Wednesday, August 22, 2018

An example of how kids acquire language

Saravanan, my co-volunteer in Evergreen Tamil school, told me a story or part of a story from "Diary of a wimpy kid". There is a language acquisition lesson here..

A kid and the parents were somewhere. They meet with someone who spoke español only. The parents were wondering what to do. The kid starts talking in español.They were surprised to see this kid talk in español because the kid never spoke español before, did not go to español class etc. But, the kid went to a daycare which was run by an español person.

We are familiar with how well and fast kids acquire their first language (L1). How did this kid acquire español so well? What is the language acquisition concept behind it?


Professor Dr. Kumar of SJSU says “for someone to acquire a language two conditions must be met:

1. ability to acquire a language

2. surrounded by linguistic environment.



Dr. Krashen goes to next level and says "you acquire a language when you understand the message in a low anxiety environment".

Now, we can connect the above 3 pieces together and see how this kid was able to acquire español without any lessons/school/syllabus/test/etc.


Natural ability - is already there. We are born with natural ability.

Surrounded by linguistic environment - the caretaker was conversing in español with these kids and others all day.

Understand the message - I am sure the caretaker was giving simple and easy to follow instruction for the kids to follow.

Low anxiety environment - the kid need not have to memorize anything, nor take a test.


The lesson and hence is: let's surround our students with lots of Tamil language as much as we can
in that 90 minutes; and also try our best to remove the anxiety from them in the class.

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Books on Language Education

By 2008, I attended couple of teacher trainings arranged by CTA. I learned some teaching techniques. In 2008 I attended a training by Mrs. Vyjayanthi Raman (PUSD), and Dr. Kumar (SJSU).

Dr. Kumar explained the basics of language education. He talked about Language skill vs Literacy skill, the challenges of teaching Tamil to the kids in the diaspora etc. That was exciting. We need to learn this. Got interested in learning more on language education. Mrs. Vyjayanthi told us a story in French without using a single word in Tamil or English. We all could understand that story. How was that possible. She said that technique was called TPRS.

So, I have two things to learn; basics of language education, and TPRS. I am sure there is more to it. These two ideas were appealing to me and I felt these are very relevant to us.

Where do I start? Need to learn from the books and other resources. Which book shall I read? Dr. Kumar mentioned some of the books he wrote, and one of them is Beyond Methods.




 
I bought this book and started reading. I got the idea somewhat. I am a software developer by profession and I could read and enjoy technical books. But, this was my first book outside my area of expertise. In addition, my English knowledge is limited. So, it was not that easy for me to grasp the full idea from this book. I had to read few times. Then I understood the basics. My favorite chapter in this book is Maximizing Learning Opportunity. This is a great book.

Mrs. Vyjayanthi talked about TPRS. So, I bought the book on TPRS written by the developer of this method. Wow, we can teach so much language just using stories! This is great! We don’t need to put the kids through the drill of memorizing vocabulary and grammar rules, and doing all those worksheets, etc? Much better then!


This is an easy reader. I did not have to read multiple times. I understood the concept, ideas, and the technique. Still there was a question in mind. If I use this method, how do I know the result will be good? What language education research/study supports this approach?

My search continued. All along I had one question in my mind. I spent about 10 years learning English in school. I could not speak English at all. However, some of my neighbors, even those who did not go to school, could learn Hindi in about 12 months after they moved to Bombay. How is that possible?

Another book by the same author is:



This is a good book to build conversation skill. But, looks like it is more suitable for teenage and adult learners. Sure, we can customize it to young learners.

I continued to read more books. I came across a linguist called Dr. Stephen Krashen. So, I read about him and his work. He talks about 5 hypothesis of language acquisition. That was the first time I came across the phrase “Language Acquisition”. His hypothesis came close to how we acquire our first language. This also answered my question above. So, I read the following book.




This is a small book with lots of technical details. I read this with patience. I understood something now. This is the one I need to understand and follow more. This approach is not without any criticism of course. This alone is not going to solve all our problems. But, explains the concepts, gives an approach, and some techniques. I am sold on this. Dr. Krashen talks highly about TPRS. I remember TPRS from Vyjayanthi’s training and the book. So, I went back and read TPRS book again. This made lots of sense. When I watched Mrs. Vyjayanthi’s training video again, I heard lots of principles of Krashen in her talk.

There was one thing I missed from the TPRS book when I read it first time. In the introduction the author tells why he developed this technique. He says the TPR method developed by Dr. James Asher is great, but students get bored after few months doing just actions. Oh, there is something called TPR? Interesting. Let me read about it. So, I checked out the book from the library.



I was pleasantly surprised to see how much research went into this field using psychology. I started believing I understand a little about language education. I also started believing and agreeing we are doing it all the other way so far. This is the reason I could not speak English even after learning the language for 10+ years in school. The students in our Tamil school are also in a similar situation. We need to change it. What should we do?

These books convinced me that this is what I was looking for and it confirms to the belief of how we acquire a language naturally.



This book is very similar to the Language Acquisition book mentioned above.

Agreed that all these authors will talk only their side of the story and support only their own theories, obviously. So, I wanted to know about the popular methods out there and unbiased opinion of those methods. So, I read this book:
 


After reading this book, I was convinced that Krashen’s comprehension hypothesis though under criticism by other scholars is the way to go for our need. Came across another similar book that gave the opinion of another language expert in a similar way.




You can pick and read the books depending on what you believe or what you want to believe about language education. As N. S Prabhu says there is no one single best method in language teaching. Decide your goal, and pick the approach that helps you reach that goal, and use the techniques of that approach. One cannot really say here is one approach that you can take and teach a language for every situation.

Few other books of interest are:

 There is a belief that Homework is important. We all believe too. Alfie Kohn claims in this book that the homework is an additional burden that does not add any learning value.

I am not sure if I agree with this or not. But, the fact that Finland, one of the top countries in education does not give any homework (or very little) makes me believe Alfie may be right.

In another book The Schools Our Children Deserve, Alfie also claims the tests are not worth the time and investment. I agree with this completely.

Again Finland does not give tests until the age 16 and they are in the top in the world! How is that!

Instead of formal testing, I prefer to do formative assessment.


 Now that everyone talks about how great the education in Finland is, I wanted to find out all the wonderful things they do. They must be working very hard to be in that position, right?

It is quite contrary. They do less and achieve more. They start Kindergarten at the age of 7, they give no (or little) homework, no test until age 16, lots of freedom for teachers, etc.

Wow, How is that possible. So, I wanted to understand. I read this book.





 I understood what they do. Still not convinced with the plan and the result. Still puzzled. So, wanted to know what they do in their classrooms. So, I read this book, and I think I understood.

Less is more.

Student Centered.

Lots of fun

Learning by Doing.

No micro level standardization of curriculum. Plenty of teacher flexibility.

And more.

I still can’t claim I understand Finnish education completely; my knowledge is only though books and youtube. I am really interested in visiting Finland and get the experience in person.



  One of the primary characteristics of Progressive Education is Learning By Doing. You can read this book (not my favorite though) to understand the concept.










Need to engage students with interesting and challenging projects. This book gives lots of ideas for different ages and different skill levels. A good resource.









 
While searching for interesting games, I came across this book. I just bought and started reading. Don’t have much comments on this yet.








 
This book gives plenty of ideas to use flashcards to teach a language in a fun way. Used some of the activities. This free book is a good resource

 









நன்றி
லோகு



Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Testing ...

Hats Analysis of Testing.

About Testing:
  • vomiting of memorized and forgettable facts.
  • the skill tested by the tests cannot of used in real life
  • test scores does not reflect real skill
  • distraction from real learning
  • Time used for testing is useless - Linda Darling-Hammond (Stanford)
Alternatives:
  •     Project based assessment
  •     Creative problem solving
  •     California is moving towards new assessment standard.
References:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2G_vWcS1NTA

Sample Test 1: Take this test and answer the questions below.

1. El concierto que se llevó a cabo en el salón de la escuela terminó. 2. El maestro le dio un libro a cada uno de los estudiantes. 3. El libro tenía preguntas. 4. Luego el maestro los llevó a la exposición. 5. Había 16 salas de exhibición. 6. Cada habitación tenía una ciudad capital y una bandera.


Q1: ¿Dónde ocurrió el concierto?


Q2: ¿Qué aprendieron los estudiantes en cada habitación?


How did you do? Were you able to answer the questions correctly? Do you know Spanish? Then how were you able to answer these questions correctly?

What are we testing here? Language skill or test taking skill? Are we testing the meaning? Are we testing the writing skill or copy-paste skill?


Sample Test 2:

Toma el cuaderno. Toma el lápiz. Dibuja una línea a la izquierda y a la izquierda. Dibuja una línea de arriba hacia abajo. Ahora conecta estas líneas.


What are we testing here? Language skill or test taking skill?


நோட்டு புத்தகத்தை எடுக்கவும். பென்சிலை எடுக்கவும். இடது வலமாக ஒரு கோடு வரையவும். மேலிருந்து கீழ் ஒரு கோடு வரையவும். இப்போது இந்த கோடுகளை இணைக்கவும்.


What are the differences between Test 1 and Test 2? One can do really well in Test 1 without knowing Spanish. Test 1 is bit complex though. Test 2 is simple, but you cannot complete the test without knowing the language. This is what I am talking about. Let us do formative assessment!

நன்றி
லோகு