Fluency
What
and why?
Many
language learning tasks focus on accuracy. These are often 'closed'
exercises in which there is only one correct answer. Fluency tasks,
on the other hand, are more open. They encourage the learners to
take risks and be more creative with the language because there
is no 'right' or 'wrong' answer (see OPEN-ENDED
TASKS; also the HELP
YOURSELF LIST or Ideas list in the Student's Book for
examples of closed and open tasks). At lower language levels, language
teaching has traditionally emphasised accuracy, believing that fluency
comes once the grammar has been mastered. In CEWw, however,
both accuracy and fluency are emphasised right from the beginning.
Developing fluency is important in building up the students' confidence
and maintaining a sense of achievement in being able to say something
meaningful. Many students also learn more naturally through tasks
which focus on using the language, rather than learning about
the language. Accuracy, however, is important and for this reason
both aspects appear in the tasks in the Student's Book and Workbook.
In
all four skills, confidence and fluency are linked and make the
students more receptive to learning. Confidence and fluency in READING
and LISTENING help
students to deal with language without feeling the need to understand
every word, encourage them to guess new words, and enable them to
understand the main message, including the speaker's/writer's attitude.
Confidence and fluency in WRITING
and SPEAKING allow
students to get their ideas across without being restricted by an
over-concern with form.
Practical
ideas
- There
are numerous fluency activities throughout CEWw. In the
Topic and Language Units, in particular, you can
see how the tasks move from a focus on fluency to a focus on accuracy
and then back to fluency.
- In
fluency exercises, the focus is on developing and expressing ideas.
There is nothing wrong with correcting language ERRORS
as they arise, but don't let this obscure the main focus. Make
a note of significant language errors and return to them later.
- There
is only one way to become fluent and accurate at the same time:
through using the language to express/understand ideas. This takes
time, so you will need to expect and tolerate language errors
as students develop this ability.
- In
fluency-focused exercises, try to react to what the students say,
not how they say it. For example, if you are marking their written
work, you can add a response to what they have said, your opinion
on the topic and so on.

Researching
the classroom
- Where
possible, keep a record of what the students have produced in
a fluency exercise (e.g. written work or a recording of a ROLE
PLAY or DISCUSSION).
Compare it with what they produce some weeks or months later to
get an idea of their development.
- Language
errors or a lack of fluency may be caused by the situation in
which the students are working. Record some class discussions
and some small group work and compare what happened. Are students
more fluent and/or accurate when they are talking about particular
topics? Is the size of the group important? Is small group work
more effective for developing fluency?
- Make
a note of the errors that you correct and notice when and how
those errors come up again. Many teachers say that students make
the same mistakes time and time again because the students don't
think before they speak/write. In truth, they are thinking about
something else. What is it? Is the message more important to the
students?
- Experiment
with providing different levels of control and support over what
the students speak/write. Do students produce more or less when
a topic is left very open and language is not controlled? Try
out different OPEN-ENDED
and closed exercises and compare the results.

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