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Courses >
Languages > Teaching ESL/EFL Grammer
In
this course, you'll come to see English grammar as a three-dimensional
process that's useful in bringing coherence, cohesion, and texture to
writing and speech. We'll begin by considering seven definitions of
grammar that we'll draw on throughout the course. We'll also discuss
the differences between patterns and rules, and why second-language
learners benefit from our instruction on both.
You'll learn
why students need to understand the three dimensions of grammar—form,
meaning, and use—and how seeing grammar as a dynamic and changing
system helps students overcome many of their grammar challenges. You'll
also see why teaching grammar in a way that makes it personally
meaningful to your students brings the best results.
And since
teaching isn't just about presenting lessons, we'll also go over the
importance of "reading" your students—observing them to try to figure
out what learning process they're using. We'll contrast rote or
mechanical practice with meaningful practice, and we'll go over
guidelines for creating activities and adapting your textbook exercises
to get students working on the unique learning challenge presented by
each different grammatical structure.
Toward the end of the
course, we'll talk about what specific errors students make can
indicate, and how they can help us pinpoint the unique challenges our
students face so we can develop meaningful practice activities to help
them meet those challenges. And we'll finish up the course by
discussing ways that you can give valuable feedback to your students.
Get ready to discover how to teach grammar in a way that's both
effective and enjoyable for your students!
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Syllabus:
A new section of each course starts monthly. If enrolling in
a series of two or more courses, please be sure to space the start date
for each course at least two months apart.
All courses run for six weeks, with a two-week grace period at the
end. Two lessons are released each week for the six-week duration of
the course. You do not have to be present when lessons are released.
You will have access to all lessons until the course ends. However, the
interactive discussion area that accompanies each lesson will
automatically close two weeks after the lesson is released. As such, we
strongly recommend that you complete each lesson within two weeks of
its release.
The final exam will be released on the same day as the last lesson.
Once the final exam has been released, you will have two weeks to
complete all of your course work, including the final exam.
| Week One |
| Wednesday - Lesson 01 |
Grammar is an
incredibly rich system for making meaning in a language. It's a subject
that many people misunderstand, though, and that's something we should
all be concerned about because if we don't see fully how grammar
contributes to communication, then our students won't either. When
students misunderstand grammar, they'll often develop a negative
attitude toward studying grammar. We'll begin this first lesson
by considering seven definitions of grammar, and we'll draw on all
seven of these definitions later in this course. We'll also discuss the
differences between patterns and rules, and why second-language
learners benefit from our instruction on both patterns and the rules in
the classroom.
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| Friday - Lesson 02 |
Many people think of grammar structures as forms in a language. For instance, one form instructs us to place an s at the end of a noun if we want to make that noun plural. While there are indeed grammatical forms such as the plural s,
there's more to grammar than form! In this lesson, you'll learn that
grammar structures have meanings, and they have uses as well. This is
very important to understand because grammar doesn't relate only to
accuracy. It also relates to meaningfulness and appropriateness. We
often teach grammar as forms that have meaning, but students don't
often understand when or why to use particular structures. They wind up
overusing them, under using them, or using them inappropriately.
Students need to understand that there are three dimensions of
grammar—form, meaning, and use—and that's what we'll discuss in today's
lesson.
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| Week Two |
| Wednesday - Lesson 03 |
The title of this lesson is Grammaring. Grammar + -ing. If you haven't heard the term before, don't be surprised. I coined it myself because I think adding the ing
helps people understand that grammar isn't a fixed system of unchanging
rules. On the contrary, grammatical rules and patterns change all the
time! In this lesson, we'll talk about three ways that grammar is
dynamic and changing. We'll also consider a long-time problem in
language learning—the inert knowledge problem, where students appear to
have learned something in class but can't use it outside of class for
their own purposes. Finally, we'll talk about helping students overcome
the inert knowledge problem by viewing grammar as a dynamic system and
teaching it in a psychologically authentic way.
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| Friday - Lesson 04 |
When you think
about grammar, you might think about rules that apply to sentences.
Such rules might tell us the order of words in a phrase or in a
sentence. But grammar goes beyond the sentence, too. Think about the
sentences in a paragraph. There's an order they must follow to make
sense, and grammar is what helps you to organize them! Today you'll
learn the ways that people can use grammar to bring cohesion,
coherence, and texture to what they're saying and writing. In the
process, grammar helps to create organized wholes from written
sentences and spoken utterances. Knowing how to create an organized
whole out of sentences and utterances is very important for ESL and EFL
students so they can learn to write and speak in a comprehensible way.
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| Week Three |
| Wednesday - Lesson 05 |
Often people make
a clear division between grammar structures and words. Grammar
structures are patterns or formulas with open slots where the words
go—it's up to you to add words to that structure. In this lesson,
however, you'll see that grammar structures and words are actually
interconnected. For one thing, the slots in certain grammatical
patterns aren't really open, waiting for just any old word to fill them
in. They can only be filled by particular words. Plus, certain grammar
structures have characteristics that put them into the category of
words, and some words have characteristics that would equally qualify
them as grammar structures. So they can go either way as words or
grammar structures. We'll talk about all of it in this lesson about
lexicogrammar!
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| Friday - Lesson 06 |
If
I asked you what you associate with the term "grammar," what would you
say? I bet you'd say "rules." It's probably the most common association
with grammar. Grammar rules are important in both language learning and
teaching. I've taught grammar rules, and perhaps you have, too. I
wouldn't want to do anything to discourage you from teaching rules. But
in today's lesson, I hope to convince you that grammar has underlying
reasons as well as rules. Reasons help you understand why rules are the
way they are. Grammar isn't as arbitrary as you may have thought. You
don't always have to tell your students, "That's just the way it is."
Reasons will also help you understand the so-called "exceptions" to
rules. Besides, reasons are broader than rules. If you understand a
single reason, you'll understand a number of rules. Now, that sounds
like a bargain, doesn't it?
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| Week Four |
| Wednesday - Lesson 07 |
One
of the problems that all teachers face is lack of time. There's never
enough time to teach all you want your students to learn. You have to
be selective. Now, you may be thinking selection becomes more difficult
with a grammaring approach. After all, you've learned by now in this
course that grammar is more complex than you may have thought. But in
today's lesson, you'll learn an important principle as well. It's
called the challenge principle. It's a principle for selecting
what it is that you need to spend time on with your students. The
challenge principle says that you should spend time focusing on the
dimension of grammar that students find most challenging—it could be
form, or meaning, or use. In this lesson, you'll learn how to apply the
challenge principle to determine an instructional focus.
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| Friday - Lesson 08 |
Teaching isn't
only about presenting lessons. A large part of being a good teacher is
"reading" your students. By "reading" your students, I mean observing
them while they're learning—trying to figure out what learning process
they're using. You'll also see that students have their own goals for
what they want to learn and their own strategies for how they'll meet
these goals. In this lesson, you'll learn about some of the learning
processes that students use to grasp grammar. You'll also see that
different students approach learning grammar in different ways. By the
end of this lesson, you'll have acquired the knowledge what you need to
be a better observer and manager of your students' learning. And,
believe me; watching your students learn is one of the very special
rewards of teaching!
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| Week Five |
| Wednesday - Lesson 09 |
In this lesson,
we'll examine three different approaches to teaching grammar. We'll
start with the traditional 3-P approach: present, practice, and
produce—present a grammar structure, practice it, and then have your
students produce it. We'll then contrast this traditional approach with
a more recent proposal to focus on form within a communicative
approach. I'll also talk about my grammaring approach. As you know by
now, I believe that we need to teach grammar in a more dynamic fashion
in order to overcome the inert knowledge problem. And my goal in this
lesson is to convince you of that, too!
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| Friday - Lesson 10 |
We
can make a number of contrasts between learning grammar in your native
language and learning grammar in another language. One of the important
differences is that in learning your native language, you learn from
experience—you learn implicitly. Second language learners, on the other
hand, often learn grammar explicitly—by following explicit rules and
explanations. In this lesson, I'll contrast the two—implicit learning
and teaching, and explicit learning and teaching. We'll also discuss
the important question about using grammatical terminology while you're
teaching grammar. Using grammar terms can be useful to students, but
let's not to lose sight of the fact that what we're trying to do is to
help them achieve an ability to use grammar—not necessarily turn them
into grammarians.
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| Week Six |
| Wednesday - Lesson 11 |
By
now, you know that I believe that learning grammar should be an active
process. The capacity to use grammar structures actively requires
practice. In this lesson, we'll start off by contrasting rote or
mechanical practice with meaningful practice. When people think of
grammatical practice, they often think of drills. But today, you'll
find out how to create meaningful practice activities that address the
form, meaning, and use challenges in learning grammar. With these
guidelines, you'll be able to create activities and adapt your textbook
exercises so that your students are working on the unique learning
challenge presented by each different grammatical structure. You can
make your teaching process much more effective this way.
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| Friday - Lesson 12 |
With this lesson,
we'll conclude our course. But we can't do that without taking up the
important issue of giving feedback to our students, and that's the
focus of this lesson. We'll start off by talking about what an error
is. Recognizing what is and what isn't an error might not always be
easy. Then, once we're satisfied that we've defined and detected an
error, we'll need to go over what to do about it. This is actually a
controversial area! I'll try to help by suggesting what sort of
feedback students find most useful. Errors are also important windows
into learners' minds—we can actually learn quite a lot from our
learners' errors! You may find it amusing that one of the final
questions we'll consider in this course has to do with learning. As
you've no doubt seen throughout this course, I consider
learning—learning about grammar, learning from our students, learning
from each other—to be at the heart of good grammar teaching. So we'll
conclude with a wish for the joy of learning.
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This
course includes a knowledgeable and caring instructor who will guide
you through your lessons, facilitate discussions, and answer your
questions. The instructor for this course will be Diane Larsen-Freeman.
Diane
Larsen-Freeman is a Professor of Education, Professor of Linguistics,
and Research Scientist at the English Language Institute at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. She is also Distinguished Senior
Faculty Fellow at the School for International Training in Brattleboro,
Vermont. She has spoken and published widely on the topics of teacher
education, second language acquisition, English grammar, and language
teaching methodology. Her books include: An Introduction to Second
Language Acquisition Research (with Michael Long, Longman, 1991), The
Grammar Book (with Marianne Celce-Murcia, Heinle/Thomson, 1999, second
edition), Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching (Oxford
University Press, 2000, second edition), Grammar Dimensions (Series
Director, Heinle, 2007, 4th edition), Teaching Language: From Grammar
to Grammaring (Heinle, 2003) and Complex Systems and Applied
Linguistics (with Lynne Cameron, Oxford University Press, 2008). In
1997, Dr. Larsen-Freeman was inducted into the Vermont Academy of Arts
and Sciences. In 1999, she was named one of the ESL pioneers by ESL
Magazine. In 2000, she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from
Heinle Publishers.
Requirements:
Internet access, e-mail, the Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla
Firefox Web browser, and the Adobe Flash and PDF plug-ins (two free and
simple downloads you obtain at http://www.adobe.com/downloads by
clicking Get Adobe Flash Player and Get Adobe Reader).
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
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