Integrating High School English and Oral Communication Classes (original) (raw)

Communicative system-activity approach in teaching english as a second language

Общество и инновации, 2021

This article outlines communicative system-activity approach in teaching English as a second language. This approach is the implementation of such a method of teaching, in which an orderly, systematic and mutually related teaching of the English language as a means of communication is carried out in the conditions of simulated (reproduced) speech activity in the classroom - an integral and integral part of the general (extralinguistic) activity. As a result of this approach in teaching, the system of English language proficiency as a means of communication in the broad sense of the word is formed, implemented and operates.

English Language Teaching: Communication Challenges Vis-A-Vis Classroom Situations

2015

English occupies a place of prestige in our country even after more than six decades of the departure of the British from India. No indigenous language however has come up to replace English, either as a medium of communication or as an official language. With the Independence, in spite of many a movement against the teaching of English in India under the influence of nationalistic feelings and emotional hostility English began to reassert its position and now we find that it has firmly established itself in the soil of India. Though still there are only a few who can understand and speak good English yet gradually the number is increasing. The present paper discusses the problems faced in English language teaching in different classroom situations, consequences and valuable suggestions. Communication is the exchange of thoughts, messages, and information as by speech, visuals, signals, writing or behavior. But as far as communication with respect to English Language Teaching is con...

English Communication Program: School's Effort in Facilitating Students' Speaking

Selodang Mayang: Jurnal Ilmiah Badan Perencanaan Pembangunan Daerah Kabupaten Indragiri Hilir

The aim of this research is to discover about the communication program held by SMAN 1 Tembilahan in order to improve students' speaking skills. The qualitative data was gathered and a Google form questionnaire was distributed to get the data dealong with the purpose above. This study sample consists of 3 English teachers from SMAN 1 Tembilahan who actively guide their students in English extracurricular. Based on the data result, there are two programs that can help students improve their speaking skill in this school. The one which facilitates students to have much exercises; English Club and another one facilitates students to compate each other at the end of every semester; English performance competition. Students in english club program learn and practice debate, speech, and 4 main skills (listening, writing, reading, and speaking). Meanwhile, in the english performance competition, students compete in debate and speech presentation.

ENHANCING POSITIVE EFFECTS FOR THE COMMUNICATIVE + LANGUAGE TEACHING ACTIVITIES IN ENGLISH CLASSROOMS

HO CHI MINH CITY UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION JOURNAL OF SCIENCE - EDUCATION SCIENCE, 2019

Nowadays, most English teachers have widely applied the Communicative Language Teaching activities (the CLT activities) in English classrooms as a foreign language (EFL) because of their outstanding effectiveness. In spite of having many benefits for learning and teaching English, activities in CLT also have problems with mixed-level students, un-motivated students and large class sizes, as well as lack of language environment for foreign language acquisition. This article is about how to enhance the positive effect for the CLT activities by using technology equipment. In this article, the author reviews the crucial theory of the improvement effects for the CLT activities, and therefrom practical activities are designed to teach English speaking skills.

Communicative Language Teaching in 21st Century ESL Classroom

Communicative language teaching (CLT) refers to both processes and goals in classroom learning. The central theoretical concept in communicative language teaching is 'communicative competence' a term introduced into discussions of language use and second or foreign language learning in the early 1970s. This paper looks at the phenomenon of communicative language teaching (CLT) in the current scenario. The goal of the paper is to show how CLT has been interpreted and implemented in various contexts. Also, the paper discusses ways for teachers to shape a more communicative approach to ELT in the context of their own situation keeping in mind the needs and goals of learners and the traditions of classroom teaching, which is the first step in the development of a teaching program that involves learners as active participants in the interpretation, expression, and negotiation of meaning. *** Teachers have found many ways or methods for teaching languages. All have been admired models in some time or place, often to be ridiculed, perhaps, or dismissed as inappropriate in yet another. Times change, fashions change. What may once appear new and promising can subsequently seem strange and outdated. Within the last quarter century, communicative language teaching (CLT) has been put forth around the world as the " new, " or " innovative, " way to teach English as a second or foreign language. Teaching materials, course descriptions , and curriculum guidelines proclaim a goal of communicative competence. Not long ago, when American structural linguistics and behaviorist psychology were the prevailing influences in language teaching methods and materials, second/foreign language teachers talked about communication in terms of four language skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. These skill categories were widely accepted and provided a ready-made framework for methods manuals, learner course materials, and teacher education programs. Speaking and writing were collectively described as active skills, reading and listening as passive skills. Today, listeners and readers no longer are regarded as passive. They are seen as active participants in the negotiation of meaning. Schemata, expectancies, and top-down/bottom-up processing are among the terms now used to capture the necessarily complex, interactive nature of this negotiation. Yet full and widespread understanding of communication as negotiation has been hindered by the terms that came to replace the earlier active/passive dichotomy. The skills needed to engage in speaking and writing activities were described subsequently as productive, whereas listening and reading skills were said to be receptive.