Audio-lingual method
method, the
audio-lingual method advised that students be taught a language directly,
without using the students' native language to explain new words or grammar in
the target language. However, unlike the direct method, the audio-lingual
method didn’t focus on teaching vocabulary.
Rather, the teacher drilled students in the use of grammar.
Applied to
language instruction, and The audio-lingual method, Army Method,
or New Key,[1]
is a style of teaching used in teaching foreign
languages. It is based on behaviorist
theory, which professes that certain traits of living things, and in this case humans, could be trained
through a system of reinforcement. correct use of a trait would receive
positive feedback while incorrect use of that trait would receive negative
feedback.
This approach to language
learning was similar to another, earlier method called the direct method. Like the direct often
within the context of the language lab, this means that the instructor
would present the correct model of a sentence and the students would have to
repeat it. The teacher would then continue by presenting new words for the
students to sample in the same structure. In audio-legalism, there is no
explicit grammar instruction everything is simply memorized in form. The idea
is for the students to practice the particular construct until they can use it
spontaneously. In this manner, the lessons are built on static drills in which
the students have little or no control on their own output; the teacher is
expecting a particular response and not providing that will result in a student
receiving negative feedback. This type of activity, for the foundation of
language learning, is in direct opposition with communicative language teaching.
Charles Fries, the director of
the English Language Institute at the University of Michigan, the first of its
kind in the United States, believed that learning
structure, or grammar was the starting point for the student. In other words,
it was the students' job to orally recite the basic sentence patterns and
grammatical structures. The students were only given “enough vocabulary to make
such drills possible.” (Richards, J.C. et-al. 1986). Fries later included
principles for behavioural psychology, as developed by B.F. Skinner,
into this method.
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