Speaking Skill
Speaking Skill
Speaking Skill
IMPROVING SPEAKING
SKILL
PHILADELPHIA UNIVERSITY
THE LANGUAGE CENTER
DR.FAYZEH SHROUF
speaking
WHAT IS SPEAKING?
Speaking is "the process of building and sharing meaning through the use of
verbal and non-verbal symbols, in a variety of contexts" (Chaney, 1998, p. 13)
Speaking is an interactive process of constructing meaning that
involves producing and receiving and processing information (Brown,
1994; Burns & Joyce, 1997). Speaking is a crucial part of second language
learning and teaching. Despite its importance, for many years, teaching
speaking has been undervalued and English language teachers have
continued to teach speaking just as a repetition of drills or memorization of
dialogues. However, today's world requires that the goal of teaching speaking
should improve students' communicative skills, because, only in that way,
students can express themselves and learn how to follow the social and
cultural rules appropriate in each communicative circumstance,therfor,recent
pedagogical research on teaching students conversation has provided some
parameters for developing objectives and techniques.
Teaching Speaking
Speaking English is the main goal of many adult learners. Their
personalities play a large role in determining how quickly and how
correctly they will accomplish this goal. Those who are risk-takers
unafraid of making mistakes will generally be more talkative, but with
many errors that could become hard to break habits. Conservative, shy
students may take a long time to speak confidently, but when they do, their
English often contains fewer errors and they will be proud of their English
ability. It's a matter of quantity vs. quality, and neither approach is wrong
so how shall we prioritize the two clearly important speaker goals of
accurate(clear, articulate,grammatically and phonologically
correct)language and fluent(flowing,natural)language? However, if the
aim of speaking is communication and that does not require perfect
English, then it makes sense to encourage quantity in your classroom.
Break the silence and get students communicating with whatever English
they can use, correct or not, , and selectively address errors.
Content
Correcting Errors
You need to provide appropriate feedback and
correction, but don't interrupt the flow of
communication. Take notes while pairs or groups are
talking and address problems to the class after the
activity without embarrassing the student who made
the error. You can write the error on the board and
ask who can correct it.
Conversation Strategies
Encourage strategies like asking for clarification,
paraphrasing, gestures, and initiating ('hey,' 'so,' 'by
the way').
Teacher Intervention
If a speaking activity loses steam, you may need to
jump into a role-play, ask more discussion questions,
clarify your instructions, or stop an activity that is
too difficult or boring.
Discussions
After a content-based lesson, a discussion can be held for various reasons.
The students may aim to arrive at a conclusion, share ideas about an
event, or find solutions in their discussion groups. Before the discussion,
it is essential that the purpose of the discussion activity is set by the
teacher. In this way, the discussion points are relevant to this purpose, so
that students do not spend their time chatting with each other about
irrelevant things. For example, students can become involved in
agree/disagree discussions. In this type of discussions, the teacher can
form groups of students, preferably 4 or 5 in each group, and provide
controversial sentences like people learn best when they read vs. people
learn best when they travel. Then each group works on their topic for a
given time period, and presents their opinions to the class. It is essential
that the speaking should be equally divided among group members. At
the end, the class decides on the winning group who defended the idea in
the best way. This activity fosters critical thinking and quick decision
making, and students learn how to express and justify themselves in
polite ways while disagreeing with the others. For efficient group
discussions, it is always better not to form large groups, because quiet
students may avoid contributing in large groups. The group members can
be either assigned by the teacher or the students may determine it by
themselves, but groups should be rearranged in every discussion activity
so that students can work with various people and learn to be open to
different ideas.
Role Play
One other way of getting students to speak is roleplaying. Students pretend they are in various social
contexts and have a variety of social roles. In roleplay activities, the teacher gives information to the
learners such as who they are and what they think or
feel. Thus, the teacher can tell the student that "You
are Ali, you go to the doctor and tell him what
happened last night, and what they think or feel.
Simulations
Simulations are very similar to role-plays but what
makes simulations different than role plays is that they
are more elaborate. In simulations, students can bring
items to the class to create a realistic environment. For
instance, if a student is acting as a singer, she or he
brings a microphone to sing and so on. Role plays and
simulations have many advantages. First, since they are
entertaining, they motivate the students. Second, as
Harmer (1984) suggests, they increase the selfconfidence of hesitant students, because in role play and
simulation activities, they will have a different role and
do not have to speak for themselves, which means they
do not have to take the same responsibility.
Information Gap
In this activity, students are supposed to be working in
pairs. One student will have the information that other
partner does not have and the partners will share their
information. Information gap activities serve many
purposes such as solving a problem or collecting
information. Also, each partner plays an important role
because the task cannot be completed if the partners do
not provide the information the others need. These
activities are effective because everybody has the
opportunity to talk extensively in the target language.
Information-gap activities
As
Information
Persons name
From
Sarah (female)
Occupation
Doctor
Professor
Khaled (male)
Movies
Romance
Go fishing
Amman
Aqaba
Amal (female)
Weekends
Action
Banker
Play cards
Occupation
Weekends
Irbed
Bs Information
Persons name
From
Jerash
Ali (male)
Movies
Relax at home
Kerak
H0rror
Mechanic
Play football
Leen (female)
Drama
Lawyer
Read novels
Comedy
The objective is for students to ask questions to find out what they can
from the other(s).
Sample Questions:
Brainstorming
On a given topic, students can produce ideas in a
limited time. Depending on the context, either
individual or group brainstorming is effective and
learners generate ideas quickly and freely. The good
characteristics of brainstorming is that the students
are not criticized for their ideas so students will be
open to sharing new ideas.
Storytelling
Students can briefly summarize a tale or story they heard
from somebody beforehand, or they may create their own
stories to tell their classmates. Story telling fosters
creative thinking. It also helps students express ideas in
the format of beginning, development, and ending,
including the characters and setting a story has to have.
Students also can tell riddles or jokes. For instance, at the
very beginning of each class session, the teacher may call
a few students to tell short riddles or jokes as an opening.
Interviews
Students can conduct interviews on selected topics
with various people. It is a good idea that the teacher
provides a rubric to students so that they know what
type of questions they can ask or what path to follow,
but students should prepare their own interview
questions. Conducting interviews with people gives
students a chance to practice their speaking ability
not only in class but also outside and helps them
becoming socialized. After interviews, each student
can present his or her study to the class. Moreover,
students can interview each other and "introduce"
his or her partner to the class.
Story Completion
Before coming to class, students are asked to read a
newspaper or magazine and, in class, they report to
their friends what they find as the most interesting
news. Students can also talk about whether they have
experienced anything worth telling their friends in
their daily lives before class.
Picture Narrating
This activity is based on several sequential pictures.
Students are asked to tell the story taking place in
the sequential pictures by paying attention to the
criteria provided by the teacher as a rubric. Rubrics
can include the vocabulary or structures they need to
use while narrating.
Picture Describing
Another way to make use of pictures in a speaking
activity is to give students just one picture and having
them describe what it is in the picture. For this activity
students can form groups and each group is given a
different picture. Students discuss the picture with their
groups, then a spokesperson for each group describes the
picture to the whole class. This activity fosters the
creativity and imagination of the learners as well as their
public speaking skills.
Conclusion
Thank you!
Dr. Fayzeh Shrouf