Listening as a way of learning a language
What is 'The input hypothesis'
Productive skills are important in language learning
What is 'Input/Output hypothesis'
It has to be perfect
What is accuracy
The skills applied when utterances are created
What are productive skills
The aim of learning English in Denmar
What is 'ability to communicate'
Anxiety to speak a foreign language in the classroom
What is the 'Affective filter hypothesis'
Just trying to say something without being certain
What is 'risk-taking'
It has to sound/feel right
What is fluency
Technology that allows us to translate languages automatically
What is Google Translate
Skills applied when an utterance is understood
What are 'receptive skills'
What is the 'Monitor hypothesis'
When learners notice gaps between what they want to say and what they are able to say
What is the noticing function
It has to be correct immediately
What is 'Getting it right in the beginning'
a conscious process
What is Learning
a purely subconscious process
What is acquisition (Krashen)
Learning a language has an innate, natural progression
What is 'the natural order hypothesis'
Trying an utterance or a phrase based on rudimentary interlanguage knowledge
What is Hypothesis-testing function
It has to be correct eventually
What is 'Getting it right in the end'
Gramma should describe how language works in the practice of communication
What is Functional Grammar
Communicative situation, where everybody speaks a foreign language
What is 'lingua franca'
Learning through listening for a period of time
What is the silent period
Learners reflect on the language they learn and generate personal rules
What is the Metalinguistic function
The platform that your teaching provides for the learner to learn from
What is scaffolding
Thinking together through language
What is 'dialogue'
A language developed follows a shared structure
What is Universal grammar (Chomsky)