Describe how learning is taken place;
Identify principles of language Curriculum design;
Examine three types of principles to guiding the design of Curriculum
2. - The aim of this part of the curriculum design process is
to decide how learning can be encouraged.
3. Contents Methods and Principles
What beliefs about: learners and
learning, teaching, and subject
matter undergird the curriculum?
The Twenty Principles
Content and sequencing
Format and Presentation
Monitoring and assessment
Using the List of Principles
Summary of the Steps
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4. Methods
and
Principles
Very few teachers or
researchers now follow any
particular method or
approach in their language
teaching.
Example: When we find that a
“modern” course is using a syllabus
that differs in only minor detail
from one used by Berlitz in the
1890s and that does not agree with
the findings of substantial research
in this area on the frequency of
grammar items.
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5. 20
Principles
Pedagogical
perspective:
curriculum design
and teacher
training
Learning (Philosophical)
perspective:
the nature of language,
nature of learning, and
role of culture
Supported by research &
theory in 3 fields:
• second or foreign language
learning,
• first language learning, and
• general educational
research and theory.
allow variety and
flexibility in their
application to suit the
wide range of
conditions in which
language is taught.
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6. 20
Principles
Content and Sequencing
(8):
Frequency, Strategies
and autonomy, Spaced
retrieval, Language
system, Keep moving
forward, Teachability,
Learning burden and
interference
Format and Presentation
(10):
Motivation, Four
strands,
Comprehensible input,
Fluency, Output,
Deliberate learning,
Time on task, Depth of
processing, Integrative
motivation and
Learning preferences
Monitoring and
Assessment (2):
Ongoing needs
and environment
analysis &
Feedback
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7. 20 principles
Content and
sequencing (8):
- focus on what goes
into a language
course and the
order in which
language items
appear in the
course.
- ensure that the
learners are
gaining
something
useful from the
course
Format and
presentation (10):
- Focus on what
actually happens in
the classroom and
during the learning.
- relate to the
kinds of
activities used
in the course
and how
learners process
the course
material.
Monitoring and
assessment (2):
- provide a teacher
and learners with
information about
the learners’ present
knowledge and
progress and a
means of
encouraging
involvement.
- ensure that the
learners will get
the most benefit
from the course.
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8. Content
and
Sequencing
https://www.eapfo
undation.com/voc
ab/
2-Frequency:vocabulary & grammar
A language course should provide the best possible coverage of
language in use through the inclusion of items that occur
frequently in the language, so that learners get the best return for
their learning effort.
Knowing …
10 words provides coverage of 25% of written text, 100 words
50%, 1,000 words 70%, and 2,000 words over 80%.
Rules of Frequency, coverage and types of vocabulary:
A small number of high-frequency items will cover a large proportion of
a text.
After knowing the few most frequent items, a very large number of low-
frequency items must be known to cover the remainder of the text.
Typically, high-frequency items are simple in their form (but not
necessarily in their meaning!).
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9. Content
and
Sequencing
https://www.eapfoun
dation.com/vocab/
Above rules applicable to selecting
material for language courses:
focus much on the high-frequency
items of the language
Provide substantial amounts of practice of
the high-frequency items both in and out
of class: use of graded readers, graded
listening to stories, guided and free writing,
and guided speaking.
Low-frequency items should be dealt
with only when the high-frequency
items have been sufficiently learned
Teach learners strategies for learning and
coping with low-frequency items
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10. Content
and
Sequencing
2 Strategies and autonomy:
A language course should train learners in
how to learn a language and how to monitor
and be aware of their learning, so that they
can become effective and independent
language learners.
Five principles for
promoting learner
autonomy (Cotterall, 2000):
- learner goals
- the language learning process
- Tasks
- learner strategies
- reflection on learning.
Good Language Learners use:
Learning strategies:
Deep processing of language and
content, vocabulary learning cards, word
part strategies, mnemonic strategies,
e.g. keyword, predicting, notetaking
strategies
Gaining input:
peer interaction strategies, strategies for
controlling the teacher
Coping strategies:
Inferring vocabulary from context,
Coping with complex sentences
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11. Content
and
Sequencing 3 Spaced retrieval:
Learners should have increasingly spaced, repeated
opportunities to retrieve and give attention to wanted items
in a variety of contexts.
Focuses on Repetition of learning & levels of processing
theory
Repetition is essential for learning, and one of the main goals that a
teacher should have when planning a course is to make sure that there
are repeated opportunities to meet the same vocabulary again.
Ensure that the same content is repeated several times
in the course. Repetition can be:
verbatim repetition where the same content is repeated
with little or no change, or varied repetition where the
same content occurs again in a different form.
Immediate repetition: occurs immediately after the first
occurrence or delayed repetition occurs some time later
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12. Content
and
Sequencing
Immediate repetition:
The 4/3/2 technique where learners repeat the same talk
three times to three different listeners under decreasing
time pressure, and repeated reading.
Speeded listening involves listening to exactly the same
text three times but each time at a faster speed.
Unexploded dictation involves making a written
transcription of a spoken text by listening to it or parts of
it over and over again.
Headlines involve half of the learners writing a newspaper
headline describing the funniest or most exciting thing
that they have experienced. They hold their headline in
front of them and other learners walk around looking at
the headlines and asking them to tell their story. They will
have to tell the same story again to several learners.
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13. Content
and
Sequencing
Immediate repetition:
The pyramid procedure involves dealing
with the same material at the individual
level, then in pairs, then in groups, and
then with the class as a whole trying to
reach agreement on the answer or solution.
The linked skills activity involves dealing
with the same material through three of the
four skills of listening, speaking, reading,
and writing, for example, read about
something, talk about it, and then write
about it.
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14. Content
and
Sequencing
Delayed repetition:
Varying across genre or topic type
involves doing the same task again but
having to use a different way of
presenting the information, for example,
turning a first-person description into a
newspaper or news report, or turning a
description into a set of instructions.
Varying across viewpoint can involve
describing an event several times, each
time from the viewpoint of a different
character involved in the event.
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16. Content
and
Sequencing
4 Language system:
The language focus of a course needs to be on the
generalisable features of the language.
A command of these features will enable the learners to
make “creative” use of the language.
Application of the principle to teaching:
Vocabulary: high-frequency vocabulary, when
explaining and teaching unknown word, teacher should
include underlying concepts/meaning of word, and word
parts
Structure: frequent structures
Discourse: topic type, rhetorical structure & cohesive
devices, prediction clues, text coping strategies like
guessing words from context and sentence
interpretation strategies
This principle ensures that goal of the lesson allows the
learner to make the widest possible use of the language
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17. Content
and
Sequencing
5 Keep moving forward:
A language course should progressively
cover useful language items, skills and
strategies.
The course should have explicit language teaching
goals: language items, content ideas, skills, fluency
development and discourse feature–text structure or
dialogue maintenance strategies
The course should ensure that there is opportunity
for the goals to be reached:
Have lists of useful items to check the course against.
Ensure each learning task has a goal which fits with
the plan for the course.
Keep the course directed towards learning goals
through regular goal-directed tests
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18. Content
and
Sequencing
6 Teachability:
The teaching of language items should take account of
the most favorable sequencing of these items and
should take account of when the learners are most ready
to learn them.
Second-language learners follow a fixed order of
stages in their acquisition of L2 grammatical
forms and, even more importantly, that these
forms can only be learned in a particular order
(Pienemann,1988: 220)
The Teachability Hypothesis
simply states the course of second
language development cannot be
altered by factors external to the
learner.
In this statement “the course of
second language development” refers
to the list of prerequisites as
outlined in Table 4.3.
“Factors external to the learner”
refers mainly to teaching.
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19. Content
and
Sequencing
Teachability Hypothesis says that
teaching cannot change the
sequence in which the structures
are learned.
Implications of this hypothesis for
teaching and curriculum design:
- A course excluding the items in this
sequence will result in teaching which
has little effect.
- in the sequence of a learner is
imporKnowing what stage tant for
effective teaching directed for the
next stage.
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20. Content
and
Sequencing
7 Learning burden:
The course should help learners
make the most effective use of
previous knowledge.
Language is learned as a foreign language with
little opportunity for contact and use outside
the classroom, and where the classroom is only
one of a range of sources for second-language
input, The effect of the first language is more
noticeable.
1st Language effects on the target language:
pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary,
discourse, aspects of language skill, and
content knowledge
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21. Content
and
Sequencing
8 Interference:
The items in a language course should be sequenced
so that items which are learned together have a
positive effect on each other for learning and so that
interference effects are avoided.
Items with strong meaning relationships:
opposites, near synonyms, free associates interfering
with each other and thus making learning more
difficult should not be learned at the same time.
If a course book presents closely related items together,
help learners master the most useful before meeting
the pairs or groups of items: hot before cold
Solution of sequencing in the course:
let the natural occurrence of items in spoken or written texts
determine the order; ensure that strongly related items are not
presented together; let frequency of occurrence guide
sequencing.
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22. 1 Motivation:
As much as possible, the learners
should be interested and excited
about learning the language and
they should come to value this
learning.
Focuses on learners’ attitude
toward learning
Motivation determines amount of
time, involvement, and effect on
learning
Format
and
Presentation
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23. Ways to involve learners in learning:
Make lessons relevant and interesting
Give learners some control and decision-making over what they
do
Set tasks with clear outcomes and with a high possibility of
success
Set many short achievement tests to help see their progress
Show learners how to keep records of their learning progress
(speed reading graphs, standardised dictation scores, number of
graded readers completed and movement through the levels, scores
on split-information tasks, and writing accuracy graphs)
Help them become autonomous learners: goals of learning
activities, teacher model of autonomous behavior and student
themselves
Reward learners’ efforts through praise and attention given
Use tasks that is challenging
Encourage learners to set achievable and realistic individual goals
Format
and
Presentation
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24. 2 Four strands:
A course should include a roughly even
balance of meaning-focused input,
language-focused learning, meaning-
focused output and fluency activities.
Input should be outside class time, where
output, language learning and fluency
should be in class time
Format
and
Presentation
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• Language-focused Input = 30%
• Language focused learning= 30%
• Language focused Output = 20%
• Fluency development = 20 %
An early stage of
Language Course
• Language focused Input & output = 50%
• Language focused learning = 20%
• Fluency development = 30 %
An advanced stage of
Language Course
25. 3 Comprehensible input:
There should be substantial quantities of
interesting comprehensible receptive
activity in both listening and reading.
Learners need to build up an understanding of the
language system before they are called on to
produce language
The Use of Graded Readers and Graded Listening:
http://www.oxfordgradedreaders.es/
https://erfoundation.org/wordpress/
https://www.er-central.com/contributors/learn-about-
extensive-reading-and-listening/what-is-extensive-
reading
Format
and
Presentation
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26. 4 Fluency:
A language course should provide activities
aimed at increasing the fluency with which
learners can use the language they already
know, both receptively and productively.
Biggest obstacles to fluency in a foreign
language situation is the lack of opportunity
outside the class room to use the foreign
language to communicate.
Format
and
Presentation
Table 4.4 indicates how
fluency activities can be
made across the four
skills.
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27. 5 Output:
The learners should be pushed to produce
the language in both speaking and writing
over a range of discourse types.
Large quantities of comprehensible input are important,
but not sufficient in itself for language learning.
Swain (1985) argues that the language knowledge
needed to comprehend language is not the same as the
language knowledge needed to produce language.
It is worth ensuring that learners are given the
chance to produce language:
in both formal and informal settings,
for transactional and interactional purposes, and
in a variety of social roles and power relationships.
Format
and
Presentatio
n
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28. 6 Deliberate learning:
The course should include language-focused
learning on the sound system, spelling,
vocabulary, grammar and discourse areas.
Language-focused learning has following effects: speed
up learning, help overcome barriers to language
development, and positively affect meaning-focused
learning.
Courses containing appropriate amounts and types of
language-focused learning achieve better results.
Format
and
Presentation
Activities used in
language-focused
learning
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29. 7 Time on task:
As much time as possible should be spent using
and focusing on the second language.
The more time learners spend on language
learning, the more they learn.
How can a teacher check to see that learners are
spending sufficient time “on task”?
If the organisation of each lesson was more
predictable and if familiar procedures or techniques
were more regularly used, the learners could get on
with the job;
Add a competitive or a score-keeping element to the
task;
Explain the learning goal and the way this goal is
achieved to the learners;
Provide learners with some special practice to
maintain attention on tasks
Format
and
Presentation
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30. 8 Depth of processing:
Learners should process the items to be
learned as deeply and as thoughtfully as
possible.
The quantity of learning depends on the
quality of mental activity at the moment of
learning.
Here are two examples:
Instead of translating a word’s meaning, T
uses foreign-language explanations
Before T gets Ss to read a text, show them 1st
sentence of each paragraph. Then Ss discuss
and anticipate what’s next in the paragraph
Format
and
Presentation
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32. 8 Depth of processing:
If inadequate, useful learner strategies can
add quality to vocabulary learning:
Mnemonic devices: use word
parts or the keyword technique
Guessing from context strategy
Use of cards with L2 word on
one side and L1 translation on
the other.
Format
and
Presentation
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33. 9 Integrative motivation
A course should be presented so that the learners
have the most favorable attitudes to the language,
to users of the language, to the teacher’s skill in
teaching the language, and to their chance of success
in learning the language.
Recent research and thinking about second-language
learning have given an important role to “affective”
factors.
Affective factors refer to feelings and attitudes and include such
things as motivation, shyness about speaking a strange
language (or “language anxiety”), opinions about native
speakers of the second language, and attitudes towards the
teacher.
If learners have negative attitudes towards the language and
its users, or if they feel personally threatened by having to use
the language, this will make it difficult for them to progress in
learning the language.
Format
and
Presentation
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35. 10 Learning style:
There should be opportunity for learners
to work with the learning material in ways
that most suit their individual learning
preferences.
Learners approach activities in a variety of
ways depending on:
personality,
previous learning experience,
expectations of how they will be tested on
what they learn,
and view of the nature of the learning task.
Format
and
Presentation
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36. 10 Learning preferences
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• provide opportunities for
learners to work to their
strengths, and
• provide opportunity and
training for learners to try
other ways of learning.
A course should take
account of individual
differences and
learning preferences
in two ways:
The following list
suggests some of
the choices that
could be made
available.
37. Monitoring
and
Assessment
1 Ongoing needs and environment
analysis:
The selection, ordering, presentation,
and assessment of the material in a
language course should be based on a
continuing careful consideration of the
learners and their needs, the teaching
conditions, and the time and resources
available.
2 Feedback:
Learners should receive helpful feedback
which will allow them to improve the
quality of their language use.
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38. Using the
List of
Principles for
curriculum
design
guide the
design of
language
teaching
courses and
lessons
evaluate
existing
courses and
lessons
help teachers integrate
and contextualise
information gained from
keeping up with
developments in their
field
provide a basis for teachers
to use to reflect on their
practice and professional
development;
provide a basis for action
research within their
classrooms, and help them
answer questions:
Is this a good technique?
Should I use group work?
Do my learners need to
speak a lot in class?”
act as one of
many possible
reference points
in teacher
training courses.
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39. Summary of
the Steps
Choose the most
important teaching
and learning
principles.
Decide how you will
incorporate them in
the course.
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40. Discussion Task 1 Principles in a
course
Look at a course and
decide the extent to
which the course puts
one of the principles in
this chapter into
action.