Here are some tips and stretegies to help you decide which approach suits you for your EFL and ESL grammar lessons.
How do you know if your students have aquired a high level of proficiency? The debate of how to teach grammar for EFL students has great implications for second and foreign language learning. The silent learners in the efl classroom who are quietly absorbing a language may indicate deep learning of grammatical rules and strcture, but when required to apply their knowledge and understanding, the signs might paint a different pcicture of where they are in terms of their languge learning abilities.
Teaching grammar can be an inductive experience for students. This means students are given the context and then are presented with the grammar rules afterwards. Some learners learn better this way while others need the rule in order to understand the rationale for the new grammatical structure.
Teaching grammar inductively has favorable implications for communciative competence, which involves a selection of the right grammatical terms to that of the appropriate setting. Learners need to also know how to use language in context:
Whatever method for teaching grammar you ultimately choose, each method provides a 'recipe' for various practical classroom ideas and procedures. Obviously a good method that stems from a good theory can produce a number of ideas. These 'recipes' can be found in various Internet sites for ESL and EFL grammar teaching.
Some sites are: Dave's ESL cafe and the tesol resource center. Obviously, there is a plethora of information just by visiting these two sites alone and the options for teaching grammar are endless.
Here are some last minute tips to help you with preparing those final touches on your grammar lessons.
Now over to you: What kind of grammar method do you prefer using? What method have you already experimented with? What problems have you already encountered in your teaching? Feel free to start a discussion. You may email me with any questions you may have.