Monday, October 7, 2013

Free topic: A well rounded learner?

Lately, I've been thinking about my own, and others, experiences as an L2 learner. It seems that I haven't really met any student who is really great at all three aspects of the language: speaking, reading, and writing. And it makes me wonder why that is. Why can some students be really great writers and readers, but be awful at speaking? Or students who have an amazing oral proficiency, but struggle to construct a logical argument in essay form? Many of the language theories that we have studied and I would say the overwhelming majority of topics that we have covered in class have been about oral proficiency. Oral proficiency is great for when students have experiences with native speakers whether it be face to face or while using technology. But I feel that we have spent very little time talking about reading or writing skills. How do you even go about these skills? In high school, there was a student a few years above me who was a Spanish native speaker, yet was taking classes in the language because she was unable to write well. Another friend is a Greek native speaker, and cannot read or write even as close to how well he can speak. So this leads me to ask, if we focus so much on learning an L2 in the same ways in which people learn their L1s, won't we have students who are great at oral proficiency, but lack in other areas. I believe that, as we have most seen in our language learning classes, it is important to provide transcripts when using authentic listening activities. It is also important to have students practice their writing skills as well as listening. I think that ways in which we can do that are having students read passages and use the vocab from said passages to write a summary. I think that, as much as we all believe that oral proficiency is important, all the other stuff is too. I think that if students are being exposed to a lot of native language authentic materials, it is very, very important to have a transcript, in order to see how things are written. A lot of the models for learning that we have talked about seem to exclude these and focus only on learning through auditory skills, including Gattegno’s Silent Way approach and Asher’s Total Physical Response method.


Another question that comes to hand it at what point do we start teaching each of these: reading, writing, listening, and speaking. I think that it is important to start off with speaking. These should be supplemented by vocabulary and grammar exercises in order to expand what you know and construct new forms of speech. I think that reading and writing can be the hardest to teach because they require a fair bit of vocabulary work and knowing how grammar works at its basic levels, but universal grammar can be used for this. I think that when each of these is introduced really depends on what the aims for the classes are. If you are trying to get your students to develop survival knowledge of the language, then oral proficiency is the key. If you want your students to be progressive in their language learning, then I think that there needs to be an even focus on all of the aspects, using many different teaching styles.

4 comments:

  1. I completely agree with you that the greatest focus in on speaking and I can see the reason behind this simply because that is the major way of communicating with others. Speaking is ultimately more necessary than reading and especially writing, but just becasue this is the case does not mean that we shouldn't focus on teaching the other aspects. I think that we get stuck on the speaking aspect becasue of how we teach a second language. For instance, at first it is all about identification and recognition rather than production. Teachers simply want studetns to remember vocabulary or recognize verb conjugations. The final step it to have students produce the second language; write it. I think that many language teachers overlook spelling errors or small gramatical errors because students have a basic understanding. We need to change this and say that a basic understaning is not enough. We need to be as strick with second language writing as native language. Only in this way will students become proficient writers and readers as well. Not to mention that native speakers learn many of their writing skills from reading, so introducing more reading is key!

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    1. Its interesting, because when native speakers are learning their first language they are repeatedly taught to read over and over again before they begin to write, but in my L2 experience, it seemed the other way around, with writing coming first. I agree that teachers need to be more strict about spelling, especially with languages with accents. My teachers never seemed to care about accents on vocab, only on verb conjugations. Students should be taught the importance of accents early on so they can better pronunciate.

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  2. I like what you said about starting off by teaching and encouraging speaking. I know some people believe that when students are ready to speak it will just "emerge naturally" from them, but I don't know if I agree with that. Speaking in a foreign, L2 language is going to feel pretty unnatural and weird for a long time. Does that mean you shouldn't speak because beautiful speech is not flowing naturally? Of course not! L2 learners need to practice, we need to mess up, we need to get a little embarrassed when we say something totally wrong or freeze up because all that practice WILL make speech start to come naturally. If you're encouraged to speak a lot, speaking won't be as intimidating and making mistakes won't seem as scary. I like your idea of focusing on speaking first because I think it's an idea that not many teachers put into action.

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  3. I completely agree with what you said about speaking being the most important aspect to start with, and I wish that in my prior Spanish classes there had been more of a focus on speaking than reading and writing. I can read and write in Spanish much more easily than I can speak it and I don't like that at all - speaking is the most necessary part of a language and I think that teachers need to be less afraid to put emphasis on students' conversational skills and back off all the reading and writing that can at times be assigned in excess. I easily learned much more in my semester in Granada speaking with my host family and being required to speak in Spanish than I did in all my previous Spanish classes where the focus was on reading novels and writing papers on them. As teachers it is going to be our job to create well-rounded learners so we need to incorporate all aspects of a language into practice.

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