AUDIO- LINGUAL METHOD
I.
Introduction
Audio- lingual method is developed in
the time of 1960’s. It was first developed in United States during Word War II.
At that time many soldier needed to learn foreign language for immediately
military purposes. Therefore this method also called army method. The purpose
of the method is to clarify student’s pronunciation and train their ability in
listening
This approach to language learning was
similar to another, earlier method called the Direct method. Like the Direct
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
Audiolingual Method didn’t focus on teaching vocabulary. Rather, the teacher
drilled students in the use of grammar.
Charles Fries (1945), 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.
II. Discussion
a.
The
principle of Audio lingual Method
The principles of the method derive from
the aims of learning a foreign language. The aims of the method include some
aspects of language learning. The linguistics aims of the ALM are:
1. Language
learners are able to comprehend the foreign language when it is spoken at
normal speed and concerned with ordinary matters.
2. Language
learners are able to speak in acceptable pronunciation and grammatical
correctness.
3. Language
learners have no difficulties in comprehending printed materials.
4. Language
learners are able to write with acceptable standards of correctness on topics
within their experience.
The aims mentioned above have basic
principles in learning teaching interaction. Since the primary aim is the
ability in communication, language learners and their language teacher should
use the target language at all times. The language teacher should greet his/her
students in the target language from the first day of their language class.
Their mother tongue is not used unless it is necessary and translation into
their mother is prohibited. Intensive drills should be provided so that
language learners can have enough practice of using the grammar of the spoken
language. Drilling is a central technique in this method. The final goal of
language learning process is that language learners are able to communicate in
target language with native-speaker-like pronunciation. Through this method
language learners learn structures, sound or words in contexts.
Here is a summary of the key features of
Audio lingual Method, taken from Brown (1994) and adapted from Prator and
Celce-Murcia (1979).
1) New
material is presented in dialog form.
2) There
is dependence on mimicry, memorization of set phrases, and overearnings.
3) Structures
are sequenced by means of contrastive analysis and taught one at a time.
4) Structural
patterns are taught using repetitive drills.
5) There
is little or no grammatical explanation. Grammar is taught by inductive analogy
rather than deductive explanation.
6) Vocabulary
is strictly limited and learned in context.
7) There
is much use of tapes, language labs, and visual aids.
8) Great
importance is attached to pronunciation.
9) Very
little use of the mother tongue by teachers is permitted.
10) Successful
responses are immediately reinforced.
11) There
is a great effort to get students produce error-free utterances
b.
Audio
Lingual Method in Practice
In
Audio lingual method the lesson in the classroom focus on the correct imitation
of the teacher by the students. Not only are the students expected to produce
the correct output, but attention is also paid to correct pronunciation.
Although correct grammar is expected in usage, no explicit grammatical
instruction is given. Furthermore, the target language is the only language to
be used in the classroom.
Observation:
Ø The
teacher introduces a new dialog.
Ex:
Sally :
Good morning, Bill.
Sally :
Good morning, Sally.
Sally :
How are you?
Bill :
Fine, thanks. And you?
Sally :
Fine. Where are you going?
Bill :
I’m going to the post office.
Sally :
I am too. Shall we go together?
Bill :
Sure. Let’s go.
Ø The
language teacher uses only the target language in the classroom. Actions,
pictures, or realia are used to give meaning otherwise.
Ø The
students repeat each line of the new dialog several times.
Ø The
students stumble over one of the lines of the dialog. The teacher uses a
backward build-up drill with this line.
Ø The
teacher initiates a chain drill in which each student greet another.
Ø The
teacher use single-slot and multiple-slot substitution drills.
Ø The
teacher says, ’very good,’ when the students answer correctly.
Ø The
teacher uses spoken cues and picture cues.
Ø The
teacher conducts transformation and question- and- answer drills.
Ø The
teacher provides the students with cues, she calls on individuals; she smiles
encouragement; she holds up pictures one after another.
Ø New
vocabulary is introduced through lines of the dialog; vocabulary is limited.
Ø Students
are given no grammar rules; grammatical points are taught through examples and
drills.
Ø The
teacher does a contrastive analysis of the target language and the students’
native language in order to locate the places where she anticipates her
students will have trouble.
Ø The
teacher writes the dialog on the blackboard toward the end of the week. The
students do some limited written work with the dialog and the sentence drills.
c.
Techniques:
1. Dialog
memorizing
To begin a lesson,
usually the teachers provide a dialog or short conversation between two people.
Through mimicry students memorize the dialogue. Students usually take the role
of one person in the dialog, the teacher and other. After the students have
learned the one person’s line, they switch roles and memorizing the other’s
part. Another way of practicing the two roles is for half of the class to take
one role and the other half to take the other. After the dialog has been
memorized, pairs of individual students might perform the dialog for the rest of
the class. In Audio=lingual method, certain pattern and grammar points are
included within the dialog.
2. Backward
build-up (expansion) drill
This drill is used when
a long line of a dialog is giving students trouble. The teacher breaks down the
line into several parts. The students repeat a part of the sentence, usually
the last phrase of the line. Then, following the teacher’s cue , the students
expand what they are repeating part by part until they are able to repeat the
entire line. The teacher begins with the part at the end of the sentence (and
works backward from there) to keep the intonation of the line as natural as
possible.
3. Repetition
Drill
Students are asked to
repeat the teacher’s model as accurately and as quickly as possible.
4. Chain
Drill
A chain drill get its
name from the chain of conversation that form around the room as
students, one by one ask and answer question of each other. The teacher
begins the chain by greeting a particular student, or asking him a question.
That students responds, then turn to the student sitting next to him. The first
student greets or asks a question of the second student and the chain
continues. A chain drill allows some controlled communication, even though is
limited. A chain drill also gives the teacher an opportunity to check each
student’s speech.
5. Single-slot
substitution drill
The teacher says a line
usually from the dialog. Next the teacher says a word or phrase – called the
cue. The students repeat the line the teacher has given them, substituting the
cue into the line in its proper place. The major purpose of this drill is to
give the students practice in finding and filling in the slots of a sentence.
6. Multi-slot
substitution drill
This drill is similar
with single-slot substitution drill. The difference is the teacher gives cue
phases, one at a time, that fit into different slots in the dialog line. The
students must recognize what part of speech is cue is, or at least, where it
firs into the sentence, and make any other changes, such as subject- verb agreement.
They then say the line, fitting the cue phrase into the line where it belongs.
7. Transformational
drill
The teacher gives
students a certain kind of sentences pattern, and affirmative sentence for
example. Students are asked to transform this sentence into a negative
sentence. Other examples of transformation to ask of students are changing the
statement into question, an active sentence into a passive one, or direct
speech into reported speech.
8. Question
and answer drill
This drill give
students with answering question. The students should answer the teacher’s
questions very quickly. Although we did not see it in our lesson here, it is
also possible for teacher to cue the students to ask question as well. This
gives students practice with the question pattern.
9. Use
of minimal pairs
The teacher works
with pairs of words which differ in only
one sound, for example : ship/sheep. Students are first asked to perceive the
difference between the two words and later to be able to say the two words. The teacher selects the sounds to work
on after she has done a constrastive analysis, a comparison between the
students’ native language and the language they are studying.
10. Complete
the dialog
Select word are erased
from a dialog student have learned. Students complete the dialog by filling the
blanks with the missing words.
11. Grammar
game
Games like the
supermarket alphabet are designed to get students to practice a grammar point
within a context. Students are able to express themselves, although it is
rather limited in this game.
III.
Conclusion
Language acquisition result from habit formation.
The habit of the native language interfere the target language learning. The
commission of errors should prevent as much as possible.
Reference:
Freeman, Diane Larsen. Second edition. Techniques and Principles in Language
Learning. Oxford University Press.
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