Teaching ESL Multiple Chapters

¶ … group work, especially for the ESL student? Are there any drawbacks? If so, how might one minimize them? (Chap 14. Sustaining Interactive with Group Work) Group work among students working toward the same goal creates positive energy known as synergy. When one student is having difficulty understanding a concept, he or she can learn from their peers and understand the material in a calmer environment. Group work also allows students to become more experienced with public speaking in real world environments, and helps to improve language speaking.

What is the potential importance of self-awareness of style, and how can ESL teachers foster such self-awareness? (Chap 16. Strategies Based Instruction, pp 261- 268)

Being self-aware of your actions and body language is very important in conveying your point across. Body language helps to add emphasis to what an individual is trying to get across in conversational exchange. Teachers can express how different words and phrases are used and their indirect meanings to students through active exchanges.

3. What makes listening so difficult for ESL students? (Chap 18. Teaching Listening)

The dialects of many languages can...

...

The way words are pronounced can differ from person to person, which can cause confusion to ESL students who are used to hearing a word pronounced one way. The pace of word pronunciation is also a challenge and can be confusing to someone who cannot keep up with the vocabulary and intonation used. Teachers can help their students by incorporating several dialogue versions that include everyday conversations, so that students can familiarize themselves with the language being used.
4. When and how should teachers correct ESL speech errors in class? Explain. (Chap 19. Teaching Speaking)

It is important for ESL students to learn how to speak comprehensively in order to fully gain the meaning and pronunciation of the language. Teachers should emphasize the parts of speech and spend time on the different pronunciations of similar words. Once the student has been introduced to new words, those words should be used in classroom conversations and dialogues. Dialogues will allow a teacher to assess how each student pronounces words and phrases and can better determine their method of delivery. If a student makes a pronunciation…

Cite this Document:

"Teaching ESL" (2012, April 29) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/teaching-esl-112232

"Teaching ESL" 29 April 2012. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/teaching-esl-112232>

"Teaching ESL", 29 April 2012, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/teaching-esl-112232

Related Documents

Wardhaugh indicates that there is a problematic need in the field to reverse expectations about the capacity of this approach to instruct in practicable and usable linguistic ability. The author takes exception with traditionalist ideas the argue "the single paramount fact about language learning is that it concerns, not problem solving, but the formation and performance of habits." (Wardhaugh, p. 21) The linguistic theorist rejects this principle as failing

Teaching ESL Students At least 3.5 million children every year are identified as possessing limited English proficiency and require additional support before they are mainstreamed into the regular classroom environment (Miller & Endo 2004: 786). Approaches to ESL instruction run the gamut from total immersion to fostering a largely bilingual approach to education for this group of students. The two typical program approaches are that of a transitional bilingual education

The chapter goes on to explicate each writing task by means of examples and further specific guidance for teachers. It is also suggested that the tasks do not need to be applied in isolation, but that they can also be used in combination for greater effectiveness. Examples are given of experience and guided tasks that can be done in groups. In this regard, the author points out that group work

Teaching ESL
PAGES 3 WORDS 872

Applying language universal in the ESL format I would show the ESL students the commonalties between their specific language and English. For instance that both languages have distinction between vowels and consonants and also between front and back vowels as well as between obstruent and sonorant consonants. Going on to grammar I would show them that distinction exists in both too between noun and verb, between pronoun and between subject and object. Using

Brevity is also necessary because reading for content and for linguistic problem solving is the focus" (Kruger). In contrast to the brevity of the intensive program the extensive program "consists of longer selections, that are assigned to be read outside of class, like novels or short stories" (Kruger). Of course a major goal of the program was English language knowledge and reading comprehension, but "Vocabulary building is an intrinsic part

ELLs frequently disappear in these comprehensive settings. Similar interpretations about mainstreaming have been made in other English-speaking countries such as Australia, Britain and Canada, where ELLs are also categorized and served under a larger authority of diversity education or literacy education intended for native English speakers who may have learning requirements very dissimilar from their own (Harper and de Jong, 2009). Teaching approaches are founded on theories. ESL teachers often