Theme: Activity design and presentation on receptive skills Content



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Activity design and presentation on receptive skills

CONCLUSION
‘Receptive Skills’ (also known as ‘Passive Skills’, or reading and listening) are often contrasted with productive skills (speaking and writing). When learning a new language learners tend to develop their receptive skills first and then acquire productive capability. It’s a complex relationship between the two as they all play a supporting role with developing other skills. For example, reading skills can be a supporting factor to the development of writing, whereas listening can improve speaking fluency. Developing receptive skills can be particularly challenging especially when communicating with a fluent or native speaker. Although starting a conversation may be done with relative ease, maintaining one poses greater challenges. Most likely learners may not recognize features of connected speech or idiomatic language which may lead to an unsuccessful interaction. Similarly with reading, if the language or grammar is too complicated it makes the text unintelligible. The key difference between listening and reading is that when learners listen to information, they have much less support than when they are working with the written word on the page. Listening requires ‘real-time’ processing of language, and once the message has finished, there is no easy way to go back and check for meaning, as there is during reading. The best way to improve receptive skills is from exposure whether from an enjoyable authentic text or a quality ESL text book. For example, television, music, books and magazines are great ways to build vocabulary while incidentally promoting learner autonomy. Course books can provide a basic scaffold and are adapted for an ESL learner, whereas authentic materials provide exposure to real language use. However, authentic materials can demotivate learners if the materials aren’t appropriately graded or applicable to their interests. It’s an important consideration to choose material which isn’t too difficult or easy, and also which relates culturally, so adaptation is an important consideration for teachers. Equally important are effectively staging a reading or listening lesson to maximize output. The below staging is an effective way to teach either a listening or reading lesson. The input our learners receive from extensive reading is an invaluable source of new lexis, which they will start absorbing and hopefully adopt in their writing and speech, turning the passive vocabulary they have acquired into active. As a result, intensive training on reading in the TL and a variety of input are very important. Teachers need to make sure that they use a variety of authentic materials from different sources, ex brochures, the web, newspapers, magazines, books. The selection of these texts should be handled with extra care and caution. Their authenticity needs to be verified and the lexis and grammar the passage contains should be carefully checked. Along with authentic texts we should also focus on creating authentic tasks and grade them based on our classrooms specific needs. Variety kills boredom and motivates learners. Teachers could step away from the reading activities suggested in the course books and use innovative exercise types to accompany the reading passage. It is important to answer these questions during the planning stage of the activity. We can read and absorb the information really fast as long as what we read makes sense. The reading passage therefore needs to be meaningful and have cohesion. If our students have to work on a difficult and confusing text that contains too much information that they cannot understand, then they stop ‘absorbing’ the knowledge. They can easily get perplexed and demotivated. We thus need to make sure that the text we choose and its accompanying tasks are appropriate for our learners and match their level and needs. In order to facilitate reading in the EFL classroom and to make sure that our learners understand what the purpose of the activity is, we first need to trigger their imagination and activate the relevant ‘schemata’ in their brains. Using regalia and visual stimuli in the pre-reading stage can be very useful in attracting our learners’ attention and arousing their interest. We need to make them predict what follows, to help them make guesses about the topic of the text and give them a purpose to read. This brainstorming during the lead in stage will attract the learners’ attention and will thus foster their motivation.


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