State the main principles of the total physical response Method (TPR)?
Ans. Total physical response is
an example of the comprehension approach to language teaching. Methods in the
comprehension approach emphasize the importance of listening to language
development, and do not require spoken output in the early stages of learning.
In total physical response, students are not forced to speak. Instead, teachers
wait until students acquire enough language through listening that they start
to speak spontaneously. At the beginning stages of instruction students can
respond to the instructor in their native language.
While the majority of class time in total
physical response is spent on listening comprehension, the ultimate goal of the
method is to develop oral fluency. Asher sees developing listening
comprehension skills as the most efficient way of developing spoken language
skills. Lessons in TPR are organized around grammar, and in particular around
the verb. Instructors issue commands based on the verbs and vocabulary to be
learned in that lesson. However, the primary focus in lessons is on meaning,
which distinguishes TPR from other grammar-based methods such as
grammar-translation. Grammar is not explicitly taught, but is learned by
induction. Students are expected to subconsciously acquire the grammatical
structure of the language through exposure to spoken language input, in
addition to decoding the messages in the input to find their meaning. This
approach to listening is called code-breaking.
Total physical response is both a teaching
technique and a philosophy of language teaching. Teachers do not have to limit
themselves to TPR techniques to teach according to the principles of the total
physical response method. Because the students are only expected to listen and
not to speak, the teacher has the sole responsibility for deciding what input
students hear.
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