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ФИО автора:
S.P.Yusupova,
Academic lyceum of Karakalpak State University
Название публикации:
«METHODS OF FORMING SPEECH SKILLS»
Annotation: The article deals with a productive type of speech activity-speaking.
Speaking is the expression of one's thoughts in order to solve communication problems.
This is the activity of one person, although it is included in communication and is
unthinkable outside of it, because communication is always interaction with other
people.
Key words: Speech skill, productive view, speaking, micro dialog, monological speech.
Speaking is a productive type of speech activity, through which (together with
listening) oral verbal communication is carried out.
The content of speaking is the expression of thoughts in oral form. Speaking is
based on pronouncing, lexical, and grammatical skills. According to the greater or
lesser role of programming utterances, there is a distinction between proactive (active)
speech, reactive (responsive) speech , and reproductive (stochastic) speech
[9, 9].
The
structure of the speaking process itself includes four phases:
1) incentive-motivational, in which a person's need for communication is
manifested under the influence of a certain motive and in the presence of a certain
purpose of utterance;
2) analytical-synthetic, presented in the form of convoluted mental actions for
programming and formulating thoughts (here the mechanism of internal design of the
utterance functions, providing word selection and grammatical prediction);
3) executive-sound and intonation design of the thought (at the initial stage of
training, the transition of the program of utterance to its execution occurs through the
native language;
4) a control group, whose task is to signal possible errors and assist in their
correction [3,58].
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Special exercises are designed for teaching speaking, which are divided into
preparatory and speech exercises. Skills and abilities of untrained speech, its reactivity,
spontaneity, the topic is developed in a dialogue; skills and abilities of prepared speech
with its initiative, logic, consistency – in a monologue.
Dialogic speech is a form of speech in which statements are directly exchanged
between two or more people. The conditions in which dialogic speech takes place are
determined by a number of its features, which include: brevity of the utterance,
extensive use of non-verbal means of communication (facial expressions, gestures), a
large role of intonation, a variety of special sentences of incomplete composition,
syntactic design of the utterance free from strict norms of book speech, and the
predominance of simple sentences.
The unit of teaching dialogical speech is dialogical unity (microdialog) – several
replicas connected by content and form. Dialogic speech training is based on a sample
given in the form of a dialogic text related to the situation in which communication
takes place. The main stages of teaching dialogic speech in the classroom are:
1)presentation of the situation by means of a verbal explanation or technical
training tools;
2) presentation of the dialog in audio and graphic form;
3) mastering the language material of the dialog;
4) learning how to connect lines in a dialog;
5) playing the dialog.
6) expanding the capabilities of the sample dialog by changing the components
of the situation [1,301].
When teaching dialogic speech, it is recommended to vary different types of
dialogues and the forms of working with them: dialogue-conversation, dialogue-
dramatization, conversation of students among themselves and with the teacher, pair
and group. Exercises are the main means of teaching dialogical speech. In the process
of their implementation, skills are formed: to request information, to respond
adequately to the interlocutor's remark, to use clichés of dialogic speech, to combine
replicas when building a dialogue, and so on.
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Monologue speech is a form of speech addressed to one or a group of listeners
(interlocutors), sometimes to oneself; in contrast to dialogic speech, it is characterized
by its expansion, which is associated with the desire to cover the topic of utterance
widely, the presence of common constructions, and their grammatical design [4,119].
Training of monologue speech takes place in three stages. At the first stage, language
automatisms are developed. The development of skills for rapid and unmistakable use
of phonetic, lexical, and grammatical material is based on associative speech, speech
and utterance, choral and communicative speech. At the second stage, they teach the
selection of language tools that correspond to the purpose of communication. The focus
is on expressing the content using adequate lexical and structural material. Here you
develop the ability to curtail someone else's utterance and use mostly speech material
in a ready-made form. The third stage is aimed at developing the skills of initiative
speech. The speaker's consciousness concentrates on the content of the utterance.
Among the features of monologue speech, there are also continuity (the utterance is
not limited to one phrase, but represents a super phrasal unity), consistency, logical
speech, relative semantic completeness, and communicative orientation of the
utterance.
Monologue speech is used for various communicative purposes: to communicate
information, to influence listeners through persuasion, to encourage or prevent action.
When determining the types of monologue speech for educational purposes, they
proceed from the content of speech (description, message, story), the degree of
independence (reproduction of memorized, retelling and independent utterance); the
degree of preparation (prepared, partially prepared and untrained speech). A story is
the most difficult type of monologue speech. It is characterized by a certain sequence
of events that reflects the causal relationships between them. If the description develops
both in one plane and the sequence of phenomena described in it is not of fundamental
importance, then in the story, compliance with the chronological sequence is
mandatory, otherwise the storyline of the narrative is violated. The main types of
prepared monologue - lecture, speech, message, as a rule, are prepared in advance.
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Conclusion: the language teaching methodology should provide training in all
types of speaking so that students can logically build their speech, which should be a
complete sphere of phrasal unity, as well as so that foreign language learners can
express their thoughts orally in order to solve communication problems.
References
1. Zimnyaya I. A.Linguopsychology of speech activity, Moscow, 2001, 299-301 p.
2. Kolker Ya. M. Practical methods of teaching a foreign language, Moscow, 2000, 6-
13p..
3. Shcherba L. V. Language system and speech activity.
4. Yakubinsky L.P. About dialogical speech / / Russkaya rech / Under the editorship
of L.V. Shcherba — - P., 1923– - 118-120p.
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