Speaking
What
and why?
One
of the main aims of CEWw is to give students confidence in
expressing themselves orally. The emphasis is, therefore, on spoken
fluency rather than on spoken accuracy. This should encourage students
to be confident and creative in their spoken English.
Practical
ideas
- Before
correcting a spoken error, consider whether it could lead to misunderstanding.
If not, there may be little reason to correct it. Too much ERROR
CORRECTION can inhibit the students' desire to speak.
- Encourage
students to give their reactions to the pictures and input at
the start of a Unit. There is no need to insist on whole sentences
- they may only manage a phrase or even a word. Try to react to
what they have said rather than how they have said
it.
- Allow
space and time for the students to speak! You can record some
of your lessons and calculate how much time you spend talking
and how much time the students spend talking. If necessary,
see if you can change the situation over the term.
- Students
often find it difficult to provide a rapid spoken reply to a question
without time to PROCESS
an answer. Sometimes it may be useful to give the students the
questions you will ask them in advance so they can prepare. At
the beginning, it may be better to let students volunteer a reply
rather than insist that they answer in turn.
- The
quieter students may prefer to be given the choice of speaking
on to a cassette at home. They could then, perhaps, give you the
cassette to listen to.
- Try
to ensure that different people speak each time. You can suggest
that different people do the reporting back after GROUPWORK.
- If
you have some students who never say anything, or who PARTICIPATE
very little, you need to ask yourself why this is. It may be their
preferred LEARNING
STRATEGY/style (to listen and absorb), they may feel shy,
they may feel that they don't know enough, or they may feel that
the lessons are dominated by other students. If the situation
persists, you could talk to the students concerned to find out
what they think about it. It may not be a problem for them at
all!

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