The
present study is anchored on the theory of Lado and Orleans (2000) that the
structured lessons in English utilizing the macro-skills’ learning performance
can attain more developments in intellectual aspects and acquisition of
language that is a valuable resource in assimilating with peers and adults in
developing a sense of personal growth and in finding a place in social and
economic life adopted to this capacity and personal preference.
Attaining
the language skill requires the mastery of a system that takes literally years
to learn. This requires on the part of the teacher skill in noting the
difficulties of the learners in both oral and written English, presuming that
the secondary freshmen students of Minglanilla
National Science
High School have mastered
the listening skill while still in their elementary years. But this does not
mean that listening should be done away with. Much as the teacher wants to
perfect language learning in speaking and writing, he can still require his
students to practice in the open air where sounds are freely transmitted
inasmuch as language is sound.
The
outcome of individual or societal integration cannot be achieved unless the
student has acquired a command of the language he learns in school. It is
through this that his personality adjustment and social participation are
achieved, relevant to his future professional and preparatory years in
Elementary School. It has become an established fact that the language facility
can raise student’s intelligence as measured by intelligence tests. This is so
because of the language facility in speaking and in writing. The educator has
to find ways to teach all his students properly because if they are taught
properly, the latter can learn skills and concepts necessary to function in
modern society.
The difference existing between
excellent teaching and acceptable classroom performance is no more than the
ability to take advantage of opportunities which develop in the context of the
classroom, and which cannot be anticipated by even the most talented and
skillful authors. The teacher who can make the most of these opportunities will
be the one to dominate the materials he teaches and to implement a vast
repertoire of techniques and procedures for classroom management.
The
language program should take into account the cognitive and socio-cultural
needs of the students, the community in which the school is located, the
training, language ability and personality of the teacher, and the present and
foreseeable future needs of the society in which our learners are living or
planning to live. (Makalinao, et al., 2002)
In
English for Special Purposes (ESP), the desirable goal to strive in language
teaching is general communicative competence. Language teaching has a definite
purpose, teachers of ESP teach only the requisite for a particular purpose, be
it an occupation (business English), or a domain (English for Science and
Technology). Thus, before English is done, the baseline experiment on needs
analyses is imperative, specifically doing analysis of situations where pilot
students will likely find themselves and carefully
selecting the English necessary for them to meet the language demands of these
restricted domains and contrasting approaches to education (Widdowson, 1998).
Learning
is indispensable on the part of students who undergo rigid studies of the
language, but teaching involves much more than knowledge of methods. However, a
well-versed teacher maybe in psychological and linguistic theories, in
techniques and methodologies, this knowledge alone will not assure success. And
even more basic ingredient of good teaching is the teacher’s attitude toward
his students and his work. More than ever, we must recognize the teacher’s
compassionate, intelligent, individual approach to his work as the essential
factor in successful language teaching.
Microsoft Encarta Premium Suite (2005)
as quoted by British Education theorist Peter Newsam, the essential factor in
successful language teaching as well as a considerable diversity of views
exists among analytic and linguistic philosophers regarding the nature of
conceptual or linguistic analysis. Some are primarily concerned with clarifying
the meaning of specific words or phrases as an essential step in making philosophical
assertions clear and unambiguous.
Others
are more concerned with determining the general conditions that must be met for
any linguistic utterance to be meaningful; their intent is to establish a
criterion that will distinguish between meaningful and nonsensical sentences.
Still other language analysts are interested in creating formal, symbolic
lingua francas that are morphological in nature. Their claim is that
philosophical problems can be more effectively dealt with once they are
formulated in a rigorous logical language.
It can
be argued, therefore, that, logical language is part of one’s assessment
towards incessant learning in order to attain intellectual aspects and
steadfast acquisition of language. Besides, educational assessment has
developed for social, rather than educational, reasons; that is, to facilitate
the social and economic purposes of selection, rather than the educational
purpose of teaching and learning.
Effects
of assessment on school systems and individual student motivation, and on the
best means by which to develop assessment practices to underpin, rather than
undermine, the process of learning get underway without incapacitating language
apprehension on the part of the learners. It is argued that too narrow an
approach to assessment can lead to a very restricted and overly academic
curriculum.
The
knowledge of assessment procedures is equally important and most meaningful
especially when it is conducted in an informal, continual basis. Teachers get a
more accurate picture of what their students can do inside the classroom than
what they may do in formal tests, which cause debilitating anxiety in them. At
the same time, the teachers need the information about the ongoing assessment
whether or not a lesson and its objectives are being achieved (Jordan, 2001).
Alcantara, et al. (2002) quoted the importance of speech improvement as
saying that in teaching, skill in oral communication is recognized as a very
important part of the qualification of a teacher. It is axiomatic that
instruction can be efficiently and effectively carried out only within the
context of effective communication. Hence, good speech, which is basic in
communication, is an important concern of every teacher not only as a practical
tool but also as a fine art.
By implication, speech improvement is both desirable and imperative in
teaching, and for that matter, in every human endeavor. The kind of speech
improvement designed to achieve good speech, is that which takes into consideration
not only linguistic principles but also makes use of corrective techniques
firmly based on scientific facts and principles. In the Philippines,
especially in Region VII, every vowel in the Visayas dialect is
stressed. This explains why children read in a sing-song manner. There are only
five (5) sounds for the five vowels. In English, there are various sounds for
each of the five (5) vowels. For a alone, a varies in sound in
words: can, star, lake, chair. There are strong stresses at regular intervals.
The weak-stressed syllables are observed and the final sound of each word is
blended with the initial sound of the one following within the same unit. These
differences call for sufficient aural-oral preparation before actual speaking
of English is done.
In
teaching English, many teachers make their student commence with the language
activities at the same time in their desire to follow the minimum requirements
without considering the children’s developmental stage. They fail to realize
that some students develop slower than the others. For example, writing for
training is similar to writing for reinforcement, but it differs in that it is
not limited to the reinforcement of grammatical structures (Marquez, 1999).
According
to Lado, et al. (2000), for purposes of training, writing presents students
with patterns of linguistic and rhetorical forms that might be new to them and
gives them practice in using and manipulating these new patterns: for instance,
“students may be asked to change a general statement: “Thermometers measure temperature,”
into a definition “Thermometers are instruments which measure temperature.” The
speed and frequency of international communication have outstripped the speed
of teaching and learning languages and demand more effective methods of
teaching. With the need for more effective teaching of language goes the need
for more effective testing of their use.
Communication Arts in English is not
taught in a vacuum. Although its objective is to develop in the students the
language skills in listening, speaking, reading and writing, the teacher uses
content materials in the pursuance of the skills’ objectives. In teaching
English, the teacher is guided by the assumption that language is trimodal.
This means that language is composed of three components or hierarchies which
interlace with one another.
There
are three components of language: phonology, structure and lexicon. The first
component is phonology. Phonology is the science that deals with sounds. It has
two divisions, namely: phonetics and phonemics. Phonetics deals with separate
sounds or phones. Its three branches are articulatory phonetics which deals
with speech production, auditory phonetics which deals with speech reception,
and acoustic phonetics which deals with speech transmission. Phonemics is that
branch of structural linguistics which has for its subject matter the organization
of phones with groups of faculties of sounds called phonemes (Preece, 2005).
Ponce de Leon-Ladera, et al., in their
Speech Communication and Creative Expression for English Teachers (2005),
emphasize the importance of aspects of linguistics. There are many different
ways to examine and describe individual languages and changes in languages.
Nevertheless, each approach usually takes into account the language's sounds
(phonetics and phonology), word structure (morphology), and sentence structure
(syntax). Most analyses also treat vocabulary and the semantics (meaning) of a
language. Any human being learns language starting with the use of mind but he
hears the sounds first before he uses them. Listening is very important in
learning a language, for learning them at the start wrongly, the individual
gets a shaky foundation of the language he is speaking. Learning is seen to be
a natural, gradual process, through which students progress at their own rates.
At first it is expected that students will speak or write imperfect English.
Through a combination of sensitive error-correction strategies (such as the
teacher repeating correctly a student’s faulty utterance) and continued
practice, the learner’s interlanguage will increasingly conform to the target
language.
The
choices of teachers remain to be like those of the artists. Artists’ choices
are not at random. They are driven by what artists are trying to achieve and
they are assessed by the artists every step of the way to assure that the
choices being made are congruent with their purpose. Art teachers can help art
students become aware of the options they have by having them study art history
to review the choices others have made. They can also help by making their
students perfect their technique. But it is incumbent upon the artists
themselves to create their unique blend that is their own special contribution
to others (Muñoz, et al. 2000).
It is similar with teaching. According
to Ida Yap Patron (2002), teachers must be familiar with the various methods,
approaches, and techniques in the teaching and learning not only of language
but also of literature to bring out the potential benefits of literature –
linguistically, culturally, and aesthetically. Only those who are intimately
acquainted with the situation, with the students and with themselves can have
the choices they are uniquely suited to make. It is, after all, only the
teachers who will be there to assess the outcome of the choices they make. It
is only the teachers who are there to make sure that they know why they are
doing what they are doing.
Simultaneous in learning the sounds of
the language the learner uses structure. This is the second component, otherwise
known as grammar. This has something to do with structural patterns. A language
works in a pattern. It has its own structure which is meaningful to its own
speakers. It operates within
its own recurring patterns or arrangements which are meaningful to its
speakers. In English the sentence structure begins with the subject, followed
by the predicate. It is exactly the opposite in Cebuano-Bisaya – sentence
begins with the predicate followed by the subject (Solomon, 1992).
There is
a need to comprehend the ways to teach the English in first year High School at
Minglanilla National Science High School. It is important that teachers should
provide their students with authentic examples of language to study. It appears
clearly that one aspect of authenticity resides in natural, spontaneous speech
which has normal irregularities, hesitations and simplifications so that the
students are trained to listen for cues that will be present in normal speech
and not just in that particular brand of speech spoken only to foreigners.
According to Necitas Pahang (1995) in
her dissertation entitled “A Correlative Study of the Mental Ability and
Language Achievement,” this study has something to do with the freshman’s
actual needs in English. The question is how students can later on develop
essays and other literary forms after attending English classes. Some of them
will later enjoy reading newspapers and write letters. But others will become
tourists, immigrants, hotel clerks, stewards on cruise ships, journalists,
diplomats, participants in domestic and foreign conferences. Such people will
need to be able to communicate orally, write legibly, read with comprehension
and understand with other when he speaks. If speech is unintelligible, the act
of communication has failed; the person who is supposed to receive the message
would fail to respond or if ever a response is made, this may be inappropriate.
It is also supported by Victoria Gabison
(1991) in her study entitled “A Correlative Study of the Mental Ability and
Language Achievement,” it is worth-noting that these structural lessons are
dependent upon the data gathered from the language inventory tests responded to
by the learners. For theoretical specificity, these structural lessons consider
the four (4) areas of English language teaching, namely: listening, speaking,
reading and writing as sequenced in the lessons. The lessons are more on the
difficulties and needs of the freshmen as identified by the students and their
teachers. Those studying English may be
aware of the importance of oral and written communications. The students who
are second speakers of the English language expend their efforts to acquire
proficiency in this particular language.
Students need to be able to communicate
orally. That is, a learner needs to comprehend the other fellow when he speaks
and vice versa. If speech is unintelligible, the act of communication, needless
to say, has failed. The student who is to receive the message fails to respond
inappropriately. Thus, it is very important that one should learn to speak as
intelligible as possible – not necessarily like native speakers – but well and
clear enough to be understood. Communication needs constant practice despite
the barrier of the language made culturally diverse from the others. Difficulty
of the language is inevitable on the learner who is not native speaker of the
language. That’s why structured English lessons are a must in the step-by-step
study and in-depth analysis done by the students themselves in order to pan out
both in oral and written communications in English (Navarro, 2001).
teacher should know the different strategy and the best strategy to used... every learners have different talents and skills, so, it is up to the teacher on how he/she handle things to developed his/her learners.
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