Sunday, 18 April 2021

 

 

IMPORTANCE OF TEXTBOOK IN TEACHING AND LEARNING LANGUAGE

Sruthy S Prakash

      The textbook is a very important instrument of education. To the student it represents the subject content and to the teacher it provides an operational definition of his duties. The textbook in language teaching, takes on an even wider responsibility, for it has to provide along with information, the basic skills required to use the language for purposes other than mastery of the textbook alone. The importance of textbook in language teaching has been recognised. Michael West has emphasised the use of textbook, a textbook is the teacher’s tool. It is to the teacher what the spade is to the gardener, the chisel and saw and screwdriver to the wood worker, the typewriter to the typist. It opens new avenues of thought and study and widens experience. According to Billows, In opening up the textbook, the teacher opens windows on the world, which both show the world and let light into the home. The textbook has always been regarded in India as an integral part of learning process and it is worshipped during the national festival "Pooja".A survey completed by the National Opinion Research Council  reported in 1966 that the textbook is still the dominant teaching tool in the colleges it is in the secondary school.  

                         Teachers of English in our schools whose command of English is poor, need lists of teaching points - structures, vocabulary etc. - with advice as how to present, identify and drill each, and with reading passages and composition exercises introduced at appropriate points. Besides, a structural syllabus cannot work without being embodied in good books. The more planned the textbook, the easier the task of the teacher. In making his pupils learn the language. Several purposes are served by the textbooks. It is at once a guide to the teacher, a memory aid for the pupils, a means of reviewing and reorganising his knowledge. In the class room, the textbook becomes an effective tool of learning, by generating educative interaction between the teacher and the learner and between the learner and other co-workers. At home it not only helps the learner in revising and reinforcing his previous learning, but also stimulates his interest and enriches his learning experience. In a wider sense, the textbook is a generalisation, a 'uniting factor in language teaching, means of extending linguistic experience beyond the' local scene and limited experience of pupil. At the same time .It has to be admitted that this is not the only means of learning, or reading the textbook the only method of organising mastery of a language. The invention and development of a large number and variety of alternative means and materials for learning languages has limited the role of the textbook and at the same time helped to overcome its limitation.

                      Obviously, the textbook should aim at teaching the materials that have to be taught to the class. If our aim is to teach our pupils to read and write English, a book which has been written for an aural oral approach will not be suitable. Adaptation will not help. Even if the pupil reads the dialogues out of the book and copies them a hundred times on paper, he will never learn the correct forms of written English.We shall be very happy, if we find a book whose objectives are exactly the same as our own, but some materials will be better than others. This means that the amount of adaptation and extra material to be provided by the teacher will be highly valuable.

Friday, 4 October 2019

PATHWAY OF FOLKLORE TRADITION


PATHWAY OF FOLKLORE TRADITION

                           “People think of folklore as old-fashioned and quaint … but actually, folklore makes you very uncomfortable because it’s what you see to survive…” – Dr. David Patterson.
                             Story -telling is an art. Passing a body of traditions and knowledge from one generation to the next, generally or typically follows a story-telling method. These kinds of stories inculcate certain values among those who listens it.  During the early stages of manhood there were lot of mysteries exist in and around the world. Most of the mysteries generated on the basis of customs, practices and norms. The noticeable facts about these stories are these usually passing orally, so it is a part of oral tradition. And these stories are located in a particular place, activity and group of people. Come to the point folklore.
                               Folklore means stories and lessons that contain the traditions of a particular group or culture. The term folklore is a combination two terms folk and lore. It is well-documented that the term was coined in 1846 by the Englishman William Thomas.

                   The term folk derived from a Germanic noun “folka” meaning “people”. Lore means all traditions about a particular subject that have been accumulated over time. In the past, folklore helped to explain the natural world, helped to articulate fears or dreams, provided order to a society, providing understanding of a culture’s values, beliefs, morals, provided entertainment. Folklore consists of legends, music, oral history, proverbs, jokes, popular beliefs, fairy tales, and customs that are the traditions of a culture. Transmission is a vital part of the folklore process. Without communicating these beliefs and customs within the group over space and time, they would become cultural shards relegated to cultural archaeologists .
                               Hence folklore is the traditions, customs, and stories that are passed down within a culture orally that keeps the past alive, teaches moral lessons about human behavior, reveals values of the society, shows characteristics of culture or geography.
“It is a record of a society’s soul”
     

    IMPORTANCE OF TEXTBOOK IN TEACHING AND LEARNING LANGUAGE Sruthy S Prakash       The textbook is a very important instrument of edu...