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Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rivers, Wilga M. – Modern Language Journal, 1986
Reviews the theories which assert the necessity for prolonged intensive listening without expectations of production for some time in language teaching. Asserts that comprehension and production are indissoluble partners in the two-way process of communicative interaction and that teacher-directed and dominated classrooms are not interactive…
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Interaction, Interpersonal Communication, Language Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brandle, Maximilian – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1977
The different learning abilities of senior citizens and ways that older students can successfully maximize their learning effort in a class essentially designed for younger learners are discussed. Because of a regressed transformational drill behavior, the pedagogical hypothesis and the teaching strategy must de-emphasize a consistent audiolingual…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Age Differences, Audiolingual Skills, Language Instruction
Lebre-Peytard, Monique – Francais dans le Monde, 1987
A language teacher urges the use of authentic listening materials that do not conform to the strictest standards of spoken usage, as a way of getting to know the language's norms and variations. (MSE)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Audiotape Recordings, Coherence, French
Bancroft, W. Jane – 1981
This paper examines the parallels between suggestopedia and Soviet sleep-learning for learning foreign languages. Both systems are based on the idea that the acquisition of information can occur in states below the optimal level of consciousness. Hypnopedia makes use of the period of paradoxical or light sleep that usually occurs just as one is…
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Dialogs (Language), French, German
Gary, Judith Olmsted – 1979
The rationale for delayed oral practice in language teaching is that the same rules underlie both speaking and listening and that the student has to understand how a language works before being capable of creating a sentence in the language. Having to focus on speaking performance as well as on listening comprehension distracts the learner from…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Audiolingual Methods, Audiolingual Skills, Language Research
Jakobovits, Leon A.; Gordon, Barbara Yaffey – Alberta Modern Language Journal, 1976
Talk is proposed as the subject matter of foreign language courses. The key to acquiring liberated expression lies in the assimilation of the learner to the target culture. Once he/she is assimilated, the learner's involvement in a situation matches the involvement of natives of the target culture. For example, faced with some life circumstance…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Audiolingual Skills, Bilingualism, Classroom Communication