THEORETICAL REVIEW
2.1 Definition of Teaching
To transfer information the teacher has to know definition of teaching. There are some experts who have defined what is teaching.
According
to Tomlinson (2001:3) “Language teaching is used to refer anything done
by materials developers or the teacher is to facilitate the learning of
the language”. It means teaching is a facility in learning process of
the language and teacher as facilitation.
According
to Joyce and Weil (2007:79) “Teaching is a process by which teacher and
students create a shared environment including sets of values and
beliefs (Agreement about what is important) which in to color their view
of reality”. Students
come to school with different learning style, requiring different
approaches to be followed to make for effective learning.
According
to Wyse and Jones (2004:2) “During the 1970s and 1980s the teaching of
language was the focus”. So, in giving knowledge, teacher must
concentrate in the materials of the subject and stay focus. It means in
those years of age, teaching language was the most important subject for
the teacher to teach teaching is process of transferring and
understanding from the teacher to the pupil their students. Teaching
language was the main purpose of teaching and all students had to learn it.
The writer concludes that teaching is facilitation in learning process. Teaching is activity which is performed, directly or indirectly by human
Being.
Consequently, everyone who writes about it is a potential teacher or
pupil and situation to show what the teacher explain to the pupils, that
s. Teaching is not only giving lesson to the students. But also how the
teacher delivers the lesson to the student. Teaching can give the
knowledge to the students and teaching can know the characteristic of
the students.
2.2. Principles of Teaching Young Children
According
to Joseph & Strain, (2002 : 4). “For emotional vocabulary teaching
to be effective adults must first spend the time necessary to build
positive relationships with children”. It means that is foundational
context of a warm and responsive relationship with children, teachers
can maximize their influence to enhance emotional vocabulary”.
According
to Denham, (1986 : 4). “ classrooms that devote planned attention to
help children acquire a rich and varied feeling vocabulary we may expect
fewer challenging behaviors and more developmentally sophisticated and
enjoyable peer social”.It means that to help the children become smart
and enjoyable.
According to Mc Closkey (2002:67),
“effective teaching of young learners promotes innate language
acquisition mechanisms by providing children opportunities to use
language as a tool for creating and sharing meanings and by scaffolding
experiences to help children function Effective
teaching, therefore, involves authentic communication between learner
and teacher and among learners, and is activity-based, providing
purposeful ways for students to use language to meet appropriate
goals”. It means that using language goals from one age group for
learners at earlier ages may not serve any benefit, but instead may
cause learners to miss important opportunities. There are seven
instructional principles of teaching young Teachers:
- Offer learners enjoyable, active roles in the learning experience.
Young
learners are meaning-seekers who learn best by doing and who prefer a
safe, but still challenging learning environment. Direct instruction
methodologies and content intended for older learners are being pushed
down to classes of younger
learners based on the idea that introducing them sooner will make
learning more effective. But young children learn differently and need
different learning environments. Overuse of direct teaching of young
learners in the full classroom group risks the fallacy that “input” will
automatically lead to “intake” that if we teach something, it has been
learned. But for young children, active involvement in the construction
of concepts is essential. We must provide input in child appropriate
ways and offer many opportunities for children to use language
purposefully as language develops. For example, once we have modeled
language and procedures for water experiments about things that float
and things that sink, or which container holds more water, we can
provide opportunities on the playground for children to experiment with
water and use the language in discussions. By asking questions and
making comments as children participate in their very purposeful play
and learning tasks.
- Help students develop and practice language through collaboration.
Children are social learners. While ensuring that students have access to vocabulary and structures they need and rich exposure to many kinds of literature is a very effective way to model high quality, academic language and
then supporting their language as needed, we provide opportunities for
learners to communicate with us and with one another. During the water
explorations, for example, one child could be encouraged to conduct the
experiments while others give instructions and ask questions about what
they see happening.
- Use multi-dimensional, thematically organized activities.
Provide
thematically organized activities and incorporate multiple dimensions
of learning and learning styles appropriate to younger learners
.Thematic organization offers us opportunities to cycle and recycle
related language and concepts so that we can support children as they
develop the complex connections that lead to learning. We need to
incorporate many kinds of child-development appropriate activities into
children’s exploration of themes: we might move like waves on the sea,
sing songs about sailing on the ocean, draw pictures of our experiments
or our favorite water creatures, weigh and measure water, solve problems
about sharing lemonade, read and reflect on a story about a mother duck
temporarily losing one of her little ones, and, with children, write
reports about what we are learning and thinking about.
- Provide comprehensible input with scaffolding.
Provide
rich yet comprehensible input with supportive scaffolding from teacher,
context, and peers to help learners work at the ZPD or “the growing
edge” providing tasks and concepts that children can accomplish or
acquire with just a little instruction and support. When children can
perform these tasks independently, the growing edge changes or expands,
and teachers then support learners with slightly more difficult tasks
and concepts. Since teachers must continually focus on providing input
and requests for output that children will need to perform at the next
level, they must use careful observation and classroom-based assessment
to know their children’s capabilities well. Scaffolding activities for
reading and writing might include reading a story aloud, providing
graphic organizers to help children understand and discuss the language
patterns and structure of a story, and shared writing with children from
the graphic organizer. Integrate language with content.
Teaching
language for age-appropriate academic content has several advantages:
Students learning two languages in school in a bilingual setting
curriculum can be integrated across languages, so that the children in
L2 (second-language) classrooms encounter the same concepts that they do
in L1 (first language) classrooms but with new labels, both reinforcing
the content-area learning and facilitating the new language learning
because it is based on what children already know. In a L2 setting,
teaching language through content means that students’ academic learning
is not delayed while they learn language. Rather, they have the
opportunity to learn language in age-appropriate, stage appropriate
activities that will prepare them for grade-level academic content.
- Validate and integrate home language and culture.
Continued
development of children’s home language will only support development
of a new language. Another misunderstanding of how language develops
that is common outside linguistic and language educational circles is
that a first language can hinder or interfere with a second. Rather,
students with good academic learning in their first language are clearly
at an advantage when they begin to learn additional languages. When a
child “breaks the code” or “joins the literacy club” and understands the
basic concepts of reading in one language, this does not need to be
re-learned in the target language. Rather, students now need to learn
only new words, new sounds, and new written codes – no small task, but a
much easier one than learning to read in a new language when a child
doesn’t have literacy concepts. As language educators, we can help young
learners use their knowledge and learning experiences of their home
language to expand their learning in a second language. Acquiring a new
language should clearly be an additive process and should never
necessitate losing one’s mother tongue.
- Provide clear goals and feedback on performance.
Children
want to do right. They need to know when they’ve achieved a goal and
when they still have more to learn. We must establish clear language and
content goals for learners and provide learners with feedback on their
progress toward those goals. We can also, in developmentally appropriate
ways, encourage learners to begin to evaluate their own progress toward
accomplishing goals to help them become independent, self motivated
learners.
The
teacher must devote as much individual attention as possible to teach
children. An important process of learning is encouraging and commending
the children for their efforts.
2.3. Definition of Question Tags
According to Huddleston and Pullum (2002:934), “A tag question are formed with shall we?/ will we? (instead of will you?/ won’t you?), and negation can be formed either with do not/don’t or just with notwithout changing the semantic scope”. It means that Question tags positive the answer must be negative.
According to Raymond (2002:104), “questions tags is mini questions which we put on the end of a sentence”. It means that In questions tags use the auxiliary verb, for the present ,past and future. Use do/does/did/was/were/have/has/had/shall.
According
to Wren & Martin (2003:305), “question tags is a common practice in
conversation to make a statement and ask for confirmation; for example:
Positive sentence
|
negative tag
|
it’s very hot,
|
isn’t it?
|
Ann will be here soon,
|
won’t she?
|
Tom should pass his exam,
|
shouldn’t he?
|
They Came by car,
|
didn’t they?
|
Negative sentence
|
Positive tag
|
Tom won’t be late,
|
Will he?
|
They don’t like us,
|
Do they?
|
That isn’t George over here
|
Is it?
|
You haven’t seen Ann today,
|
Have you?
|
You couldn’t do me a favour,
|
Could you?
|
The writer concludes that question tags is mini questions which put on the end of a sentence and ask for confirmation. questions tags is not only giving question to the student. But also how the teacher delivers the question to the student.Actually, question Tags use for short question but easy to learn.
2.4 Definition of Games
According
to Hadfield (1998:4) “A game is an activity with rules, a goal and
element of fun”. It mean that games are a vital part of a teacher’s
equipment, not only for language practice they provide, but also for the
therapeutic effect they have. They can be used at any stage of a class
to provide an amusing and challenging respite from other classroom
activity and are especially useful at the end of along day to send
students away feeling cheerful about their English class. Games can be
the media to teach young learners for some reasons.
According
to Wright, et al (1997:1), “games can be found to give practice in all
the skills (reading, writing, listening, and speaking), and for many
types of communications (e.g. encouraging, criticizing, agreeing,
explaining)”. Games are used to make the children
easier to understand and remember vocabularies in some topics. By using
games, the children do not feel that they learn something through that
activity. Through games the students become active learners. The teacher
should have a creative way in giving the materials to the students, one
of the ways is by doing some fun activities.
According
to Linse (2001:5) explain that “The games for the most part are
variations of favorite childhood games play purely for recreational
purposes” It mean that games have many variations that make students
interesting so the teacher can reach the purpose of teaching through
creating a new game that relevant with the subject.
According
to Shaptoshvili (2002 : 34 ) “ Games are important parts of a teacher’s
repertoire. Although they are recreational activities bye nature whose
main purpose is enjoyment. In the language learning process their
purpose is to rein force what has already been thought”. It means that
although the game is fun, but in the language learning it is more
difficult because the problem is suitable with the language.
The
writer concludes that games for children is facilitation and practice
on one way in learning process which playing something by doing some fun
activities. Games are using to make the children easier to understand
and remember the lesson in some topics. Teaching question tags using
games to the children can become active learners.