The republic of uzbekistan uzbek state world languages university english faculty III


Sharing personal experiences and story telling



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401 Камалова Гавхарой (1)

7. Sharing personal experiences and story telling
Activities where learners are asked to recount their personal experiences and tell stories are valuable because they give learners a chance to speak for longer and in a more sustained way. And it is something we often do in real-life. However, as we saw from the ‘Grandparents’ activity in Criteria for identifying tasks for TBLL, the instructions for activities where learners are encouraged to relate things from their personal lives are often rather vague and open-ended. In order to encourage richer interaction, we usually need to add a clear goal, make instructions more precise, and give clear completion points.
TBLL makes the performance of meaningful tasks central to the learning process. Instead of a language structure or function to be learnt, learners are presented with a task they have to perform or a problem they have to solve. According to J. Harmer6, there are several types of TBLL. They are:

  • Preparing a meal

  • Two pictures or texts to compare

  • Ordering food in a café

  • Find the differences

  • Talking to someone on

  • Solving a problem

  • On the phone

  • Designing a brochure

  • Compiling qualities of a good friend

To characterize above- mentioned tasks, the researcher can validate that with the help of such tasks we can develop especially speaking skill and improve the learners’ vocabulary. In addition to this they will accustom to feeling themselves freely while speaking.
E. The effectiveness of dividing the class into groups and pairs
In order to realize these tasks the teacher should divide the class into some parts as pair work, group work. About it there is a survey made by the teacher of San Francisco State University, Patricia A Porter.
Patricia A.Porter7 belives that the use of group work in classroom second language learning has long been supported by sound pedagogical arguments. Recently, however, a psycholinguistic rationale for group work has emerged from second language acquisition research on conversation between non-native speakers, or inter language talk. The negotiation work possible in group activity makes it an attractive alternative to the teacher and aviable classroom substitute for individual conversations with native speakers.
For some years now, methodologists have recommended small-group work (including pair work) in the second language classroom. In doing so, they have used arguments which, for the most part, are pedagogical. While those arguments are compelling enough, group work has recently taken on increased psycholinguistic significance due to new research findings on two related topics: 1)the role of comprehensible input in second language acquisition (SLA) and
2) the negotiation work possible in conversation between non-native speakers, or inter-language talk.
According to researcher’s point of view, small-group work or pair work is much more necessary than individual work for having effective learning. The researcher can mention some reasons of saying that, they are:

  • In group work learners are more interacted and much more interested

  • In pair or group work they will develop their self-confidence

  • As the language is interaction itself, so group work will develop their communication skills more effectively. Because in future learners will come across with international people.

  • Learners enlarge their outcome and their fantasy

  • Learners practice the learners overcoming different situational problems of the language

  • Learners can be more adaptable, creative and independent

There are at least five pedagogical arguments for the use of group work in the second language (SL) learning in Vocabulary. They concern the potential of group work for increasing the quantity of language practice opportunities, for improving the quality of learner talk, for individualizing instruction, for creating a positive affective climate in the classroom, and for increasing learner motivation.


Group work increases language practice opportunities. In all probability, one of the main reasons for low achievement by many classroom SL learners is simply that they do not have enough time to practice the new language. This is especially serious in large EFL classes in which learners need to develop aural-oral skills, but it is also relevant to the ESL context. From observational studies of classrooms8 we know that the predominant mode of instruction is what might be termed the lockstep, in which one person (the teacher) sets the same instructional pace and content for everyone, by lecturing, explaining a grammar point, leading drill work, or asking questions of the whole class. The same studies show that when lessons are organized in this manner, a typical teacher of any subject talks for at least half, and often for as much as two thirds, of any class period9. In a 50-minute lesson, that would leave 25 minutes for the learners. However, since 5 minutes is usually spent on administrative matters (getting pupils in and out of the room, calling the roll, collecting and distributing homework assignments, and so on) and 5 minutes on reading and writing, the total time available to learners is actually more like 15 minutes. In an EFL class of 30 learners in a public secondary school classroom, this averages out to 30 seconds per learner per lesson or just one hour per learner per year. An adult ESL learner taking an intensive course in the United States does not fare much better. In a class of 15 learners meeting three hours a day, each learner will have a total of only about one and a half hours of individual practice during a six-week program. Contrary to what some private language school advertisements would have us believe, this is simply not enough. Group work cannot solve the problem entirely, but it can certainly help. To illustrate with the public school setting, suppose that just half the time available for individual learner talk is devoted to work in groups of three instead of to lockstep practice, in which one learner talks while 29 listen (or not, as the case may be). This will change the total individual practice time available to each learner from one hour to about five and a half hours. While still too little, this is an increase of over 500 percent.

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