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4
Tips for Improving Grammar Learning
John
Brezinsky, Higher Education Marketing Manager
What the
research says
In
a recent
Journal of Neuroscience
article, scientists tested people's ability to learn to notice
differences in a stream of input (much like learning to distinguish
Past Simple and Present Perfect). Some participants practiced
extensively and improved. Others alternated shorter practice sessions
with receptive tasks and improved just as much.
The conclusion?
Repeated practice is effective, but it can be tedious and is difficult
to maintain over a period of years. It is better to mix up productive
and receptive practice as much as possible.
How
you can use this in your classroom
To put it simply:
give students as many chances as possible to notice the target grammar
in as many contexts as possible. Some specific tips:
- Make the
most of introductory texts. Create reading comprehension
questions that require students to analyze the target grammar even
before the main part of the lesson.
- More
opportunities to read shorter texts. One great example is an
editing exercise in which students have to find common errors with the
day’s grammar. Alternatively, students can review each
other’s (anonymous) writing for grammar mistakes.
- Listening
for every grammar point. If you just do reading texts, that's
going to get boring too. Put the grammar into a listening text as well,
and give your students an opportunity to notice it in what they hear.
- Lots of
communicative tasks. One great thing about communicative
activities is that they require learners to understand what someone
else says before they can take part. Don't limit your students to a
single larger communicative exercise at the end of the lesson, but mix
speaking in at every step.
You don't have to
design all this yourself
Focus on Grammar, the most popular contextualized
grammar series in the world, already includes all of the exercises
described above—for every single grammar point. Read
more about this series and check out sample units online.
Reference
Wright, B. A., Sabin, A. T., Zhang, Y., Marrone, N., & Fitzgerald,
M. B. (2010) "Enhancing perceptual learning by combining practice with
additional sensory stimulation." Journal
of Neuroscience, 30(38) pp. 12868-12877.
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