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Browse > ELT > Products >  CES > Cambridge World of English Magazine > Articles   |
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ArticlesVideo and Cambridge English for Schools
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[ ] honey [ ] salt [ ] water [ ] milk [4 ] eggs [ ] flour [ ] butter [ ] lemon [ ] sugar
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Now watch the same segment with sound and see how many you guessed correctly.
Grammar
Recent studies of how languages are learned suggest what many teachers already knew, that the teaching of grammar is important. A focus on form, as opposed to formS (Long and Robinson 1998), has been advocated as the way grammar teaching should be carried out. This implies the use of tasks in which noticing, as used by Schmidt (1993), is central. In other words, tasks should promote detection plus the noticing of a given language feature. The following task is an example of this. It focuses on likes and dislikes and is meant to be used with sequence 5 of Welcome to English as above; the segment right after a student says: ÔYes, itÕs quite small, and itÕs a bit lumpy!Õ Students match the halves of the sentences before the segment is shown to them, then they check by watching it. The objective is to match the halves by looking not only at meaning but also by noticing how sentences are syntactically formed.
Task
Draw a line to match the halves of the sentences as in the example. Watch the video to check your answers. Compare with a partner.
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Alejandro G. Mart'nez is the Academic Consultant for Cambridge University Press in Mexico and Central America.
REFERENCES:
Long, M. and Robinson, P. (1998) Focus on form: Theory, research, and
practice from Dougthy, C. and Williams, J. (eds.) (1998)
Focus on Form in Classroom Second Language Acquisition Cambridge University
Press Schmidt, R. (1993)
Awareness and second language acquisition. Annual Review of
Applied Linguistics 13, 206-226 Cambridge University Press
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