Introduction.xml 19 KB

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  4. <chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
  5. version="5.1">
  6. <title>Introduction</title>
  7. <section><title>AIM</title><para>It is the aim of the course to provide the student with a useful control of the structure
  8. of the spoken language and of a basic vocabulary which meets at least some of the
  9. specialized needs of the Foreign Service. After completion of the basic course the Foreign
  10. Service Officer should be able to make limited practical use of the language in his official
  11. duties and social obligations. He will furthermore have the means, given the proper
  12. surroundings and personal motivation, for continued rapid and efficient development of
  13. proficiency.</para></section>
  14. <section><title>MATERIALS</title>
  15. <para>The materials in this first volume of the text are organized into twelve lessons or units.
  16. Each unit contains a set of basic sentences for memorization. These are in the form of a
  17. dialog based on one or sometimes two specific situations in which a person might find
  18. himself in Germany. Notes to the basic sentences are provided as necessary to clarify
  19. occasional difficulties in vocabulary and idiom and to provide additional background on some
  20. cultural features unfamiliar to Americans. Notes on pronunciation are included in each of
  21. the first eight units. Phonological features which have been found to be particularly
  22. difficult for American students are here presented with explanations and pronunciation
  23. practice drills. The notes on grammar in each unit single out those structural features
  24. illustrated in the basic sentences which are appropriate for systematic consideration at
  25. that stage in the course. Substitution drills provide for the manipulation of forms by
  26. substituting specific items in fixed sentence frames. They are in­tended to build habits of
  27. association, so that in a given syntactic environment the appropriate grammatical form
  28. automatically comes to mind. As the German vocabulary is all familiar, no English
  29. equivalents are given in these drills. Variation drills provide for the manipulation of
  30. larger syntactic patterns. In each group a model sentence, underscored, serves as a guide.
  31. Associated with it are additional sentences incorporating the same syntactic pattern but in
  32. which most of the individual word items have been replaced. English equivalents are given to
  33. serve as cues for recall of the German variant sentences. Vocabulary drills provide both
  34. practice in the use of new vocabulary items and also allow for manipulation of sentence
  35. elements whose particular form and arrangement depends upon their association with that
  36. vocabulary item. The manipulation of both variation and vocabulary drills depends on the use
  37. of English equivalents. Specific translation drills are also provided, however. In most
  38. cases they present the material of the basic dialog in the form of a narrative. They thus
  39. provide content review of the basic sentences and practice in the transformation from active
  40. dialog to descriptive narration. The response drills are question and answer drills on the
  41. situations of the basic dialogs. Conversation practice and additional situations in out­line
  42. bridge the gap to free conversation with small pieces of supplementary dialog for acting out
  43. and situations providing for a freer play of the student's imagination. The finder list in
  44. each unit notes all new vocabulary which has been presented.</para>
  45. </section>
  46. <section><title>METHOD AND PROCEDURE</title>
  47. <para>This is a course in Spoken German; the forms and patterns of the language are
  48. intentionally colloquial. The emphasis in instruction is everywhere on speech, and an
  49. indispensable component of the learning process is the voice of a tutor, or instructor,
  50. whose native language is German. On no account should the student attempt to use these
  51. materials without either a native instructor or recordings of a native instructor's voice.
  52. The method of instruction incorporates guided imitation, repetition, memorization, pattern
  53. practice, and conversation.</para>
  54. <para>Working under the supervision of a linguist the tutor's role is to serve as a model for
  55. speech and to guide the student to accurate imitation by constant repetition and correction.
  56. The student's Job is to watch and listen to the tutor carefully and to imitate as exactly as
  57. he can the sounds which he hears. He must be prepared for constant correction and
  58. repetition. Each time however the instructor will give him a model to follow by repeating
  59. the item first. The student should never attempt to read from his text but should always
  60. wait until he hears the word or utterance as the tutor speaks it for him. As far as possible
  61. he should leave his book closed during the presentation of new dialog material and keep his
  62. eyes on the tutor, students will be asked to repeat in chorus and individually and will be
  63. expected to re­peat many, many times, even when their imitation has been good and accurate.
  64. Only by constant repetition after an authentic model for speech can habitual fluent and
  65. accurate reproduction of the sounds and forms of the foreign language be achieved.</para>
  66. <para>The basic sentences are preceded by "build-ups" giving the component parts of the
  67. utterance separately. Each new item which is introduced appears first as a build-up. The
  68. tutor will ask the students to repeat the build-ups separately first, then combined into
  69. larger units and finally the complete new sentence or utterance. The basic sentences are
  70. sub-divided into numbered sections, each to be treated as a unit, repeated in chorus and
  71. individually, with and with­out build-ups, until the students' imitation is satisfactory.
  72. Then a new section may be begun. The time required to cover each section in this way will
  73. differ widely depending on the size and ability of the class. After acceptable imitation and
  74. accurate pronunciation has been achieved in one or more sections they are assigned for
  75. memorization outside of class or repeated in class until memorized. The student should be
  76. able to give either the German sentence or its English equivalent on request or switch from
  77. one to the other and back again. The tutor will drill by repeating each sentence for each
  78. student in the class, then by giving each student a different sentence, repeating it for him
  79. first, and finally asking the students to recite the sentences in order, the first student
  80. the first sentence, the second student the second sentence, etc., without receiving a cue
  81. from the instructor. Repetition outside of class, preferably using recorded materials as a
  82. guide, should be continued to the point of over-learning. The student should not only be
  83. able to give the correct German sentence immediately upon hearing an English equivalent, at
  84. random selection, he should also be able to give the correct German sentence with equal ease
  85. and speed of response upon hearing its German cue. As a final step the students are expected
  86. to act out the basic dialog in entirety from memory, with the tutor or with other students.
  87. Only when the basic sentences have been mastered to this extent can they be considered to
  88. provide an adequate basis for control of the spoken language. It should be noted at this
  89. point that the English text accompanying the basic sentences is not primarily a translation
  90. but rather a set of conversational equivalents. Many apparent discrepancies will be found if
  91. the student, or the tutor, looks for word-for-word correspondence between the English and
  92. German text. It does not exist. Rather, in such and such a situation this is what is said in
  93. German and this is what is said in English.</para>
  94. <para>The pronunciation practice drills are to be taken up after the presentation of the basic
  95. sentences has been completed and memorization has been started. Items are arranged in groups
  96. according to the particular phonological feature concerned. Words in vertical columns
  97. present the same phonological feature in different environments. Several columns in a
  98. practice group contain related phonological features or related phonological environments in
  99. which the same feature recurs. Words are to be repeated first in chorus and then
  100. individually by each student after the tutor, at first following the vertical columns and
  101. later, for variation and comparison, horizontally across the page. Particular attention
  102. should be paid to items in contrast. These are minimum meaningfully distinctive sound
  103. patterns, accurate control of which is important for communication and comprehension.
  104. Contrasting word pairs are linked by a dash, and after separate practice for accuracy the
  105. items should be repeated by pairs to bring out the exact distinctions between them.</para>
  106. <para>The notes on grammar are earmarked for home study. After each unit has been started and
  107. the first hour or more has been spent in class on repetition of the basic sentences the
  108. student should read through the grammar notes to acquaint himself with the grammatical
  109. points presented in that unit. During the whole time a particular unit is being worked on in
  110. class the student should continue to study the grammar section. Many questions which he may
  111. feel tempted to raise in class will be found to be answered in the notes on grammar. The
  112. tutor is specifically requested not to discuss the language with his students, and the
  113. students are asked not to ply him with questions. Time in class is to be spent using and
  114. manipulating the language and not in talking about it. In each unit one or more grammatical
  115. features are presented, and the basic sentences have been designed, as far as is possible
  116. consistent with natural expression, to incorporate and illustrate those features. Each point
  117. of grammar discussed is illustrated by sentences which are natural utterances in the
  118. language. They are taken in nearly every case from the basic sentences of the current or
  119. preceding units. Thus the examples are already familiar to the student, and the patterns
  120. they contain, which will be drilled and practiced in the sections to follow, are patterns
  121. which the student has already begun to assimilate by memorizing the sentences of the
  122. dialog.</para>
  123. <para>After the basic sentences of a unit have all been repeated several times and memorization
  124. has been well begun, work can be started on the drills. The material is designed to provide
  125. a maximum of additional experience in using the forms and patterns of the language learned
  126. in the basic sentences. It is not assumed, however, that the learner is automatically able
  127. to transfer the experience gained in the basic sentences to error-free manipulation of these
  128. forms and patterns. The drills are by no means a test of what the student can do with the
  129. elements given him. It is a matter of no great importance whether he can or cannot "figure
  130. them out" by himself. The goal is to learn to speak the language accurately and fluently,
  131. and this aim can only be achieved by correct repetition of the forms and patterns involved.
  132. Therefore all the sentences in each drill group are first to be repeated after the tutor in
  133. their correct form. The tutor then cues each student in turn for repetition of one of the
  134. drill sentences until all students have given all sentences correctly.</para>
  135. <para>In the substitution drills the model sentence and all its variants are first repeated in
  136. chorus after the tutor. He then gives the model sentence again, the class repeats it in
  137. chorus, after which each student is cued individually with an item to be substituted and
  138. repeats the sentence with the substitution called for. In some cases the cue is the exact
  139. form which fits into the sentence. In some cases a cue is given which requires the student
  140. to choose the proper form to fit the syntactic environment of the model. Regardless of which
  141. type of cue is given or how simple or complex the exercise may appear to be, the student's
  142. task is to make the substitution without hesitation and to repeat the sentence accurately at
  143. normal conversational speed. Although no English equivalents are given in the substitution
  144. drills and the first task is rapid, fluent and accurate manipulation of the material in
  145. German. The tutor may ask for spot translations into English here and there, and on the
  146. second or third repetition of the drill he may give English equivalents as word or sentence
  147. cues in place of the German cues provided.</para>
  148. <para>In most of the variation drills and in all of the vocabulary drills the cues take the form
  149. of equivalent English sentences. Basic procedure remains the same as in the substitution
  150. drills. All sentences in a given variation or vocabulary group are first repeated after the
  151. tutor in their correct form. The tutor then gives the pattern sentence again, and the
  152. students repeat it in chorus, after which they are required individually to recall and
  153. repeat the correct German sentences for which an English equivalent is given. Students may
  154. work with their books open here, covering up the right-hand side of the page on Which the
  155. German sentences are printed and taking their cues from the English sentences on the
  156. left-hand side of the page.</para>
  157. <para>Conversion drills require the conversion of one or more elements in a sentence from one
  158. form to another - singular to plural, present tense to past tense, etc. No English is
  159. provided for these sentences as a rule. However, as in the substitution drills the tutor may
  160. ask for a random spot translation into English, and he may go through the drill a second or
  161. third time giving English sentence cues for which the student gives the German
  162. equivalent.</para>
  163. <para>Translation and response drills, as noted above, are in most cases directly related to the
  164. basic sentences. In translation drills the procedure is similar to that followed in
  165. variation and vocabulary drills. Students may work with their books open, covering the
  166. German text and reading the English sentences themselves, or if preferred, books may be left
  167. closed while the tutor gives the English equivalents. In the response drills it is often
  168. appropriate for the tutor to address two or three questions to the same student and then two
  169. or three more to the next, so that the drill takes on a more natural character of
  170. conversation­al interchange. Both drills should be repeated in entirety several times,
  171. however, or until all students have had a chance to respond to all items.</para>
  172. <para>It will be noted that all drill material is provided with both a cue and a correct
  173. response, so that all may be prepared by the student outside of class and repeated and
  174. practiced by him as often as necessary to achieve complete accuracy and fluency. In many
  175. cases there is more than one possible response to a given cue, and instructors are
  176. encouraged to accept all responses which are truly equivalent. If a correct response has
  177. been given, however, instructors are not to suggest variant forms which may occur to them,
  178. as this only introduces unnecessary complexity of choice to an exercise which is difficult
  179. enough as it is.</para>
  180. <para>In the conversation practice brief conversations, usually on the same theme as the basic
  181. dialog, are read through by the tutor three or four times while students listen. Then the
  182. tutor takes one role while one student takes the other, and they repeat the conversation
  183. together. The student's aim here is not primarily to memorize and repeat exactly, but to
  184. give as accurate an equivalent as possible in his own words. After acting out the
  185. conversation with the tutor the student goes through it again with another student, he in
  186. turn with the next student, and so on until all have taken both parts in the dialog.</para>
  187. <para>The situations are brief descriptions, in English in the earlier units, later in German,
  188. of occurrences similar to those on which the basic dialogs are based. Two or more students
  189. then act out what has been described in their own way and using their ov.i words. They are
  190. free to use their imagination and fill in any supplementary details that occur to them. The
  191. whole conversation should not be prolonged however more than four or five minutes maximum
  192. duration. Then other students may try their hand at the same situation.</para>
  193. <para>The narratives, beginning with the fifth unit, are designed for reading purposes. In the
  194. early units they introduce a minimum of additional vocabulary and unfamiliar forms, and they
  195. may be used in the class for oral narration, the student re-telling in his own words what he
  196. has read. In later units some features of expository prose - matters of both form and style
  197. - which differ from normal spoken usage are introduced through the narratives in order to
  198. bridge the gap between conversational German and those reading skills of a specialized
  199. nature which require particular study and attention.</para>
  200. <para>The ultimate goal of the course, as has been stated above, is to speak accurately,
  201. fluently and easily. The text provides for the assimilation of all basic forms and patterns
  202. of the language by the guided imitation, memorization, and manipulation of a large number of
  203. sentences and by practice in confronting several widely occurring every­day situations.
  204. Actual living use of the language in free conversation is a necessary and essential adjunct.
  205. The tutor should therefore encourage his students from the start to use the language in
  206. every way possible, above and beyond what is provided for in the text. After the first few
  207. days of work both students and tutors should avoid the use of English in the classroom for
  208. any purpose at all, and they are encouraged to speak German outside the classroom as well.
  209. Only by constant use of the skill he is learning can the student hope to master it and
  210. retain it as a useful tool of his profession.</para></section>
  211. </chapter>