Theories/Approaches
Teaching Language Skills
What is language?
100

Supports that children are born with a specific innate ability to acquire a language, endowed to learn language biologically.

Innatist

100

refers to forming and hearing sounds in spoken language, is seen as the main purpose in teaching pronunciation.

Intelligibility

100

the competence type involving the use of cohesive devices in connecting the parts of the texts in various genres.

Discourse Competence

200

H

Behaviorist Theory.

200

refers to quickly searching for a piece of information in a text such as a name, date or a place. 

Scanning

200

a grammar type supporting the idea that even if languages are superficially diverse, they share fundamental similarities.

Universal Grammar

300

Acquisition occurs through associating elements or ideas with one another via experiences. 

Connectionist Theory

300

using a variety of clues to understand the literal meaning of words in a text.

Inferencing

300

a grammar type that tries to lay out the rules of language use and make judgements about dialects and accents in the society. 

Prescriptive Grammar

400

includes demonstrating the meaning through the use of realia and pictures. Learners learn inductively without the use of mother tongue.

The Direct Method

400

the stage when the child produces syllable-type sounds like 'ba', 'da', 'mu'.

Babbling 

400

a property of language stating that language enables people to talk about other places and times.

Displacement

500

Techniques are; reflective listening, small group tasks, recording students' conversation, transcription. 

Community Language Learning

500

involves going over the same listening material multiple times to develop vocabulary and grammar knowledge.

Intensive Listening

500

when we say language is ..., we mean there is no logical connection between words and their meanings.

Arbitrariness