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Articles and Interviews
Motivating children in the language classroom - an interview with
Herbert Puchta
The internationally renowned young learners expert, Dr. Herbert
Puchta, recently toured Brazil and gave an interview with New
Routes readers. |
NR: How
long have you been involved in the teaching of English to children?
HP: Well, I started to teach English to lower secondary school
children in Austria in the early 70's, so it's 30 years or so.
NR: That's
right, you're Austrian, of course. So, when did you start to learn English?
HP: Oh! That's quite some time ago! I learned English as a child
at school.
NR: So what
do you think have been the major changes since then?
HP: It's changed a lot, fortunately! At that time it was basically
grammar and vocabulary. The standard exercises were just devoid of any
meaning, basically. These days the focus of teaching in a good young learners
classroom is on meaning. It's stories, activities based on information
gaps, so children learn from the very beginning to communicate in the
language they're learning.
NR: What are
some of the key principles which promote effective and enjoyable learning
in young children?
HP: Well, for young learners one principle is definitely fun. Young
learners learn the language indirectly. They are interested in stories
and if the story is good, they want to understand it and in this way they're
training their receptive skills. If you're doing a song with them, and
they love songs, they will be singing and chanting along enthusiastically
and obviously training their pronunciation. The teacher does a guessing
game with them, has given them a certain structure which they use over
and over again and they want to find out the solution to the game. That's
why both the content of what they're learning and the process of how the
teacher is teaching them are so important.
NR: How can
teachers motivate children in the classroom?
HP: I think the challenge with children is not so much how you
initially motivate them, because children have a high level of motivation
in everything that is new. The real challenge is how to sustain that motivation
and make more out of it. Motivation, seen from a psychological point of
view, has to do with beliefs, with the children gradually developing an
understanding of why they're doing things and what's in it for them, and
developing an awareness of what they're able to do in the foreign language.
NR: Do children
learn English more effectively if the language learning takes place as
part of their overall development, that is intellectual, social, and emotional?
HP: Yes, they do and I strongly believe that it is possible to
help develop the child's cognitive skills at the same time they are learning
a foreign language. This is very much based on Howard Gardner's concept
of Multiple Intelligences. Gardner and his team claim that intelligence
is not one unitary kind of skill. It's a wide range of different cognitive
capabilities, eight or nine different intelligences. What he convincingly
states is that it's not that we are born with a certain IQ which decides
our success or failure in life. We can actually develop our intelligences
and as teachers of young learners we have a responsibility to help them
to develop their cognitive skills.
NR: What does
that mean then in practical terms in the classroom?
HP: Well, a teacher might say, "I've always used songs in my classroom
to foster musical intelligence, pictures for visual intelligence etc."
What I mean is something a bit different here. First of all, you might
think you have children in the class who are not very intelligent and
in fact they might be very intelligent in other intelligence areas. So
by using exercises that motivate different intelligences, not only the
linguistic intelligence, but also the visual, interpersonal, intrapersonal,
kinaesthetic, musical etc., the chances are those learners will feel more
addressed, more motivated and will learn better because they see a way
into the foreign language.
The other thing is that I believe there are certain activities we can
use in each of the different intelligence areas that can actually be used
to help learners to develop skills that maybe are not that well developed
yet. So, for example, the visual skill. One sub-skill is the ability to
be able to focus on pictures. If we give learners discovery pictures that
you can use for all kinds of language purposes, and at the same time focus
their attention and concentration, this is important for two reasons.
First of all there are studies that show that children's concentration
span seems to be becoming shorter - this has a lot to do with the fact
that our children live in a world of visual overload and fast-moving pictures
have a certain effect on their concentration span. So, if you give them
an activity like a picture with a number of animals hidden and half hidden
and ask, "How many lions, snakes etc. are there?", from the language teaching
point of view it's plural nouns plus revision of animal vocabulary and
numbers. From the point of view of developing their visual intelligence,
it's all about helping them to focus their attention, which is a cognitive
skill that forms the foundation for a number of other more sophisticated
cognitive skills.
NR: In what
ways should the classroom for children be different? How can the teacher
make it a "magic" place for kids and stimulate creativity?
HP: The child lives in a world where the line between make-believe
and reality is a very blurred line, which is great, because we can get
them to completely identify with what they're doing. So when you use a
puppet, a glove puppet, they know it's a puppet and yet at the same time
for them it's alive! We can do all sorts of role-play activities where
learners really identify with the foreign language and almost develop
a kind of foreign language identity. Something we have done with the new
course Playway to English , from Cambridge University Press, for example,
is musical plays, acted out by children in England on stage, so students
can just watch it on video, or they can, of course, do a project themselves
and act it out, which is the idea, and which is extremely motivating.
They can produce a real project with costumes, props, and teachers using
this say it's fascinating how enthusiastic children become and how well
they learn the language.
NR: You travel
all over the world training teachers. What kinds of cultural differences
and the influence of these on teachers, have you observed?
HP: Well, if you go to the Southern Hemisphere you don't need to
worry about teachers not being ready to try things out. Teachers in Brazil,
for example, are very spontaneous and open. They want to try things out,
and if they believe something is good, they're willing to change what
they're doing. This is not the case everywhere in the world. There are
some countries where teachers tend to be more reserved and would not act
as readily and spontaneously in a workshop as teachers here in Brazil.
NR: Are there
any cultural disadvantages in the Southern Hemisphere?
HP: I don't think so. I love coming here and working with Brazilian
teachers!
NR: What advice
would you give to teachers who are new to teaching children?
HP: Well, go into second position with your children. Feel what
it's like for a child learning a foreign language and then look for good
materials that give you the guidelines you will need in order to make
the best out of this situation for the children and for yourself.
NR: What advice
would you give to teachers who have been teaching children for a long
time?
HP: You're probably doing lots of things with excellence in your
class. Share these things with as many other teachers as possible and
where you think there is room to improve, look at some of the latest developments,
for example in the areas of Multiple Intelligences, and look at materials
that actually transform these very important findings in the area of cognitive
psychology to the foreign language classroom.
NR: What advice
would you suggest teachers give to the children?
HP: Children do not ask the teacher for advice, that's what I find
difficult. I think rather than give them advice, teachers should show
the learners that they are enjoying the class themselves. This is the
best advice they can give them because it will give the learners a model,
open up their minds and form a basis of interaction in the class that
draws on mutual motivation and offers the learner and the teacher fun!
NR: Finally,
could you gaze into your crystal ball and tell me what major changes you
foresee for the future.
HP: I think brain research is going to come up with further interesting
insights into the workings of the human brain and somehow this will further
influence what will be going on in the classroom. The last decade has
already come up with a number of very interesting influences from areas
like brain research.
Possibly more and more foreign language classes will have computer systems
available and will be using very good software and CD-ROMs. Obviously
not each and every classroom has good computer facilities but this certainly
will be one important point for the future.
NR: I can also
see into your crystal ball, Herbert, and I can see a brilliant future
for you!
HP: (Laughing) Thank you very much.
NR: I thank
you very much!
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