Wednesday 29 October 2014

Language learning strategies list (new)


Learning Strategies
 Definitions
1. Metacognitive Strategies

Planning

Advance Orginizers
previewing the main ideas and concepts of the material to be learned for  organizing (skimming)
Directed Attention
deciding in advance to attend in general a learning task and to ignore irrelevant distracters
Functional Planning
Planning for linguistic components necessary to carry out an upcoming task
Selective Attention
deciding in advance to attend to specific aspects of input, often by scanning for key words and concepts
Self Management
understanding the conditions that help one learn and arranging for the presence of those conditions
Self Monitoring
Checking one's comprehension during listening or reading and checking the accuracy and appropriateness of one's oral or written production while it is taking place
Self Evaluation
Checking the outcomes of one's own language against a standard after it has been completed
2. Cognitive Strategies

Resourcing
Using references such as dictionaries and books
repetition
Imitating a language model, including overt practice and silent rehearsal
Grouping
classifying words, terminology or concepts according to the attributes or meaning
Deduction
applying rules to understand or produce the foreign language making up rules based on language analysis
Imagery
Using visual images either mental or actual to understand or remember new information
Auditory representation
Planning back in one's mind the sound of a word, phrase or longer language sequence
Key word method
remember a new word in the foreign language by (1) identifying a familiar word in the first language that sounds like or otherwise resembles the new one and (2) generating easily recalled images of some relationship with first language homonym and the new word in the foreign language
Elaboration
 Relating new information to prior knowledge, relating different parts of information to each other, or making meaningful personal associations with the new information
Transfer
using previous linguistic knowledge or prior skills to assist comprehension or production
inferencing
using available information to guess meaning of new items, predict outcomes or fill in missing information
Note taking
writing down key words or concepts in abbreviated verbal, graphic or numerical form while listening or reading
Summarizing
Making a mental, oral or writte summary of new information gained through listening or reading
Recombination
constructing a meaningful sentence or larger language sequence by combining known elements in a new way
Translation
using the first language as a base for understand and producing the foreign language
3. Social/Affective Strategies

Question for clarification
eliciting from a teacher or peer additional explanations, rephrasing, examples or verification
Cooperation
working together with one or more peers to solve a problem, pool information, check a learning task, model a language activity or get feedback on oral or written performance
Self talk
reducing anxiety by using mental techniques that make one feel competent to do the learning task
Loud reading
read loudly showing enthusiasm and emotions

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