The Audio-Lingual Method was developed during WWII to rapidly teach soldiers foreign languages. It focused on habit formation through repetition and drills without error. The teacher strictly modeled the target language, and students mimicked through dialog memorization and pattern practice drills. The goal was automatic language use by overcoming native language interference. Grammar was induced, not explicitly taught.
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2. INTRODUCTION
The Audio-Lingual Method was developed in the United
States during World War II. At that time there was a need
for people to learn foreign languages rapidly for military
purposes.
The Grammar-Translation Method did not prepare people
to use the target language. While communication in the
target language was the goal of the Direct Method, there
were at the time exciting new ideas about language and
learning.
4. 1. The teacher introduces a new dialog
Language forms do not occur by themselves; they
occur most naturally within a context.
5. 2. The language teacher uses only the target
language in the classroom. Actions, pictures, or
realia are used to give meaning otherwise.
The native language and the target language have separate
linguistic systems. They should be kept apart so that the
students' native language interferes as little as possible
with the students' attempts to acquire the target language.
6. 3. The language teacher introduces the dialog by
modeling it two times; she introduces the drills by
modeling the correct answers; at other times, she
corrects mispronunciation by modeling the proper
sounds in the target language.
One of the language teacher's major roles is that of a
model of the target language. Teachers should provide
students with a native-speaker-like model. By listening
to how it is supposed to sound, students should be
able to mimic the model.
7. 4. The students repeat each line of the new
dialog several times.
Language learning is a process of habit formation. The
more often something is repeated, the stronger the
habit and the greater the learning.
8. 5. The students stumble over one of the lines
of the dialog. The teacher uses a backward
build-up drill with this line.
It is important to prevent learners from making errors.
Errors lead to the formation of bad habits. When
errors do occur, they should be immediately corrected
by the teacher.
9. 6. The teacher initiates a chain drill in which each
student greets another.
The purpose of language learning is to learn how to
use the language to communicate.
10. 7. The teacher uses single-slot and multiple-slot
substitution drills.
Particular parts of speech occupy particular "slots" in
sentences. In order to create new sentences, students
must learn which part of speech occupies which slot.
11. 8. The teacher says, "Very good" when the
students answer correctly.
Positive reinforcement helps the students to develop
correct habits.
12. 9. The teacher uses spoken cues and picture cues.
Students should learn to respond to both verbal and
nonverbal stimuli.
13. 10. The teacher conducts transformation and
question-and answer drills.
Each language has a finite number of patterns. Pattern
practice helps students to form habits which enable
the students to use the patterns.
14. 11. The teacher provides the students with cues; she
calls on individuals; she smiles encouragement; she
holds up pictures one after another.
The teacher should be like an orchestra leader-
conducting, guiding, and controlling the students'
behavior in the target language.
15. 12. New vocabulary is introduced through lines
of the dialog; vocabulary is limited.
The major objective of language teaching should be for
students to acquire the structural patterns; students
will learn vocabulary afterward.
16. 13. Students are given no grammar rules;
grammatical points are taught through examples
and drills.
The learning of a foreign language should be the same
as the acquisition of the native language. We do not
need to memorize rules in order to use our native
language.
The rules necessary to use the target language will be
figured out or induced from examples.
18. 1. What are the goals of teachers who use the
Audio-Lingual Method?
Teachers want their students to be able to use the target
language communicatively. In order to do this, they
believe students need to overlearn the target language, to
learn to use it automatically without stopping to think.
Their students achieve this by forming new habits in the
target language and overcoming the old habits of their
native language.
19. 2. What is the role of the teacher? What is the
role of the students?
The teacher is like an orchestra leader, directing and
controlling the language behavior other students.
She also is responsible for providing her students with a
good model for imitation.
Students are imitators of the teacher's model or the tapes
she supplies of model speakers.
They follow the teachers directions and respond as
accurately and as rapidly as possible.
20. 3. What are some characteristics of the
teaching/learning process?
New vocabulary and structures are presented through
dialogs.
The dialogs are learned through imitation and repetition.
Students' successful responses are positively reinforced.
Grammar is induced from the examples given; explicit
grammar rules are not provided.
21. 4. What is the nature of student-teacher
interaction? What is the nature of student-student
interaction?
There is student-to-student interaction in chain drills or
when students take different roles in dialogs, but this
interaction is teacher directed.
Most of the interaction is between teacher and students
and is initiated by the teacher.
22. 5. How are the feelings of the students
dealt with?
There are no principles of the method that relate to
this area.
23. 6. How is language viewed? How is culture viewed?
Everyday speech is emphasized.
The level of complexity of the speech is graded, however,
so that beginning students are presented with only simple
forms.
Culture consists of the everyday behavior and lifestyle of
the target language speakers.
24. 7. What areas of language are emphasized? What
languages kills are emphasized?
The structures of the language are emphasized over all the
other areas. The syllabus is typically a structural one, with
the structures for any particular unit included in the new
dialog. Vocabulary is also contextualized within the
dialog.
The natural order of skills presentation is adhered to:
listening, speaking, reading and writing. The oral/aural
skills receive most of the attention. Pronunciation is
taught from the beginning.
25. 8. What is the role of the students' native language?
The habits of the students' native language are thought to
interfere with the students' attempts to master the target
language.
Therefore, the target language is used in the classroom,
not the students' native language.
A contrastive analysis between the students' native
language and the target language will reveal where a
teacher should expect the most interference.
26. 9. How does the teacher respond to student errors?
Student errors are to be avoided if at all possible
through the teacher's awareness of where the students
will have difficulty and restriction of what they are
taught to say.
28. Dialog Memorization
Dialogs or short conversations between two people are
often used to begin a new lesson. Ss memorize the dialog
through mimicry ("mim-mem"); Ss usually take the role
of one person in the dialog, and the T the other.
After the Ss have learned the one person's lines, they
switch roles and memorize the other person's part.
Another way of practicing the two roles is for half of the
class to take one role and the other half to take the other.
After the dialog has been memorized, pairs of individual
Ss might perform the dialog for the rest of the class.
29. Backward Build-up (Expansion) Drill
This drill is used when a long line of a dialog is giving Ss
trouble.
T breaks down the line into several parts. Ss repeat a part
of the sentence, usually the last phrase of the line. Then,
following the Ts cue, Ss expand what they are repeating
part by part until they are able to repeat the entire line.
T begins with the part at the end of the sentence and
works backward from there. This also directs more
student attention to the end of the sentence, where new
information typically occurs.
30. Repetition Drill
Students are asked to repeat the teacher's model as
accurately and as quickly as possible.
This drill is often used to teach the lines of the dialog.
31. Chain Drill
A chain drill gets its name from the chain of conversation
that forms around the room as Ss, one-by-one, ask and
answer questions of each other. T begins the chain by
greeting a particular S, or asking him a question. That S
responds, then turns to the S sitting next to him. The first
S greets or asks a question of the second S and the chain
continues. A chain drill allows some controlled
communication. A chain drill also gives the T an
opportunity to check each Ss speech.
32. Single-slot Substitution Drill
T says a line, usually from the dialog. Next, T says a
word or a phrase-called the cue. Ss repeat the line T
has given them, substituting the cue into the line in its
proper place. The major purpose of this drill is to give
the Ss practice in finding and filling in the slots of a
sentence.
33. Multiple-slot Substitution Drill
This drill is similar to the single-slot substitution drill.
The difference is that T gives cue phrases, one at a
time, that fit into different slots in the dialog line. Ss
must recognize what part of speech each cue is, where
it fits into the sentence, and make any other changes,
such as subject-verb agreement. They then say the
line, fitting the cue phrase into the line where it
belongs.
34. Use of Minimal Pairs
T works with pairs of words which differ in only one
sound; for example, "ship/sheep. Ss are first asked to
perceive the difference between the two words and
later to be able to say the two words. T selects the
sounds to work on after she has done a contrastive
analysis, a comparison between the Ss native language
and the language they are studying.
35. Complete the Dialog
Selected words are erased from a dialog students have
learned.
Ss complete the dialog by filling in the blanks with the
missing words.
36. Grammar Game
Games like the supermarket alphabet game described
in this chapter are often used in the Audio-Lingual
Method. The games are designed to get Ss to practice a
grammar point within a context. Ss are able to express
themselves although it is rather limited in this game.
Notice there is also a lot of repetition in this game.
38. Does it make sense to you that language acquisition
results from habit formation? If so, will the habits of
the native language interfere with target language
learning?
39. Should the commission of errors be prevented as
much as possible?
40. Should the major focus be on the structural patterns of
the target language?
41. Which of these or the other principles of the Audio-
Lingual Method are acceptable to you?
42. Is a dialog a useful way to introduce new material?
43. Should it be memorized through mimicry of the
teacher's model?
45. Is working on pronunciation through minimal-pair
drills a worthwhile activity?
46. Would you say these techniques (or any others of the
Audio-Lingual Method) are ones that you can use as
described?
Could you adapt any of them to your own teaching
approach and situation?
48. Apply what you have understood about the Audio-Lingual
Method.
Read the following dialog. What structure is it trying to
teach?
SAM: Lou's going to go to college next fall.
BETTY: What is he going to study?
SAM: He's going to study biology. He's going to be a doctor.
BETTY: Where is he going to study?
SAM: He's going to study at Stanford.
49. 2. Prepare your own dialog to introduce
a new structure to your students.