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  • Squid for brains TPRS with Chinese characteristics

TPRS with Chinese characteristics

€19,75
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Instruction guide for teachers of Chinese and other languages with special characteristics. Effective strategies and skills will help you make language easy for your students.

The rating of this product is 5 out of 5

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Have you read or heard about TPRS, but don’t quite know where to begin? A little hesitant about teaching a “hard” language like Chinese using Comprehensible Input? TPRS with Chinese Characteristics summarizes fifteen years of teaching Chinese using TPRS/CI. Focused on classroom practice, the book presents tested, effective strategies and skills that will allow you to leave the myth of Chinese as a “difficult” language far behind your students. From tones, Pinyin, and reading instruction to writing prompts and output, TPRS with Chinese Characteristics fills in the gap between “traditional” Spanish- and French-focused TPRS training and the special challenges faced by students of Chinese.

We recommend reading the blog by the author as well.

What readers say about this book: 

The right book at the right time! Stephen Krashen, Ph.D.

This is a superb book about how to teach so that students will indeed become, as the subtitle says, fluent and literate through comprehensible input. It is loaded with down-to-earth practical advice for any language teacher who wants her/his students to actually develop true proficiency.
I especially recommend it to all teachers who don't consider themselves advanced in TPRS or comprehensible input. However, even the most experienced TPRS and CI teachers are likely to learn something from Dr. Waltz's descriptions of her experiences. It may be an exaggeration, but there is much truth in legendary baseball manager Earl Weaver's opinion that it's what you learn after you know everything that counts.
Teachers of Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, Hebrew, Korean, Russian and other languages that do not use the Latin alphabet will get extra benefit from the sections on teaching reading and writing. Teachers of other tonal languages will profit from Waltz's practical approach to teaching tones. Contee Seely

Terry Waltz has taught Mandarin using comprehensible input for fifteen years. A PhD, international presenter, linguist, teacher, and professional translator, Waltz knows as much about comprehensible input as anyone alive. If you teach Chinese, you want to up your pedagogical game, and you want your students to learn with ease, this is where you start. Chris Stolz, TPRS teacher

I sure wish I had this book when assisting on classes 5 years ago. It would have been awesome. B.D., German teacher

I just started reading your book on TPRS with Chinese and I am IN LOVE!!! I teach French and have been a TCI teacher for about 8 years now. In the beginning, I saw a lot of success and was thrilled with the results. Lately, pressure from colleagues pushed me back to a more "combined" method of teaching. I about burst into tears when I read your comments on page 16 regarding the ineffectiveness trying to serve two masters. I feel re-inspired to fully embrace TCI and to see what my students can do when I put my whole heart into this method. A.B., French teacher

docentenhandleiding / story-asking / storytelling / teacher's guide / TPRS
Author Terry Waltz
Adaptation --
Year of publication 2015
ISBN 978-0692442906
CERF level (Common European Reference Framework) --
Includes TPRS instruction Yes
Language of instruction English

The rating of this product is 5 out of 5

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Wat lezers over dit boek zeggen:

The right book at the right time! Stephen Krashen, Ph.D.

This is a superb book about how to teach so that students will indeed become, as the subtitle says, fluent and literate through comprehensible input. It is loaded with down-to-earth practical advice for any language teacher who wants her/his students to actually develop true proficiency.
I especially recommend it to all teachers who don't consider themselves advanced in TPRS or comprehensible input. However, even the most experienced TPRS and CI teachers are likely to learn something from Dr. Waltz's descriptions of her experiences. It may be an exaggeration, but there is much truth in legendary baseball manager Earl Weaver's opinion that it's what you learn after you know everything that counts.
Teachers of Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, Hebrew, Korean, Russian and other languages that do not use the Latin alphabet will get extra benefit from the sections on teaching reading and writing. Teachers of other tonal languages will profit from Waltz's practical approach to teaching tones. Contee Seely

Terry Waltz has taught Mandarin using comprehensible input for fifteen years. A PhD, international presenter, linguist, teacher, and professional translator, Waltz knows as much about comprehensible input as anyone alive. If you teach Chinese, you want to up your pedagogical game, and you want your students to learn with ease, this is where you start. Chris Stolz, TPRS teacher

I sure wish I had this book when assisting on classes 5 years ago. It would have been awesome. B.D., German teacher

I just started reading your book on TPRS with Chinese and I am IN LOVE!!! I teach French and have been a TCI teacher for about 8 years now. In the beginning, I saw a lot of success and was thrilled with the results. Lately, pressure from colleagues pushed me back to a more "combined" method of teaching. I about burst into tears when I read your comments on page 16 regarding the ineffectiveness trying to serve two masters. I feel re-inspired to fully embrace TCI and to see what my students can do when I put my whole heart into this method. A.B., French teacher

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