Teaching ESL Learners Assignment-1 Sample
Teaching ESL Learners Assignment-1 Sample
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For this case study, I have chosen India, specifically Delhi where the majority of the
population speak Hindi with others speaking Urdu, Punjabi and Bengali. Hindi has become
the lingua franca in India and more acceptable through the different social levels. English
is now considered to be more of a ‘door opening key’ rather than giving the social status
that it once did (ET Bureau, The Economic Times, 2022). The acquisition of English can
provide both social and economic opportunities in India and overseas. With the global
opportunities for employment have risen and having a strong command of both written and
English (Chin, Prekash & Azam, 2010). Proficiency in spoken English is particularly
desirable (Pearson, 2024). By enrolling their children in private language schools, parents
students are currently attending primary school and aged between 10 and 11 years old.
Typically, they learn their first language, in this case, Hindi, several times a week. They also
attend English lessons as part of their weekly timetable and some learn Urdu as a third
language. The learners are currently working between A2 and B1 of the Common European
Drawing on current teaching experiences, there are several methods that would enhance
and support the L2 learners and this approach of engaging several different pedagogical
approaches would allow for a wider range of effective teaching strategies (Brown and Lee,
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2015). Children aged from 10-11 years have a limited attention span, around 20 to 30
minutes (Shakibaie, 2021), so any activities should be engaging, short and energetic to
maximise learning, retention of concepts and information being taught. Keeping the
learners motivated would also be a challenge. They attend the lessons at the behest of
their parents and, after full days at school, ensuring that the learners are engaged and
motivated could prove challenging. As young learners, the activities they engage in should
encourage them to use the second language without fear, so music, games and song give
them a mix of voices (Lightbown and Spada, 2006) rather than being singled out to speak.
To encourage engagement, the learners need to be taking part in activities, such as real
world ideas and creative and critical thinking problems where they feel intrinsically
(Ellis, 2005). Using contextualised themes with these young learners will support them in
teaching methods would encourage and develop language skills. There are significant
overlaps in methodologies (Nagy, 2019) so this supports the notion that a balanced
methods to create a relaxed and informal learning environment. Krashen’s affective filter
hypothesis addresses the need to be aware of the emotional states and feelings of the
learners so SLA can take place. Students who are stressed and tense or bored will
frequently ‘filter’ out input and so acquisition becomes less likely (Lightbown and Spada,
2006). Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) allows for a broad, more informal
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approach toward learning because, by its nature, it is not prescriptive and allows for
teacher interpretation (Johnson and Morrow, 1981) and can also be contextualised to the
Activities with a group of learners at the A2-B1 levels could be role play, interviews and
analysis of simple news articles and weather forecasts to provide authentic materials,
language games, scrambled sentences and picture strip stories (Johnson and Morrow,
1981). Savignon points out the CLT is not solely the use of face-to-face communication
and that writing and reading activities are of equal importance (Savignon, 2017). These
reading and writing activities though should still be based around authenticity. The use of
authentic materials when using the CLT method is important to stimulate spontaneous
interactions (Nagy, 2019). Materials such as magazine articles, podcast transcripts that
are about subjects the students can engage with, for example, interviews with YouTubers,
actors and musicians would spark their interest and begin those spontaneous
These interactions, along with intentional activities are part of Richard Schmidt’s (1990)
(Lightbown and Spada, 2006), the input becomes intake and self-correction occurs (Unlu,
2015). As the students engage in group and partner interactions and tasks, their ability to
correct one another, in a non-judgmental manner, will lessen the anxiety around speaking
the target language, allowing for language acquisition. This interaction supports
Cooperative learning, as a pedagogical approach and builds teams who must work
together to succeed (Brown and Lee, 2015). With students aged 10-11, this kind of
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camaraderie builds trust and confidence and allows the students to both self-correct and
As Brown and Lee point out, language teaching methods have become more eclectic as
further research into L2 acquisition has been done (Brown and Lee, 2015). The
target language through role-play, games, music and song as some of the approaches
utilised. Activities where choral speech is used allows for those less confident students to
participate with their peers and there is less fear of mistakes (Ur, 2012). Music, drama and
storytelling are ingrained in the Indian culture and, with the popularity of Bollywood
musical films in Indian culture and Hollywood and Broadway musicals in English speaking
cultures, these types of activities would be fun and encourage participation. Including
these as learning activities, a translation is created between the two cultures (Norris and
Tsedendamba, 2014). Languaculture (Agar, 1994), ties the language with the culture so the
students would be able to acquire an understanding of the emotion these bring out in the
target culture. Language is intertwined with culture and so the activities that the student
would be completing would have focus on rules, values, attitudes and beliefs (Brown and
Lee, 2015). Authentic and up to date digital experiences, such as the use of social media,
would also expose the A2 and B1 learners to the cultural norms of the target language.
Facilitating Zoom or Webex meetings with a partner school in an English speaking country
would provide opportunity for SLA conversation, questioning and exposure to culture. For
this age group, it would also provide the ‘comprehensible input’ that Krashen suggested in
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his input hypothesis (Thornberrry, 2016). This would be another opportunity for some
While the CLT method allows for students to have control over their learning as the main
communicators, it also relies on textbooks and, while they have a place, unless the
activities are relevant, well-structured and coherent, often textbooks can be overwhelming
and confusing for learners. They can also be a very dull and uninteresting way to learn
(Nagy, 2019). Short textbook activities can be chosen as a support to consolidate either a
prior activity or as an extension of a verbal or kinesthetic activity but not as the basis for a
materials (Nagy, 2019). His input hypothesis discusses input being slightly beyond the
2008) and discerning selection of input would lead to greater output. This would encourage
extension of the learner’s SLA, but Krashen’s natural approach does not allow for teacher
correction unlike the CLT method where the teacher would facilitate the activities to
encourage student led learning, note any errors and these could be addressed during more
formal, focused activities (Johnson and Morrow, 1981). Until the learners are able to notice
their grammatical and lexical errors, any corrections should be teacher directed to ensure
Having had extensive experience teaching 10-11 year old primary students, my approach
to teaching has been challenged and has developed through conversations, observations
contextualised tasks which mirror the CLT method. SLA teaching should involve some level
of immersion in the language through play, music, drama, practical activities such as
cooking, art and conversation but also some more formal, teacher directed tasks to create
‘noticeability’ so that the students begin to self-correct as they recognise errors. It is a mix
but with gradually less direct teacher correction and more student accountability. Student
my firm belief that anxiety that arises from the fear of failure can dramatically hinder the
When students develop the ability to self-correct and notice errors, their confidence grows
and learning becomes more of a natural process with far greater uptake and engagement.
An SLA learning program for this age group that incorporates the approaches discussed
and links not only to the culture of their country but also the pre-teen culture of social
(Word count:1602)
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