Chapter I theoretical foundation of direct method


Specific techniques and strategies of the direct method



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Isabel Allende

1.3 Specific techniques and strategies of the direct method.
"Only the target language is used” That’s the first thing you read in any direct method lesson plan.
While some do prefer to have some room to throw a little mother tongue here and there, like in teaching vocabulary, direct method purists would never utter a single sound outside the target language.
Even in the first few sessions of the course when members of the class will be absolute beginners and all the words that are coming out of your mouth will sound like Greek to them,9 you need to stick the target language when doing your presentations. That is, do everything possible—demonstrating, dramatizing, gesturing—to send your message using only the target language.
The idea is that going through translations only bogs down learning. Students should be trained to think in the target language. Going through translations conditions them to think first in their first language, before converting the information to the target language.
Your students should be trained to see the world through the lens of the target language. In a Spanish class for example, when a student sees a red fruit hanging from a tree, she should immediately be thinking, “la manzana,” not “that’s an apple, hmmm let’s see, apple is manzana in Spanish. That’s la manzana!”

There should be a direct connection between the sight of the fruit and la manzana. And it’s your job as the teacher to make this direct connection.


●Question/answer exercise – the teacher asks questions of any type and the student answers.
●Dictation – the teacher chooses a grade-appropriate passage and reads it aloud.
●Reading aloud – the students take turn reading sections of a passage, play or a dialogue aloud.
●Student self-correction – when a student makes a mistake the teacher offers him/her a second chance by giving a choice.
●Conversation practice – the students are given an opportunity to ask their own questions to the other students or to the teacher. This enables both a teacher-learner interaction as well as a learner-learner interaction.
●Paragraph writing – the students are asked to write a passage in their own words.
There are also the most important 5 Direct Method Teaching Techniques:
1. Example proliferation
When you only have the target language to use during your lectures, you have to make it up somehow. Example proliferation is one of the ways you do that.10
In order for your students to connect the dots and figure out vocabulary and rules of grammar for themselves, you have to give them plenty of material to work with. This means that instead of just giving one or two examples to illustrate your point, you work with five, six or even ten examples. And not only that—you’ll present each of the examples several times. Repetition is key in the direct method if students are to draw the correct conclusions. The examples that you give should be simple, unambiguous and interesting.
Let’s say you want to teach the class the shapes, say circle. You have many different ways to dramatize this concept. Besides the obvious, which is drawing a circle on the board, you can bring different objects that exhibit the shape. How about a hula hoop, rings, coins, CDs, buttons, cookie, plate, frisbee or medal? How about bringing in pictures of the sun, a rotunda, the London Eye and a pizza?
Notice how difficult it is to resist seeing the connection between what you’re bringing and the concept of “circle?” The more interesting the things you offer to the class, the stronger and more memorable those mental connections will be. When students have pizzas and pies staring back at them, it’s very hard not to get the point.
You can do a comprehension check by presenting an object of a different shape and asking the class if it’s a circle or not
2. Visual support
A mantra of the direct method is “demonstrate, don’t translate.” When you do example proliferation to drive home a point, you would probably be hitting different learning modalities, different senses. And the most important sensory mechanism to hit—and hit again and again—is the visual sense.
There are many ways you can do this. A simple gesture can make your point vivid and clarify your intent. For example, you can use a close fist to signify strength. Execute it over and over and your ESL students will know what you mean when you say, “This table is built strong.”The thing is, there’s a whole language based on signs and gestures alone. This can only mean that with enough well-timed actions, a whole new language can be taught.You can also do actual body demonstrations instead of just using your arms. You can jump,punch, dance, even swim. You can exaggerate body language to provide context cues for your message. Teaching about airplanes? Dramatize it by zooming around class, hopping from one airport to another.
As suggested earlier, you can bring labeled pictures or even the actual objects to help dramatize the content of your lessons.Of course, the direct method requires that the teacher be prepared. Nothing beats a teacher who knows their stuff.
3. Listening activities
Remember when you were a kid and your mom and dad used to read you bedtime stories?
You probably didn’t understand every word of it. You also probably did not know that it was actually also a great linguistic lesson—especially if one of your parents knew how to modulate their voice and often went overboard telling the story.Do the very same thing with your students. Read them a story. Preferably the kind with cool pictures. If you can somehow use a projector to have the images on the wall, so much the better. Choose a story containing simple sentences.
Pace yourself. The goal of storytelling here isn’t to get to the last page. The story is your vehicle to expose your students to more of the language. So if you need to repeatedly read the sentences several times before proceeding to the next page, then do so.You don’t need to read verbatim, you can do short asides. For example, if there’s a line that reads, “The lips of the princess were painted red,” you can elaborate a bit by saying, “Red. Just like the rose I showed you earlier, remember?”
So pace yourself. If there’s a particular vocabulary or concept in the story that you want to elaborate, then spend a little more time on it.
Another listening activity that you can do is playing a conversation of two native speakers.11 (They can be talking about anything, as long as they use simple sentences and aren’t conversing too fast.) Replay several times, then ask the students about the contents of the dialogue.The goal in these activities is really not to understand everything. It’s to understand what’s going on. What’s the story about? What are these two people talking about? If they understand the message, then they’ve just experienced the target language as it’s used to convey a specific message.
4. Oral exercises and tasks
The direct method is a speech-centered teaching approach and believes that there’s nothing like having your students talk in the target language. Make it a clear goal to make your students talk in class as early in the course as possible—in the first class, really. Grab any excuse you have to make them open their mouths and use the target language. For example, engage them interactively often by asking questions, encouraging them to reply only in the target language. You can ask the class as a whole or random students individually.
“Jerry, how was your weekend?”
“Class, did you see the news this morning? Any reactions?”
“Can anyone tell me their greatest fear?”
Sure, they’ll maybe answer you in the most basic form of the target language that they can muster, even almost incoherently mumbling. But you know that’s all part of the process.12
Let them interact with each other. For example, split them up into pairs and let them do question-and-answer dialogues. One of the students will ask all the questions, the other will do the answering. They can ask any question that they want, and the answer given must be as honest as possible. The goal here isn’t to ask grammatically perfect questions and give grammatically perfect answers. It’s to experience what it’s like to send and receive messages in the target language. After five questions and five answers, make them switch positions and do another five rounds of Q&A.Also give them opportunities to talk in front of the class. You can extend the previous activity by making them present it in class. Give the pairs a chance to practice a little and put them on deck.Like I said, every time you find an opportunity to make your students enunciate the sounds of the target language, grab it. Even a simple reading task where you call on each student to read aloud different parts of text in front of the class would go a long way in giving them firsthand experience with the language
The direct method looks to the processes of first language acquisition and applies them a second time to second language acquisition.
When we first learned English, we didn’t have translations to get us through the day. Mommy and daddy talked to us in simple English and we slowly acquired it. Sure, there were times when we made mistakes. But through trial and error, we groped our way to fluency. We not only speak English, we also think and dream in English.e.
5. Stress free and supportive environment
Providing your students with a stress-free and supportive environment is a standard for all the other teaching approaches, but nowhere is it more important than in the direct method.
Imagine being a student, sitting in your first language class, and immediately the teacher is addressing you in the language that you’re supposed to be learning—even though you haven’t learned a word yet. Everything that comes out of her mouth sounds all Greek to you (even though it’s Spanish or Korean). Yeah, her gestures and tones help somehow, but you can’t be really sure what she means.Even so, you start picking up a few sounds and tones, a few words here and there that you think have a certain meaning.The classroom situation is very fluid and you just don’t know when the teacher will call on you and make you stand in front of the class. You can’t just sit at the back of the classroom and fly under the radar until the course finishes.Imagine that. As good as this is for getting students to be observant, think critically and absorb the language naturally, it could be a little intimidating.
As a teacher, it’s your first responsibility to make every member of the class understand that mistakes aren’t fatal. They don’t have social repercussions. Mistakes are part of language learning and you have to give students enough confidence to participate in class, regardless of uncertainty.Let them know that you’re there for support. One of the ways you can do this is by making sure that when you call on someone and throw them a question, you never leave without giving the correct answer. For example, you can ask, “Tim, what color is this?” Tim sees that you’re pointing to a yellow banana, but doesn’t know how to respond. What do you do? You feed him the answer and then let him tell it to you.
You: “It’s yellow. Yellow! This banana is yellow. What color is this?”
Tim: “Yellow.”
You: “Very good! Class, the banana is yellow.”
What if Tim ventures on another answer, like “red,” how do you respond?
You give Tim plenty of opportunity to self-correct and guide him to the answer. You can repeat his answer with a questioning tone (“Red?”) then give him options by saying, “Is it red (pointing to something red), or is it yellow (point to the banana)?”If he mispronounces “yellow,” feed the correct pronunciation to him and let him throw it back to you. In short, nobody in your class gets asked a question without being able to give the correct answer.
Make students feel that you won’t leave them hanging, you won’t embarrass them in class and they’ll be active and willing participants in the learning process.And that’s what the direct method is all about—a unique method with wonderful virtues of its own.



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