Friday, March 28, 2014

Week 6 -- Communicative Competence

Congratulations, you have finished the first part of the course, which has been mostly focused on language itself. I know the language components content is not for everyone, but consider it a necessary evil for your continuing studies in TESOL.

Now we will be shifting our focus to the most influential theories of acquisition. Before we do, we have to define what exactly language acquisition entails. We'll answer the question "What exactly are our students acquiring?"

1. Please read the excerpt on Communicative Competence from the TESOL Bible, Brown's Principles of Language Learning and Teaching.

There are two discussion leaders for the first group this week. Next week we'll be doing something different with the blog. This will be your last week with your current group T.T

Jeff, Amy, *Jasper, *Liz (two discussion leaders, not a typo)
 Kevan, Lawrence, *Dee Dee

John, Laura, *David

Finally, to help connect the course content to real-life teaching, please bring the textbooks you teach with to class each week. If you don't use a textbook, bring a book you have used in the past or could possibly use in the future (the resource center has a lot to choose from). You can bring more than one book each week and you can bring a different book each week. 

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Week 5

No blog post for this week. Use the time to look over the material for our first quiz on language components and learner language.

A review sheet will be given to you on Saturday, March 22nd.

Feel free to use this space or the G+ community to compare notes or review ideas. If you want to get my attention quickly, please email me directly or write my name as +AdamBoothe on G+.

Good luck.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Week 4 --Syntax and Acquisition theories overview

Hello everyone, this week we'll be talking briefly about syntax, summarizing theories of acquisition, and prepping for the week 5 quiz.

Please complete your final learner language analysis homework about developmental sequences. 

Week 4 Reading: Lightbown & Spada. How Languages are Learned. Chapter2 (HLAL_Chapter 2.pdf)

Directions:
**This week you will read summaries of several L2 Acquisition theories. Choose one to support, summarize it and share learning and teaching experiences that support your choice.

Attention!! Group leaders: If your name has an * in front of it, you are the group leader for the week 4 journal. Please get your summary and comments posted by Wednesday.

Jeff, *Amy, Jasper, Liz
Kevan, *Lawrence, Dee Dee

John, *Laura, David

Friday, March 7, 2014

SLA Week 3 -- Morphology and Syntax

Week 3 Dialogue Journals (due before week 3's class)

Hello everyone, this week we'll be covering morphology.

You can find all of the relevant material here. There is extra stuff too, but that is just for your reference.

1. Record your interviewee doing the Question/Retell task. You can see an example of Rodrigo doing it it in the folder linked above. Complete the Morphology Analysis chart after your interview. We’ll answer the questions in small groups next week in class.


2. The West reading covers the basic concepts/terms related to morphology and the Carlisle reading focuses on morphological processing and word learning.

Attention!! Group leaders: If your name has an * in front of it, you are the group leader for the week 3 journal. Please get your summary and comments posted by Wednesday.

*Jeff, Amy, Jasper, Liz
 *Kevan, Lawrence, Dee
*John, Laura, David

Summary guidelines: KEEP IT SHORT! A good summary is a shorter version of the original that includes only the main points. Try to keep your summaries limited to 200 words or less.

Everyone else -- your role is to leave a comment on the Leader's summary.

Comment guidelines: Comments should demonstrate your ability to personalize the material. Whenever possible, share your own experiences as language teachers and learners that relate to the assigned reading. This should be longer than the summary.

Week 3 Reading: 

West, Morphology: The Inner World of Words
Carlisle, J. Fostering Morphological Processing, Vocabulary Development, and Reading Comprehension.

**Skim 'west_ morphology' to get an idea of the terms, then read Carlisle. Summarize and comment on the Carlisle article only. Questions related to the readings can be posted to the community.

Personalize! Share your experiences teaching/learning vocabulary.

Note: Group leaders should post summaries and comments as replies to this post.