Adapted from Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000)
1. Goals 2. Role of the teacher/student3. Teaching/learning process4. Nature of student/teacher interaction 5. How are students’ feelings dealt with 6. View of language/ culture 7. What language skills are emphasized 8. Role of native language 9. How does the evaluation occur 10.Treatment of errors 11.Associated with whom
1. Maximizing Learning Opportunities
2. Minimizing Perceptual Mismatches
3. Facilitating Negotiated Interaction
4. Promoting Learner Autonomy
5. Foster Language Awareness
6. Activating Intuitive Heuristics
7. Contextualizing Linguistic Input
8. Integrating Language Skills
9. Ensuring Social Relevance
10. Raising Cultural Consciousness
We cannot prepare teachers to tackle so many unpredictable needs, wants and situations; we can only help them develop a capacity to generate varied and situation-specific ideas within a general framework that makes sense in terms of current pedagogical and theoretical knowledge.
(Kumaravadevilu, 1992)
Eclectic method is not a method by itself. It means using different methods and different techniques of different methods depending on the age, gender, goal (short term and long term), available audio visual devices, available materials, learners’ needs, defined objectives of the course, views about learning and teaching, and views about dealing with strategies and styles. (Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching Diana Larsen-Freeman)
1. Harmer, J.(2007) “The Practice of English Languge Teaching”, Pearson Longman Limited;
2. Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000) Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching 2nd edition, Oxford University Press;
3. Summary of Principles in Language Teaching Dr. Flick B.(2000) http://www.auburn.edu/~nunnath/engl6240/principl.html
4. Jiang, N. (2000) http://www.auburn.edu/~nunnath/engl6240/othermet.html5. Dr. Iravani, H. Presentation on Teaching Methods6. Bax, S. (1997) Roles for a teacher educator in context-sensitive teacher
education ELT Journal, Oxford University Press;7. Kumaravadevilu (2003)TEN MACROSTRATEGIES FOR LANGUAGE
TEACHING http://www.actfl.org/files/ACTFL06handouts/Session368.pdf 8. B. Kumaravadivelu Macrostrategies for the Second/Foreign Language
Teacher The Modern Language Journal, Vol. 76, No. 1. (Spring, 1992), pp. 41-49;
9. Waters, A. (2006) Native-speakerism in ELT: Plus cøa change. . .? Department of Linguistics and English Language, Bowland College, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YT, United Kingdom.
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