2.2 The application of interaction in English classes. In the practice of our English language teaching and learning, lack of interaction is a common thing. As a matter of fact, most college EFL teachers in in every country are confronted with awkwardness: most of the learners sit looking straight ahead and use minimal facial expressions, gestures and verbal utterances; most of the learners seldom ask questions, make comments and respond with nods and shakes of the head, with the sounds of agreement or sounds of understanding some learners always keep their heads down and remain silent when asked questions or assigned to group work. Therefore, this paper focuses on the reasons of lacking of interaction in foreign language teaching, and puts forward the strategies for implementing classroom interaction. Understanding of Classroom Interaction -The classroom interaction has three components. It provides learners with opportunities both to encounter input and to practice the L2. It also creates in the learners “a state of receptivity, defined as an active openness, a willingness to encounter the language and the culture it represents.
According to the participants in classroom interaction: the teacher and the learners, classroom interaction is classified into two categories: teacher-learner interaction, learner-learner interaction. Teacher-learner interaction has broad sense and narrow sense. In broad sense, teacher-learner interaction is the interaction between the teacher and learner. In narrow sense, it is the interaction between the teacher and learner or the teacher and learners in teaching situation. Learner-learner interaction is based on peer relationships, which allows the maximum degree of communication. Carefully structured learner-learner interactions provide a forum for extended, meaningful exploration of ideas, which exposes learners to more varied and complex language from their peers than does traditional teacher-fronted classroom interactions. Through interaction with other learners in pairs or groups, learners can have more opportunities to make use of linguistic resources in a relaxing and uncontrolled manner and use them to complete different kinds of tasks. According to the focus point of learner’s language competence and the benefit of learner activities, there are two types of classroom interaction: language output and language input. Language output mainly concerns foreign learners’ competence of using language. Language input aims to improve learners’ mastering of target language and speed up their language acquisition. Classroom interaction tends to be scientific and diverse.
Factors Affecting Classroom Interaction - What factors will affect classroom interaction? The following factors are needed in classroom interaction in foreign language teaching. In other words, the following factors are what are needed for improving English teaching in English class. A Teachers’ beliefs Shavelson indicates that teacher’s theoretical beliefs,guiding teachers’ expectations and decisions are thought to act as filters through which teachers make instructional judgments and decisions.
Teachers’ beliefs are instrumental in shaping how teachers interpret what goes on in their classrooms and how they will react and respond to it. Their beliefs evolve from what Lortie characterized as the apprenticeship of observation and based on early experiences as learners. When teachers enter teacher education programs, they bring with them an accumulation of prior experiences that manifest themselves in the form of beliefs that tend to be quite stable and rather resistant to change . Some attribute this inflexibility, in part, to teachers’ lack of knowledge about how to adjust their beliefs to the realities of life in classrooms . Numerous studies in the fields support the notion that teachers teach in accordance with their beliefs. Teachers' Questions - Questioning plays a significant part in classroom teaching. Questions stated in language that is too complex or too wordy for aural comprehension. Teachers' questions should provide necessary methods to communication, attract learners’ attention, and learn about the extent of learners' comprehension, help learners understand puzzlement and know what is important, provide learners with opportunities to find out what they think by hearing what they say. However, asking a lot of questions in classroom will guarantee stimulation of interaction.
Certain types of questions may actually discourage interactive learning. Therefore, it is unlikely for the EFL teacher to ask only either of the two questions types. The teacher should choose the types according to the different proficiency level of learners. The higher the English proficiency level the learners are in, the more the teacher can venture into asking referential questions. So the teacher should challenge their learners sufficiently but without overwhelming them. And in the following part, learners’ different English levels will be discussed.
Learners’ Different English Levels Teachers of English generally make three basic level distinctions: beginner, intermediate and advanced though exactly what these terms mean often depends where you work and what textbook you are using. Broadly, however, beginners are those who do not know any English and advanced
learners are those whose level of English is competent, allowing them to read unsimplified fact and fiction and communicate fluently, with native speakers. Between these two extremes, intermediate suggests basic competence in speaking and writing and an ability to comprehend fairly straightforward listening and reading. Teacher-learner Rappor - Rapport is a somewhat slippery but important concept increasing positive climate in the classroom. Rapport here is the relationship or connection the teacher establishes with their learners, a relationship that is built on trust and respect and that leads to learners’ feeling capable, competent, and creative. Part of the rapport is created on the delicate balance that is set between praise and criticism. Too much of either one renders it less and less effective. Genuine praise enables students to welcome criticism. Anxiety -MacIntyre and Gardner looked in more detail at anxiety seem to relate to negative experiences in speaking activities. This would confirm the experience of many teachers, but the suggestion that arises from such studies, that anxiety is a response learned through early experiences and that it can increase until the whole process of learning is badly affected, emphasizes the need for humanistic approaches in the widest sense of the word. It implies that teaches have both the power and the responsibility to counter the development of anxiety by building self-confidence through positive early experiences, through providing reassuring feedback, and through promoting self-perception of developing proficiency.