Teaching the language system
Cues can also be verbal (e.g. ‘Question ... Flight 36’ to get the response ‘W hat time does
Flight 36 leave?’) or non-verbal (e.g. the teacher shrugs their shoulders to elicit ‘I don’t
know’).
Cue-response drills are an efficient way of getting the students to say the new language
in a way that can be invigorating and challenging. If we think students need more controlled
practice of this type, we can put them in pairs and ask them to continue saying the new
words and phrases to each other. Perhaps they can take turns mim ing one of the professions
or showing/drawing pictures of policemen, nurses, etc so that they are, in effect, conducting
cue-response drills of their own.
Freer practice
Sometimes we may decide that students do not need very m uch controlled practice of
the new language. This is often the case at higher levels where not only will they probably
have understood our explanations of meaning and language construction, but they may be
slightly familiar with the language anyway. In such situations we m ight just say something
like ‘OK, can anyone tell me what would have happened if they’d overslept this morning?’
to provoke examples of the third conditional (see page 74). As students use personalised
sentences in this way, we can point out any mistakes they m ight be making and encourage
correct pronunciation.
If, when we try to bypass controlled practice in this way, we find that students are
having more problems than we thought, we m ight have to return to our explanations of
meaning and construction and then organise controlled practice after all. But hopefully
this will not happen, and our students will be able to try using the language in this more
relaxed and less formal setting.
Freer practice - especially where personalisation is concerned (see page 53) - is a kind of
transition stage between language study and activation. It is still concerned with the correct
construction of language and so it is part of study; it is also concerned with language use
and so it is moving towards activation.
The decision about whether or not students need explanation or controlled practice will
depend, as we have suggested, on whether we think they are already familiar with the new
language or not. It would, after all, be inappropriate to force students to concentrate on
studying language they were already perfectly capable of using. O ur decision about how to
proceed should, therefore, be based on what the students know already, and we will need
to adapt our plan immediately if we find that the m ajority of them are more aware o f the
‘new’ language than we thought they were.
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