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Teaching the spoken language : an approach based on the analysis of conversational English / Gillian Brown and George Yule.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge language teaching libraryPublisher: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1983Description: xi, 162 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0521253772
  • 9780521253772
  • 0521273846
  • 9780521273848
  • 0521253780
  • 9780521253789
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 428.307
LOC classification:
  • PE1128.A2 B73 1983
Contents:
Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Data: recorded materials and transcripts -- 1. The spoken language -- 1.0. Preliminaries -- 1.1. Spoken and written language -- 1.2. Functions of language -- 1.3. Structured long turns -- 1.4. Spoken language models and feasibility -- 1.5. Feasibility--what can be taught? -- 1.6. Texts -- 2. Teaching spoken production -- 2.0. The production of spoken language -- 2.1. The aims of the course -- 2.2. Interactional short turns -- 2.3. Transactional turns -- 'Communicative stress' -- Grading tasks: events in time -- Grading tasks: descriptions and instructions -- Grading tasks: the discoursal approach -- Pronunciation and intonation -- 3. Teaching listening comprehension -- 3.0. 'Listening comprehension ought to be naturally acquired' -- 3.1. Teaching listening comprehension -- 3.2. What might 'listening comprehension' mean? -- 3.3. Native listening: context and co-text -- 3.4. Native listening: strategies -- 3.5. Background: British background and culture -- Background: the speaker's voice -- 3.6. Choosing materials -- Grading materials: by speaker -- Grading materials: by intended listener -- Grading materials: by content -- Grading materials: by support -- Choosing materials: types of purpose -- 3.7. Approaching a text -- 3.8. Assessing listening comprehension -- 4. Assessing spoken language -- 4.0. Introduction -- 4.1. Assessing spoken English production -- 4.2. Practical requirements -- An assessment profile -- The student's tape -- Speech in different modes -- Task types -- The information gap -- Scoring procedures -- 4.3. Principles underlying the methodology -- Elicit speech which has a purpose -- Elicit extended chunks of speech -- Elicit structured or organised speech -- Control the input -- Quantify the notion of 'communicative effectiveness' -- 4.4. Task types and scoring procedures -- Tasks: general conditions -- Task type A. Description -- Task type B. Instruction/description -- Task type C. Story-telling -- Task type D. The eye-witness account -- Task type E. Opinion-expressing -- 4.5. Can listening comprehension be assessed? -- Illustrations -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: "This book is about teaching the spoken language. It presents in a highly accessible form the results of the author's important research on teaching and assessing effective spoken communication. The authors examine the nature of spoken language and how it differs from written language both in form and purpose. A large part of the book is concerned with principles and techniques for teaching spoken production and listening comprehension. An important chapter deals with how to assess spoken language. The principles and techniques described apply to the teaching of English as a foreign and second language, and are also highly relevant to the teaching of the mother tongue. The accompanying cassette contains extracts from original source recordings which are transcribed as examples in the book."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 428.307 BRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A024425B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 160-161) and index.

Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Data: recorded materials and transcripts -- 1. The spoken language -- 1.0. Preliminaries -- 1.1. Spoken and written language -- 1.2. Functions of language -- 1.3. Structured long turns -- 1.4. Spoken language models and feasibility -- 1.5. Feasibility--what can be taught? -- 1.6. Texts -- 2. Teaching spoken production -- 2.0. The production of spoken language -- 2.1. The aims of the course -- 2.2. Interactional short turns -- 2.3. Transactional turns -- 'Communicative stress' -- Grading tasks: events in time -- Grading tasks: descriptions and instructions -- Grading tasks: the discoursal approach -- Pronunciation and intonation -- 3. Teaching listening comprehension -- 3.0. 'Listening comprehension ought to be naturally acquired' -- 3.1. Teaching listening comprehension -- 3.2. What might 'listening comprehension' mean? -- 3.3. Native listening: context and co-text -- 3.4. Native listening: strategies -- 3.5. Background: British background and culture -- Background: the speaker's voice -- 3.6. Choosing materials -- Grading materials: by speaker -- Grading materials: by intended listener -- Grading materials: by content -- Grading materials: by support -- Choosing materials: types of purpose -- 3.7. Approaching a text -- 3.8. Assessing listening comprehension -- 4. Assessing spoken language -- 4.0. Introduction -- 4.1. Assessing spoken English production -- 4.2. Practical requirements -- An assessment profile -- The student's tape -- Speech in different modes -- Task types -- The information gap -- Scoring procedures -- 4.3. Principles underlying the methodology -- Elicit speech which has a purpose -- Elicit extended chunks of speech -- Elicit structured or organised speech -- Control the input -- Quantify the notion of 'communicative effectiveness' -- 4.4. Task types and scoring procedures -- Tasks: general conditions -- Task type A. Description -- Task type B. Instruction/description -- Task type C. Story-telling -- Task type D. The eye-witness account -- Task type E. Opinion-expressing -- 4.5. Can listening comprehension be assessed? -- Illustrations -- Bibliography -- Index.

"This book is about teaching the spoken language. It presents in a highly accessible form the results of the author's important research on teaching and assessing effective spoken communication. The authors examine the nature of spoken language and how it differs from written language both in form and purpose. A large part of the book is concerned with principles and techniques for teaching spoken production and listening comprehension. An important chapter deals with how to assess spoken language. The principles and techniques described apply to the teaching of English as a foreign and second language, and are also highly relevant to the teaching of the mother tongue. The accompanying cassette contains extracts from original source recordings which are transcribed as examples in the book."--Publisher description.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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