2. BACKGROUND
Before Second World War : 3 methods;
Second World War: A.S.T.P
1.939: University of Michigan: 1st English
Institute. Charles Fries (Director)
British Oral Approach
Different names at first; then becomes
the Audio-lingual Method (Professor
Brooks-1964)
3. Audiolingualism:
The combination of Structural Linguistics theory,
Contrastive Analysis; Aural-oral Procedures, and
Behaviorist psychology.
4. Audiolingualism: Approaches
Theory of languages:
Structural Linguistics;
Important tenet: SPEECH IS LANGUAGE
Theory of Learning:
Behaviorism: structure is important.
Principles:
1) Mechanical habit formation by repetition and
memorization.
2) Aural-oral training is needed.
3) Analogy better than analysis.
4) Meaning of the word learned in context, not in isolation.
6. Activity types
According to Brooks (1964): According to Larsen Freeman
1. Repetition 1. Dialogue memorization
2. Inflection 2. Backward buil-up (expansion)
3. Replacement drill
4. Restatement 3. Repetition
5. Completion 4. Chain
6. Transposition 5. Single-slot substitution
7. Expansion 6. Multiple-slot substitution
8. Contraction 7. Transformation
9. Transformation 8. Question and answer
10. Integration 9. Use of minimal pairs
11. Rejoinder 10. Complete the dialogue
12. Restoration 11. Grammar game
7. Roles and Procedure
Learners: Responding to stimuli
Teacher: Central and Active
Instructional material: tape-recorders; audiovisual
equipment.
Focus: immediate and accurate speech.
9. Bibliography:
Approaches and methods in Language Teaching.
J.C. Richards and T.S. Rodgers-
Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching. D.
Larsen Freeman.
Daniela Giorgis
Tamara Pisano