52: TBLT Lesson Planning

Post-Task

Stage Objectives• review language

used in the task

Matthew Walker, 2010

Stage Options• repeat performance• reflecting on the task

personal reflectionGroupwork

• focusing on forms learner errornoticingproduce and practice

Page 53: TBLT Lesson Planning

Hope this Helps!

Robert J. Dickey

Keimyung University

Daegu, S. Korea

[email protected]