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Learner Observation of, and Reflection on, Spoken Discourse: An Approach for Teaching Academic Speaking

✍ Scribed by Helen Basturkmen


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
61 KB
Volume
11
Category
Article
ISSN
1056-7941

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✦ Synopsis


anguage teaching courses often target speaking skills and aim to improve students' ability to interact orally in a range of situations. One aspect of teaching speaking is creating practice tasks. This aspect has been well served by the current range of communicative activities, such as role-play, simulations, and information and opinion gap tasks. Another aspect of teaching speaking is raising students' awareness of the features of spoken language. Methodological options here have been more limited. However, one option is for teachers to design tasks that put students in the position of discourse analysts, observing language use in recordings and transcripts, and also reflecting on their own use of language. This option can be used as a way to reveal to learners features of spoken language that they may be partially or completely unaware of and that go unnoticed unless attention is directly drawn to them.