Marmara Elt Resources

  • Home
  • Terms of Use
  • Archive
  • Dictionaries
  • SEARCH
  • Categories

    • Classroom Management
    • Classroom Resources
    • Elt News
    • English Tenses
    • Grammar
    • Lesson Plans
    • Makaleler
    • Methods and Techniques
    • Other Grammar Topics
    • Quizes
    • Reading
    • Reading Texts
    • Sentences, Clauses and Phrases
    • short-stories
    • Speaking
    • Teaching Grammar
    • Teaching Writing
    • Türkçe-Turkish
    • Useful Articles
    • Useful Tips
    • Vocabulary
    • Vocabulary Teaching
    • Worksheets
    • writing
  • Pages

    • Archive
    • Dictionaries
    • SEARCH
    • Terms of Use
  • Users' Area

    • Register
    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org
  • Stats

    • Users 126
    • Posts 278
    • Comments 33
    • Pages 4
  • Archives

    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
  • Links

    • Msn emotions
    • life is beatiful
    • Everything For Nothing
    • information resources
    • CuteWriting
    • Shinobi’s Blog
  • Tags

    article articles Classroom Management classroom management tips clauses Common Idioms conditionals EFL elt elt article elt articles elt tips english english idioms english reference ESL future grammar idiom idioms ingilizce language language learning Learning lesson plan Lesson Plans past perfect prepositions present present perfect progressive quantifiers Reading reading text Reading Texts role play simple subject teaching teaching english tense tips worksheet writing
  • Join My Community at MyBloglog!
  • eLearning Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

Why Grammar teaching Should Be Explicit-Implicit Grammar Teaching

Implicit Grammar Teaching
Implicit grammar teaching should not be excluded for explicit grammar teaching entirely, however. Some basic features of English language grammar structure are illogical or dissimilar to speakers of other languages and do not readily lend themselves to being well understood, even in context. In cases where features of English grammar are diametrically opposed or in some other way radically different from the manner of expression in the student’s L1, explicit teaching may be required.
Photo: The author making a point in a university EFL class

Aspects of English language grammar that may offer exceptional challenge to EFL students include use of word order, determiners (this, that, these, those, a, an, the), prepositions (in, on, at, by, for, from, of), auxiliaries (do, be, have), conjunctions (but, so, however, therefore, though, although), interrogatives, intensifiers (some, any, few, more, too) and distinctions between modal verbs (can, could, would, should, may, might, must). Phrasal verbs also present considerable difficulty to Spanish speakers learning communicative English.

Student Responses
Some students also are logical or linguistically-biased thinkers who respond well to structured presentation of new material. Logical-Mathematical and Verbal-Linguistic intelligence learners are prime examples of those that would respond well to explicit grammar teaching in many cases.

Based on my English language teaching and on my personal second and third foreign language learning (L2, L3) experience, an exclusive approach using either implicit or explicit methodologies is not as effective as utilizing one or the other of these approaches as required. Although it is essential to teach elements of language and develop communicative abilities in our students, there is no one best way to introduce and provide practice in them. Young learners have more natural facility in acquisition, while adults may benefit substantially from more “formal” language learning. Learning styles and intelligence strengths are also a significant factor.

Sounds and Structure Introduction
There are many generally accepted ways of introducing the sounds, structure and vocabulary of English, including colloquial forms of conversation and the four basic communication skills. Grammar provides for “communicative economy”. Grammar teaching should be implicit, or explicit, as teaching / learning conditions may dictate helping to minimize the student response teachers fear most, “Teacher, I don’t understand.”

Larry M. Lynch

This entry was written by admin and posted on 10 December 2007 at 11:56 and filed under Useful Articles, Useful Tips. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.

Leave a Reply

  • FOR SALE

    Built with clean and validated XHTML and CSS, support widget on both sidebars, Ads friendly.

  • Recent Posts

    Entries RSS
    • Simple trick to be successful in listening English
    • Role Reversal-Teachers as Learners
    • A Simple, Guided-Discovery Learning Activity
    • Empathy and English Teaching
    • Some practical thoughts about student-sensitive critical pedagogy
    • The Benefits of Self-Evaluation
    • Peer Observation in the Classroom
    • Test Your Grammar Skills-Question Tags Using Verbs ‘could’, ‘would’ and ‘should’
  • Recent Comments

    • n/a: Collaborative Learning-Terms and Definitions ...
    • BusyMoolo: Hello! good site, thank you! ...
    • webhosting: Good tips...
    • seo-Auckland: You’re very welcome Empress. I hope people will join as well...
    • Adee: Rob, thanks for sharing how to praise students! In fact, pra...
    Comments RSS
valid_HTMLValid_CSS

Powered by WordPress. Designed by Blog Perfume.