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UNIT 2: COMMUNICATION IN THE LANGUAGE LESSON.

LINGUISTIC AND NON-LINGUISTIC COMMUNICATION


1. COMMUNICATION
Communication abilities at a very early stage are one of the primary aims
of foreign language teaching.
Modern approaches to communication do not include only linguistic
production but gesture, behaviour, mime and other aspects occurring in first
language communication.
The communicative use of the visual and tactile modes in their nonlinguistic aspects is referred as non-verbal communication or body
language.
Communication means to say something to someone with a communicative
purpose and in an appropriate way.
2. COMMUNICATION IN THE CLASSROOM
The main aims in language teaching are:
Using oral and writing language in classroom actions.
Using idioms and sentences (congratulations, greetings,)
Using extralinguistic strategies (gesture, body language,)
And these are the contents:
Conceptual (linguistic): identifying, greeting, describing, asking,
expressing needs and emotions, quantify, object location, requesting,
denying, offering,
Procedures (non-linguistic): acting, doing what they are commanded
(total Physical Response)
Socio-cultural: knowing games, sports and traditional songs in that
language.
Communication goals:
The learner gets a social and linguistic development:
Gets an internal linguistic consciousness
Takes part in a social interaction
Gets a cultural knowledge of that society and their habits, and also a
way to science, technology and international relations
Gets practice in everyday activities
Learners can understand much more that they can speak, so current
language ca be used in the classroom.
3. COMMUNICATIVE LEARNING AND TEACHING ACTIVITIES
There is almost an unlimited range of activities within the communicative
approach (information sharing, negotiation of meaning and interaction)

Most communicative techniques operate by providing information and


holding it from the others, creating an information gap.
Every communicative activity has these characteristics:
A desire to communicate
A communicative form
A variety of contents and language
The teachers role must be to facilitate the communication process and be
involved as a participant within the group, analysing needs, counselling,
managing the process and organising resources.
Learners must interact within the group. Successful communication can
only be achieved through group interaction.
4. NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION
The communicative event is not based on the verbal component only. It
also implies paralinguistic devices such as gesture, facial expression, body
language, sight. They are information and emotional sources.
These non-verbal acts are culturally related. Different cultures may use
different gestures (hand using, head movement, e.g.: nodding in Hungary
is opposite to everywhere else)
There is also the silent language like the physical distance maintained
between individuals, the sense of time appropriate for communication
under different conditions The sight directs very well communication. If
we do not like someone we put our eyes away, insecurity makes eyes go
down or if we are very interested our eyes are widely open to make the
speaker go on.
5. EXTRALINGUISTIC STRATEGIES
The most common strategies of language learning are:
Learning grammar rules and using them
Imitating linguistic habits
Learning vocabulary and structures by heart
Finding out strategies, making hypotheses, contrasting them and getting
the knowledge
Non verbal reactions to messages in different contexts:
Games: guessing games, drawing games,
Drama: acting, miming,
Role play: using sentences as a native speaker, which is funny and
vividly remembered.
Total Physical Response: is a teaching method built around the coordination of speech and action. It attempts to teach language through
physical activity.

The more intensively a memory connection is traced the stronger the


memory association will be and the more likely it will be recalled.
It makes second language learning a process like first language acquisition.
Comprehension abilities precede productive skills but they transfer from
one to others.
The speech directed to children consists mainly of commands. Most of the
grammatical structures of the target language and hundreds of lexical items
can be learned from the skilful use of the imperative.
The lower the stress is the greater the learning is. Successful learning
normally occurs in stress controlled classrooms, in pleasurable experiences
and low anxiety situations.
Grammatical features and lexical items are selected according to the
classroom situations and the ease they can be learnt. Total Physical
Response is uses after language presentation and practice in order to
consolidate structures and vocabulary.
The teacher is the director of the stage play and pupils are the actors. The
teacher decides what to teach, how to present the new material, how to
select materials.
Correction should be used only when our pupils will really benefit from it.
in the beginning the learner cannot attempt efficiently to the corrections
because all attention is directed to producing utterances.
Learners listen attentively and respond physically to our commands.
Teachers monitor and encourage to speak when learners fell ready to speak.
Procedure:
Warming up or introductory review
Introduction of new language, new commands and new items
Simple questions which can be answered with a gesture such as pointing
Pupils utter commands. Manipulating teacher and pupils behaviour.
Reading and writing activities (blackboard, notebooks, ). Writing,
reading and acting out the sentence.
It is very suitable for our primary lessons. It is only valid for beginners.
When our pupils knowledge is very limited we do not expect them to talk:
they have to watch, listen and act.
Our main objective is to provide children as much understable listening as
we can while they are doing an enjoyable activity.
The use of gesture allows them to talk when they cannot speak. Commands
can be responded by physical actions (e.g.: point)

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