Students Love Grammar! So Why Do
Teachers Hate It?
Have you ever heard an English teacher say,
“Teaching grammar is boring!” Betty Azar has, and she strongly disagrees.
“For me teaching grammar is the most fun class of all. I think that is a
misconception -- that teaching grammar is a boring thing to do -- when
teaching grammar, for me, always was the class I looked forward to the
most because grammar was just the foundation. It was where you started.
Grammar is just the starting point.”
Betty Azar is a world famous expert on teaching English grammar. She
talked with VOA about how teachers can move from grammar to
communication experiences.
“From there you do conversations, you do games, you do communicative
interaction, you do all of the wonderful things you do in a second
language classroom, but you do it in combination with having a solid
foundation of the structures that they are using.”
Why do students need to learn grammar?
Michael Swan is a co-author of the Oxford English Grammar Course. He
writes that when teachers are deciding which grammar points to teach,
they should first ask two questions. First, will understanding the point
help students be understood – will it help them understand better? Next,
if that is true, will learning the grammar point help learners be
acceptable as English speakers?
The common misunderstanding that Ms. Azar sees is
that grammar can be taught as a subject, like history or math. Teachers
try to get students to memorize rules. Grammar is not just learning
rules. It is a way to help students along the way to communication.
“If you have a class named 'grammar,' it doesn't mean you're teaching
rules that the students have to learn. It just means, ‘grammar is where
we're going to start, and then we're going to have a lot of fun with it,
and practice, and do a lot of interesting things, and, most importantly,
have successful communication experiences.’ Those are the building
blocks of learning a second language.”
Another piece of advice for teachers is that students do not all learn
in the same way. Each may have a different learning style when it comes
to learning grammar. Some may see a pattern and understand the rule.
Others need explanations and more practice.
“But to teach grammar as a subject matter and test it as though you were
testing the memorization of dates in history is sure to bore everybody
and not reach the goals that you are trying to reach - successful
communication experiences.”
Why do some teachers hate teaching grammar?
Because grammar was removed from the regular course of study in the U.S.
and U.K. in the 1960s, most native speakers of English did not learn it
in school. Ms. Azar imagines that many teachers are not comfortable
teaching grammar because they do not know how to answer their students’
questions.
“We now have an entire pool of possible teachers who don’t know the
grammar of their own language. If you don’t know any grammar of your own
language, and then you are asked to teach it, you walk into a class;
very likely your students may know more grammar than you know, and you
cannot answer their questions. You’re going to have hostility towards
teaching grammar.”
What does the research show about teaching grammar?
Michael Swan says that teachers should apply modern research on language
to teach the most frequent grammar points before they spend time on
those that are not often used. He wants teachers to understand their
students’ language backgrounds, too. If the students have a native
language with a similar grammar rule, they do not need to spend time
practicing it in English.
The worst situation, Mr. Swan says, is when teachers try to make their
students “perfect” English speakers by teaching too much grammar. This
approach makes students afraid to speak, because they do not want to
make any mistakes.
An organization called The International Research Foundation for English
Language Education (TIRF) has been doing long-term studies of ESL
students. TIRF’s research reports that teaching grammar along with
communication is effective.
“There have been a number of research studies that show the combination
of having a grammar component in a communicative program allows students
to progress faster and better than if there were no grammar component.”
Can teaching grammar really be fun?
Betty Azar hopes that her textbooks help teachers learn to make the
teaching of grammar fun. She says that her students enjoy learning
grammar as much as she enjoys teaching it.
“Students in my experience, love it. … I think grammar is absolutely
fascinating, endlessly fascinating. It is the glue that holds language
together. It is a many-colored interwoven fabric that is really
beautiful when you get to know it. Grammar is quite a remarkable thing.” |