COD 2006 - G284
English for Teachers I - Does pronunciation take care of itself?
Teachers who have some experience of teaching a subject in English or teachers who have some limited experience of teaching English as a FL.
1
sessions, start: 06-May
The course chosen does not allow any new enrolment
Course detail
Year: 2006
Level: General
Language: English
Status: Ended
Lugar: ESSARP - Deheza 3139, CABA
Facilitator/s: Ms. Silvia Rettaroli, Ms. Luciana Fernández
ESSARP Schools
ARS
ARS
Exams Schools
ARS
ARS
Non affiliate
Free of charge
Free of charge
Sessions
Sessions | Dates | Start | Finish |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 06 May 2006 | 10:30 am | 12:00 pm |
Facilitator/s
Silvia Rettaroli
Luciana Fernández
Teachers who have some experience of teaching a subject in English or teachers who have some limited experience of teaching English as a FL.
Workshop participants will be able to:
- read about, listen to, reflect on and discuss issues related to the acquisition of pronunciation and to teachers' attitudes to the acquisition of pronunciation,
- reflect on the learning methods they use, to better understand their own teaching when dealing with the acquisition of pronunciation,
- evaluate the benefit for their own students of different learning activities and approaches applied when teaching pronunciation,
- feel more confident in their use of English (Modal verbs).
- Language skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing skills.
- Language functions: how to express possibility or uncertainty.
- Grammar: Modal verbs: could/can- may/might.
- Vocabulary: teaching-related vocabulary (e.g. phoneme, sound quality, stress, rhythm, intonation, among others).
Methodology: Each module is topic-based and self-contained. It includes a number of tasks which provide:
- coverage of the four language skills,
- opportunities for the study of the language system,
- ways of developing teaching-related language,
- awareness and evaluation of teaching methodologies.
- Bowen, T. & Marks, J. (1994) Inside Teaching. Oxford: Heinemann.
- Laroy, C. (1995) Pronunciation. Oxford: OUP.