Reported by:
Kevin Castro & Kathleen Ching
WHAT IS TOTAL PHYSICAL RESPONSE?
🞭 TPR is a language teaching method in which
learners listen toinstructionsin the target
language, and carryout a sequence of physical
actions.
🞭 This is based on the belief that second
language is learned most effectively in the early
stages if the pressure for production is taken
off the learners.
PRINCIPLES IN WHICH TPR WAS BASED
🞭 JamesAsher, the proponent of
this method, derived three
principles from his beliefs about
the nature of first language
acquisition.
1. Stress comprehension rather
than production
2. Obey the “here and now”principle
3. Comprehension by listeningto
and carryingout instructions
couched in the imperative
CRITICAL ELEMENTS IN LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
1. Listening skill is far in advance of speaking.
2. Children acquire listening skill in a particular
way
3. Listening skill may produce a “readiness” for
the child to speak.
CLAIMS IN WHICH TPR WAS BASED
🞭 Asher claimed that the fastest and least
stressful way to achieve understanding of any
target language is to follow directions uttered
bythe instructor (without native language
translation).
KEY COMPONENTS OF TPR
🞭 Movement as memory enhancer
🞭 Use of imperatives as the method of instruction
MAIN PRINCIPLES OF TPR
🞭 Meaning in the target language can often be
conveyed through actions. Memory is activated
through learner response. The target language
should be presented in chunks, not just word
by word.
🞭 The students’ understanding of the target
language should be developed before
speaking.
MAIN PRINCIPLES OF TPR
🞭 Students can initially learn one part of the
language rapidly by moving their bodies.
🞭 Imperatives are powerful linguistic device
through which the teacher can direct student
behavior.
🞭 Students can learn through observing actions
as well as by performing the actions
themselves.
MAIN PRINCIPLES OF TPR
🞭 It is very important that students feel
successful.
🞭 Students should not be made to memorize
fixed routines.
🞭 Corrections should be carried out in an
unobtrusive manner.
🞭 Students must develop flexibility in
understanding novel combinations of target
language chunks.
MAIN PRINCIPLES OF TPR
🞭 Language learning is more effective when it is
fun.
🞭 Spoken language should be emphasized over
written language.
🞭 Students will begin to speak when they are
ready.
MAIN PRINCIPLES OF TPR
🞭 Students are expected to make errors when
they first begin speaking. Teachers should be
tolerant of them. Work on the fine details of the
language should be postponed until students
have become somewhat proficient.
FEATURES OF TPR
YES NO
Comprehensible input
Language as meaning
Language as structures and vocabulary
Language learning: association of
stimulus-response through physical action
Conscious reflection and analysis of
linguistic structures
Unconscious acquisition Conscious learning
Silent period
Immediate production
Input before output
Inductive learning
Deductive learning and explanation of
structures
Teacher as leader in the classroom Learners are active participants in learning
process
Activities designed to reduce affective filter Stressful situations leading to anxiety
Use of imperatives
THEORIES INCORPORATED IN THE METHOD
🞭 Childhood language acquisition theories
🞭 Natural order hypothesis
🞭 The right brain – left brain divide (“brain
switching”)
🞭 Lowering stress and affective filter
PHASES OF TPR INSTRUCTION
Modeling bythe instructor
🞭 T. says command and performs action
🞭 T. says command; students and T. perform action
Demonstration bythe learner
🞭 T. says command, students perform action
🞭 T. says commands in a random order and random combination,
students perform action
LEARNERS’ ROLES
🞭 Listeners and performers
🞭 Imitators of the teacher’s nonverbal model
🞭 Monitor and evaluate their own progress
TEACHER’S ROLES
🞭 Director of all students’ behaviors
🞭 Decides what to teach
🞭 Serves as model of the target language
🞭 Presents the new material
🞭 Selects supporting materials for classroom use
SOME STRATEGIES IN USING TPR
🞭 Role Reversal
🞭 Students command their teacher and classmates to
perform some actions.
🞭 Asher says that students will want to speak after
ten to twenty hours of instruction, although some
students may take longer.
🞭 Students should not be encouraged to speak until
they are ready.
SOME STRATEGIES IN USING TPR
🞭 Action Sequence (or Operation)
🞭 The teacher gives three connected commands.
Example: The teacher tells the students to point to
the door, walk to the door, and touch the door.
🞭 As the students learn more and more of the target
language, a longer series of connected commands
can be given, which together comprise a whole
procedure.
SOME STRATEGIES IN USING TPR
🞭 Action Songs
🞭 Storytelling
🞭 Use of novel utterances
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Howdoyou copewith abstraction without using translation?
A: Abstractions are simply vocabulary items that can
be incorporated in several different ways. It is
recommended to delayfirst the teachingof
abstraction until a large amount of structure in the
TL has been assimilated with concrete vocabulary
items.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Is any homework assigned?
A: Usuallynot, but this does not mean that it is
inadvisable. Through trial-and-error, each instructor
discovers what mix of activities produces the best
results.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Are thereany teacherpreconceptionswhichcouldblockthe
successful application ofthis strategy?
A: There are three: (1) illusion of simplicity, (2)
tendency to be over-ambitious for students, and
(3) narrow tolerance for errors in speaking
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Whataboutthetransferoflearningfromlistening
understanding to reading for peoplewhocannot read in
their native language?
A: The transfer will probably be zero. Apparently it is
necessary to have prior skill in the orthography of
one’s native language before there is transport
from listening skill in the second language to
reading and writing.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Howcanimperative improvepronunciation?
A: The students, during a long time period of silent
acting when the teacher utters a command, are
internalizing a model of the target language which
helps the students monitor and self-correct the
individual’s own speech.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Can productionbetaught?
A: Production can be shaped, but not directly taught.
There are three reasons for the radical conclusion
that production cannot be taught:
1. In first language acquisition, speech always
lags behind listening comprehension
2. Puberty is a critical factor which determines
whether one will achieve near-native
pronunciation in L2
3. Individual differences
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Doyoucorrect mistakes that students makein production?
A: Yes, but since we operate on a developmental
theory to explain production, our feedback is
modeled after the feedback which parents give to
children learning their first language.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Howdoesthis methodcompareand contrast with the Silent
W
ay?
A: Both methods use commands to manipulate the
students’ behavior. One difference is the point in
training when students produce spoken language.
In the Silent Way, an attempt is made to fine tune
pronunciation immediately. In TPR, there is a delay
in production until students indicate readiness to
speak.
ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES
🞭 It is a lot of fun. Learners enjoy it, and this
method can be a real stirrer in the class. It lifts
the mood of the class.
🞭 It is very memorable. It does assist students to
recognize phrases or words.
🞭 It is good for kinesthetic learners who are
required to be active in the class. It also taps
the visual and auditory skills of the learners.
ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES
🞭 It can be used both in large or small classes. In
this case, the class size does not matter that
much. As long as you are prepared to take the
lead, the learners will follow.
🞭 It works well with mixed-ability classes. The
physical actions get across the meaning
effectively so that all the learners are able to
comprehend and apply the target language.
ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES
🞭 There is no need to exert a lot of time for the
preparation of materials using the TPR.
🞭 It involves the use of both left and right brain in
learning.
ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS
🞭 Students who are not used to such things might
find it embarrassing.
🞭 It is only suitable for beginner levels. This method
holds stronger in teaching non-abstract vocabulary
items and is unsuccessful in teaching abstracts
which are acquired at advanced levels.
🞭 It gives priority to receptive skills, mainly listening,
at the expense of productive skills.
🞭 Very less effort is expected from the learner.
ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS
🞭 It assumes that stress hinders the process of
language acquisition denying the fact that positive
stress, as explained in some literature, is
considered sometimes crucial in learning
processes.
🞭 Grammatical features and vocabulary items are
selected not according to their frequency of need
or use in the target language situations, but
according to the situations in which they can be
used in the classroom and the ease with which
they can be learned.
ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS
🞭 The method is time consuming. Learning a
single vocabulary item, for example, would
require the demand or imperative of the
teacher, the students' demonstration, and
teacher's feedback. It usually involves the
whole class participating in learning one single
item. Yet, the results would be expected to be
more fruitful and lasting than it is with other
methods.
REFERENCES
Asher, J. (1979). Learning Another Language through Actions. Los Galos, CA:
Sky Oaks Productions.
Neupane, G. (2008). Act, Don’t Explain: Total Physical Response at Work.
Journal of NELTA, 13 (1-2), 80-86.
Nunan, D. (2009). Second Language Teaching and Learning. Pasig City:
Cengage Learning.
Adelman, B., Price, E., and Silver, M. (2003). Total Physical Response: A
Curriculum for Adults. St. Louis, MO: English Language and Literacy Center.
Widodo, H. (2005). Teaching Children Using a Total Physical Response (TPR)
Method: Rethinking. Bahasa Dan Seni, 33 (2), 236-248

Teaching Metodologies - Total Physical Response (TPR).pptx

  • 1.
    Reported by: Kevin Castro& Kathleen Ching
  • 2.
    WHAT IS TOTALPHYSICAL RESPONSE? 🞭 TPR is a language teaching method in which learners listen toinstructionsin the target language, and carryout a sequence of physical actions. 🞭 This is based on the belief that second language is learned most effectively in the early stages if the pressure for production is taken off the learners.
  • 3.
    PRINCIPLES IN WHICHTPR WAS BASED 🞭 JamesAsher, the proponent of this method, derived three principles from his beliefs about the nature of first language acquisition. 1. Stress comprehension rather than production 2. Obey the “here and now”principle 3. Comprehension by listeningto and carryingout instructions couched in the imperative
  • 4.
    CRITICAL ELEMENTS INLANGUAGE ACQUISITION 1. Listening skill is far in advance of speaking. 2. Children acquire listening skill in a particular way 3. Listening skill may produce a “readiness” for the child to speak.
  • 5.
    CLAIMS IN WHICHTPR WAS BASED 🞭 Asher claimed that the fastest and least stressful way to achieve understanding of any target language is to follow directions uttered bythe instructor (without native language translation).
  • 6.
    KEY COMPONENTS OFTPR 🞭 Movement as memory enhancer 🞭 Use of imperatives as the method of instruction
  • 7.
    MAIN PRINCIPLES OFTPR 🞭 Meaning in the target language can often be conveyed through actions. Memory is activated through learner response. The target language should be presented in chunks, not just word by word. 🞭 The students’ understanding of the target language should be developed before speaking.
  • 8.
    MAIN PRINCIPLES OFTPR 🞭 Students can initially learn one part of the language rapidly by moving their bodies. 🞭 Imperatives are powerful linguistic device through which the teacher can direct student behavior. 🞭 Students can learn through observing actions as well as by performing the actions themselves.
  • 9.
    MAIN PRINCIPLES OFTPR 🞭 It is very important that students feel successful. 🞭 Students should not be made to memorize fixed routines. 🞭 Corrections should be carried out in an unobtrusive manner. 🞭 Students must develop flexibility in understanding novel combinations of target language chunks.
  • 10.
    MAIN PRINCIPLES OFTPR 🞭 Language learning is more effective when it is fun. 🞭 Spoken language should be emphasized over written language. 🞭 Students will begin to speak when they are ready.
  • 11.
    MAIN PRINCIPLES OFTPR 🞭 Students are expected to make errors when they first begin speaking. Teachers should be tolerant of them. Work on the fine details of the language should be postponed until students have become somewhat proficient.
  • 12.
    FEATURES OF TPR YESNO Comprehensible input Language as meaning Language as structures and vocabulary Language learning: association of stimulus-response through physical action Conscious reflection and analysis of linguistic structures Unconscious acquisition Conscious learning Silent period Immediate production Input before output Inductive learning Deductive learning and explanation of structures Teacher as leader in the classroom Learners are active participants in learning process Activities designed to reduce affective filter Stressful situations leading to anxiety Use of imperatives
  • 13.
    THEORIES INCORPORATED INTHE METHOD 🞭 Childhood language acquisition theories 🞭 Natural order hypothesis 🞭 The right brain – left brain divide (“brain switching”) 🞭 Lowering stress and affective filter
  • 14.
    PHASES OF TPRINSTRUCTION Modeling bythe instructor 🞭 T. says command and performs action 🞭 T. says command; students and T. perform action Demonstration bythe learner 🞭 T. says command, students perform action 🞭 T. says commands in a random order and random combination, students perform action
  • 15.
    LEARNERS’ ROLES 🞭 Listenersand performers 🞭 Imitators of the teacher’s nonverbal model 🞭 Monitor and evaluate their own progress
  • 16.
    TEACHER’S ROLES 🞭 Directorof all students’ behaviors 🞭 Decides what to teach 🞭 Serves as model of the target language 🞭 Presents the new material 🞭 Selects supporting materials for classroom use
  • 17.
    SOME STRATEGIES INUSING TPR 🞭 Role Reversal 🞭 Students command their teacher and classmates to perform some actions. 🞭 Asher says that students will want to speak after ten to twenty hours of instruction, although some students may take longer. 🞭 Students should not be encouraged to speak until they are ready.
  • 18.
    SOME STRATEGIES INUSING TPR 🞭 Action Sequence (or Operation) 🞭 The teacher gives three connected commands. Example: The teacher tells the students to point to the door, walk to the door, and touch the door. 🞭 As the students learn more and more of the target language, a longer series of connected commands can be given, which together comprise a whole procedure.
  • 19.
    SOME STRATEGIES INUSING TPR 🞭 Action Songs 🞭 Storytelling 🞭 Use of novel utterances
  • 20.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Howdoyoucopewith abstraction without using translation? A: Abstractions are simply vocabulary items that can be incorporated in several different ways. It is recommended to delayfirst the teachingof abstraction until a large amount of structure in the TL has been assimilated with concrete vocabulary items.
  • 21.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Isany homework assigned? A: Usuallynot, but this does not mean that it is inadvisable. Through trial-and-error, each instructor discovers what mix of activities produces the best results.
  • 22.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Arethereany teacherpreconceptionswhichcouldblockthe successful application ofthis strategy? A: There are three: (1) illusion of simplicity, (2) tendency to be over-ambitious for students, and (3) narrow tolerance for errors in speaking
  • 23.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Whataboutthetransferoflearningfromlistening understandingto reading for peoplewhocannot read in their native language? A: The transfer will probably be zero. Apparently it is necessary to have prior skill in the orthography of one’s native language before there is transport from listening skill in the second language to reading and writing.
  • 24.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Howcanimperativeimprovepronunciation? A: The students, during a long time period of silent acting when the teacher utters a command, are internalizing a model of the target language which helps the students monitor and self-correct the individual’s own speech.
  • 25.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Canproductionbetaught? A: Production can be shaped, but not directly taught. There are three reasons for the radical conclusion that production cannot be taught: 1. In first language acquisition, speech always lags behind listening comprehension 2. Puberty is a critical factor which determines whether one will achieve near-native pronunciation in L2 3. Individual differences
  • 26.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Doyoucorrectmistakes that students makein production? A: Yes, but since we operate on a developmental theory to explain production, our feedback is modeled after the feedback which parents give to children learning their first language.
  • 27.
    FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Howdoesthismethodcompareand contrast with the Silent W ay? A: Both methods use commands to manipulate the students’ behavior. One difference is the point in training when students produce spoken language. In the Silent Way, an attempt is made to fine tune pronunciation immediately. In TPR, there is a delay in production until students indicate readiness to speak.
  • 28.
    ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES 🞭It is a lot of fun. Learners enjoy it, and this method can be a real stirrer in the class. It lifts the mood of the class. 🞭 It is very memorable. It does assist students to recognize phrases or words. 🞭 It is good for kinesthetic learners who are required to be active in the class. It also taps the visual and auditory skills of the learners.
  • 29.
    ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES 🞭It can be used both in large or small classes. In this case, the class size does not matter that much. As long as you are prepared to take the lead, the learners will follow. 🞭 It works well with mixed-ability classes. The physical actions get across the meaning effectively so that all the learners are able to comprehend and apply the target language.
  • 30.
    ASSESSING TPR: ADVANTAGES 🞭There is no need to exert a lot of time for the preparation of materials using the TPR. 🞭 It involves the use of both left and right brain in learning.
  • 31.
    ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS 🞭Students who are not used to such things might find it embarrassing. 🞭 It is only suitable for beginner levels. This method holds stronger in teaching non-abstract vocabulary items and is unsuccessful in teaching abstracts which are acquired at advanced levels. 🞭 It gives priority to receptive skills, mainly listening, at the expense of productive skills. 🞭 Very less effort is expected from the learner.
  • 32.
    ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS 🞭It assumes that stress hinders the process of language acquisition denying the fact that positive stress, as explained in some literature, is considered sometimes crucial in learning processes. 🞭 Grammatical features and vocabulary items are selected not according to their frequency of need or use in the target language situations, but according to the situations in which they can be used in the classroom and the ease with which they can be learned.
  • 33.
    ASSESSING TPR: LIMITATIONS 🞭The method is time consuming. Learning a single vocabulary item, for example, would require the demand or imperative of the teacher, the students' demonstration, and teacher's feedback. It usually involves the whole class participating in learning one single item. Yet, the results would be expected to be more fruitful and lasting than it is with other methods.
  • 34.
    REFERENCES Asher, J. (1979).Learning Another Language through Actions. Los Galos, CA: Sky Oaks Productions. Neupane, G. (2008). Act, Don’t Explain: Total Physical Response at Work. Journal of NELTA, 13 (1-2), 80-86. Nunan, D. (2009). Second Language Teaching and Learning. Pasig City: Cengage Learning. Adelman, B., Price, E., and Silver, M. (2003). Total Physical Response: A Curriculum for Adults. St. Louis, MO: English Language and Literacy Center. Widodo, H. (2005). Teaching Children Using a Total Physical Response (TPR) Method: Rethinking. Bahasa Dan Seni, 33 (2), 236-248