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Teacher Talking Time
The development of Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
brought with it a methodology which emphasised communication
in the classroom, pair and group activities and student
involvement in the learning process. A consequence of this
was the belief that the teacher's presence in the classroom
should be reduced.
Why reduce TTT
Strategies for reducing TTT
Positive uses of TTT
Conclusion
Why reduce TTT
Many training courses based on CLT insisted that teacher
talking time (TTT) was counterproductive and that teachers
should reduce TTT for a number of reasons:
Excessive TTT limits the amount of STT (student talking
time). If the teacher talks for half the time in a 60 minute
lesson with 15 students, each student gets only 2 minutes to
speak.
A large amount of TTT results in long stretches of time in
teacher-to-class (T/class) mode and a monotonous pace.
Student underinvolvement inevitably leads to loss of
concentration, boredom and reduced learning.
TTT often means that the teacher is giving the students
information that they could be finding out for themselves,
such as grammar rules, the meanings of vocabulary items and
corrections. Teacher explanations alone are often tedious,
full of terminology and difficult to follow. There may be no
indication of whether the students have understood.
If the teacher takes the dominant role in classroom
discourse in terms of initiating the topic, allocating turns
and evaluating comments, the student's role is only that of
respondent. Opportunities for developing the speaking skill
are therefore severely limited.
If the teacher is constantly dominant and controlling, the
learners take no responsibility for their own learning but
learn what the teacher decides and when. Student autonomy is
thus limited.
Strategies for reducing TTT
The over-use of TTT is often the product of the under-use of
communicative techniques in the classroom. Many activities
do not need to be teacher led – pair work (PW) or group work
(GW) can be used instead. An activity might be set up in
T/class mode, demonstrated in open pairs (students doing the
activity across the class), and done in closed pairs (all
the students working at the same time). Some mechanical
activities need to be done individually (IW) but can be
checked in pairs. What is most important is that activities
and interaction patterns (T/class, PW, GW, IW) need to be
varied. The amount of time spent in T/class mode will depend
on factors such as the students and how much they know, the
stage of the lesson, the time of day and what is being
taught, but a useful guideline is a limit of 30% of a
lesson, and no more than 10 minutes at one time.
Other common strategies for reducing TTT include:
Using elicitation rather than explanation. If students are
presented with clear examples and guiding questions, they
often do not need to be "told". This kind of guided
discovery leads to better understanding and more successful
learning. Organising activities as pair work also means that
all the students have the chance to work on the new
language.
The use of body language, mime, gestures and facial
expressions rather than words. The position of the teacher
in the classroom can also indicate to the students what is
expected of them at a particular stage of the lesson.
Getting students to give feedback on tasks to each other
rather than to the teacher. This is often done in pairs, but
answers can also be checked against a key. Student
nomination, whereby one student nominates another to answer
a question, is also a useful technique. Feedback involving
the teacher is therefore limited to problematic questions
rather than every question in an exercise.
Eliminating unnecessary TTT. Grading language is important,
but over-simplification can lead to unnatural models from
the teacher. Instructions should be kept simple, while
explanations need to be carefully worded and repeated if
necessary rather than paraphrased. Simple concept questions
should be asked to check understanding. If explanations are
clear and concept checking is effective, there should be no
need for re-explanation or interrupting an activity to
reteach or re instruct.
Tolerating silence. Inexperienced teachers in particular
tend to fill silences by unnecessary talking. Silence is
important not only when students are working individually,
but also provides 'processing time' between instructions,
during explanations, while waiting for a student to respond,
and during monitoring of activities. Prompting, providing
clues and rephrasing the question are often
counterproductive when the student merely needs time to
answer.
Positive uses of TTT
In recent years, approaches other than CLT have suggested
that TTT may not always be counterproductive and can be used
to good effect. The teacher provides good listening practice
which is not inhibited by the sound quality of a tape or CD
player and which is accompanied by visual clues to aid
comprehension. In a monolingual teaching context overseas,
the teacher may provide a valuable source of authentic
listening, exposing learners to a limited amount of new
language, and 'roughly tuning' input to assist
comprehension. In some circumstances, the teacher may be the
only source of models of good, natural language. Some forms
of TTT are clearly beneficial:
Personalised presentations. Language should be presented in
context, and this can be provided by the teacher rather than
through a reading or listening. Listening to the teacher
talking about real issues is more motivating than listening
to or reading about complete strangers talking about people,
places or events which, for the students, have no personal
interest. Students are also more likely to pick up knowledge
which is content rather than language based by listening to
the teacher introducing a topic.
Questioning. Every teacher question asked during a lesson
demands a student response. Questions need not be language
related, and are often the basis of 'brainstorming' a topic
with the class. Frequent questioning holds students'
attention and increases learner involvement in the class.
Natural conversation. Conversations taking place during pair
and group work are often loaded towards certain language
items or based on an imposed theme. Natural conversation
initiated by the teacher encourages questioning, asking for
clarification, commenting and changing the subject as well
as introducing functional and everyday language which is
often overlooked in course materials. Chats outside the
classroom are also valuable and often more memorable to
students than lessons. In these circumstances, teachers
should remember to continue to use graded but natural
language rather than to use simplified language to ensure
understanding.
Anecdotes. These can be the basis of a presentation, but can
also be used at the start of a lesson, rather than using a
'warmer' activity, as a natural way of engaging the
students. Anecdotes and jokes may also be used to stimulate
interest during a lesson. Anecdotes do not need to be
monologues, and students can be encouraged to interrupt and
ask questions.
Storytelling. This can be the basis of a lesson or an
ongoing theme throughout a course and is as appropriate to
adult classes as it is to young learners. There is a whole
methodology surrounding storytelling, which is often a
stimulating alternative to the use of a graded reader in the
classroom.
Conclusion
There are advantages and disadvantages to TTT. It is not
easy to reduce TTT when talking to the students is a natural
thing to do and when there is inevitably a theatrical side
to language teaching. In certain cultures, there is also a
tradition of 'chalk and talk' which influences the
expectations and behaviour of both teachers and students.
However, bearing in mind the nature of the communicative
classroom, teachers should perhaps be aware of the quality
of their TTT and how it is used rather than trying to reduce
it to a bare minimum.
Further reading
Dellar, H. Rethinking Teacher Talking Time, TESOL Spain
Newsletter, 2004.
http://www.tesol-spain.org/newsletter/hughdellar.html Lynch,
T. Communication in the Language Classroom OUP, 1996
Scrivener, J. Learning Teaching (2nd Edition), Macmillan,
2005
Zaro, J. & Salaberri, S. Storytelling, Macmillan, 1995
Written by Steve Darn, Izmir University of Economics, Turkey
Link to original article.
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