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DELTA Module 1 Questions & Answers(RATED A+)

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  • DELTA Module 1

Suggestopedia - ANSWERDefinition: (Giori Lozanov) an approach based on lowering the students' affective filter as much as possible to encourage acquisition. Example: using baroque music, sitting in comfy chairs, creating new identities all form part of this approach Further Point: there is a...

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  • November 12, 2024
  • 14
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • DELTA Module 1
  • DELTA Module 1
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DELTA Module 1 Questions &
Answers(RATED A+)
Suggestopedia - ANSWERDefinition: (Giori Lozanov) an approach based on
lowering the students' affective filter as much as possible to encourage acquisition.

Example: using baroque music, sitting in comfy chairs, creating new identities all
form part of this approach

Further Point: there is a 'receptive' 'activation' phase in class

Anaphoric Reference - ANSWERDefinition: a type of grammatical cohesion -
something that refers back to a previously mentioned item in a text.

Example: "Susan lives just round the corner. She's my best friend." 'She' refers back
to 'Susan'

Further Point: can be seen in contrast to cataphoric reference (refers forward) and
exophoric reference (refers to something 'outside' the text, which is common
knowledge)

Aptitude test - ANSWERDefinition: a test of a student's natural ability to learn a
language (in this case).

Example: in pronunciation, a test to check the ability to imitate/distinguish sounds in
an unknown language.

Further Point: clearly it is much simpler to test aptitude in systems like grammar,
pronunciation or lexis, rather than skills

Audio-Lingual Approach - ANSWERDefinition: an inductive approach based on
drilling and pattern practice, moving towards substitution of elements.

Example: Teacher: "That cat is cute." Students: "That cat is cute." Teacher: "Dog."
Students: "That dog is cute." etc.

Further Point: most interaction is teacher-student,
students should 'overlearn' so that usage becomes
habitual.

Backwash - ANSWERDefinition: the effect a test/exam has on the teaching leading
up to it
Example: a global language exam decides to include a speaking test for the time.
This causes teachers to begin including speaking practice in their classes

Further Point: the effect of backwash can be positive or negative

, Behaviourism - ANSWERDefinition: a belief that language is learned behaviour and
we learn by imitation of good models

Example: the Audio-lingual Method is the classroom
approach of behaviourist ideology

Further Point: this approach works on a stimulus-response- reward/punishment
model

Bottom-up Processing - ANSWERDefinition: processing a text starting with the
smaller elements of a text (words, sounds, etc) then building upwards to decode the
text as a whole
Example: listening or reading for the times of a particular train
Further Point: can be seen in comparison to 'Top-down' processing, which starts
from 'global knowledge' to process meaning

Cataphoric Reference - ANSWERDefinition: a type of grammatical cohesion -
something that refers forward to another thing mentioned later in the text

Example: "Given that it is bad for you, smoking still remains very popular." 'It' refers
forward to 'smoking'

Further Point: can be seen in contrast to anaphoric reference (refers back) and
exophoric reference (refers outside the text)

Cloze test - ANSWERDefinition: a test where a number of words have been removed
from a text. Students have to complete the text

Example: FCE Use of English Part 2, where students have fill the gaps left in the text

Further Point: traditionally, the missing words were every so many words (e.g. every
9th word was missing) - there are also open and multiple choice cloze tests

Co-text - ANSWERDefinition: the words immediately around a particular
item in the text which help to deduce its meaning

Example: on the way back to the market (the underlined words are the co-text of
'back')

Further Point: the co-text can be the same topic as the context (they are about the
same things) or can be a digression away from the context

Community Language Learning - ANSWERDefinition: (Charles Curran) an approach
designed to
form a group identity and lower the affective filter by
building a conversation for later analysis/practice.
Example: Ss sitting in a closed circle whisper to T
(outside the circle) what they wish to say to another S
in L1. T translates, drills and S records utterance.
Further Point: a student-led process syllabus

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