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Piercy, Margaret – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1977
The BBC's French educational programs are valuable for classroom use. Use of worksheets with essay questions, filling in blanks in a passage, and writing equivalents of phrases can test pupils' comprehension. Tape copying is discussed, and a sample worksheet appended. (CHK)
Descriptors: Educational Radio, French, Language Instruction, Language Tests
Hill, Brian; Barley, Anthony – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1977
Various ways to use foreign language radio broadcasts in comprehension practice, speaking practice, and written work are outlined. BBC and other broadcasts in several languages are listed and annotated as to age level and topics. (CHK)
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Educational Radio, Language Instruction, Listening Comprehension
Black, Colin – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1972
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Language Instruction, Language Skills, Listening Comprehension
Whitaker, S. F. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1976
Wherever aural comprehension is prized, together with literacy and ability to read the foreign language, dictation may be found to be both profitable for teaching and valid for testing. It must not be presented as a series of spelling traps but as a realistic language activity. (Author/CFM)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Higher Education, Language Instruction, Language Tests
Nickols, Helen R. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1975
Some of the methods used in teaching a French class composed of about 20 children classified as slow learners with an average reading age of 6 plus are described. Emphasis was on listening skills and background knowledge. (RM)
Descriptors: Conversational Language Courses, Course Content, Disadvantaged Youth, French
Sewell, Penny – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1974
The typical day of a student travelling in France is outlined, with discussion of the different types of language he would be exposed to. Ways in which classroom teaching can provide similar experience are suggested, and abilities involved in listening and reading which are not language-specific are discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Content, French, Language Instruction, Language Skills
Segerman-Peck, Lily M. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1976
Rather than learning just a series of responses to drills, a student can learn "real" French by using L2-L2 (second language) precis work in the language laboratory. The student listens to a previously unheard text and then reproduces it in a shortened form. (CFM)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Methods, French, Higher Education, Language Instruction
Cook, V. J. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1978
This article examines some of the ways in which language has been organised for language teaching. Their deficiencies are examined and some possibilities for the future are suggested. (Author/NC R)
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Grammar, Instructional Materials, Language Instruction
Harding, J. Cooper – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1977
This article examines teaching methods for developing foreign language comprehension in students, with attention to methods of testing comprehension. Reading materials should include journals, newspapers, and items concerning teenage culture. The English summary of a French text is recommended for testing comprehension; examples of this exercise…
Descriptors: French, Language Instruction, Language Skills, Language Tests
Sneyd, Michael R. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1977
Use of texts to improve language skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing at the intermediate level is discussed. Text selection is explained, and the use of several reading and writing exercises outlined. (CHK)
Descriptors: Instructional Materials, Language Instruction, Language Skills, Listening Skills
Ager, D. E. – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1967
For ease of presentation, advanced grammar teaching techniques are briefly considered under the headings of structuralism (belief in the effectiveness of presenting grammar rules) and contextualism (belief in the maximum use by students of what they know in the target language). The structuralist's problem of establishing a syllabus is discussed…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Audiovisual Instruction, Debate, Grammar