About TPRS
What is TPRS?
TPRS, short for Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling, is a language teaching approach based on the fact that the brain needs huge amounts of language input in order to be able to acquire a new language.
It was invented in the 1980’s by a Spanish teacher in the US, called Blaine Ray. He was trying to find a new way of teaching, influenced by the work Dr. James Asher (Total Physical Response) and, later on, of Dr. Stephen Krashen.
The result was a teaching method that focuses on the importance of teacher-student interaction, the use of massive amounts of comprehensible input (both orally and in reading), repeated exposure to language chunks, personalised conversations and co-created stories. Many teachers in the US and around the world contributed to the development of TPRS.
In recent years, TPRS 2.0 was developed, with a stronger focus on opportunities for students to speak and try out their new language.
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Why comprehensible input?
There is now broad consensus that getting a lot of rich, understandable input most important condition is for language acquisition. TPRS offers the teacher tools with which he/she can really provide a lot of input, which is for all students understandable is and also very polymorphous is. The input is largely narrative and contains many dialogues, initially mainly between characters in the stories and between teacher and students, later also between students themselves.
Why the repeated exposure to language chunks?
What all researchers and language didactics agree on is that much has to be repeated. There is still a difference of opinion about the number of repetitions required. It is often spoken of 5-15 or 7 repetitions. These numbers come from psychological research and concern the conscious withholding of information. Since TPRS strives for fluency, which requires lightning fast, unconsciously and automatically language information retrieval is necessary, TPRS assumes that there are much more reps needed than the aforementioned numbers. The number can, depending on the part of speech, degree of marking and meaning and emotional charge of individual words, range from 1 to 150 or even more.
Complex language tasks
Speaking and writing tasks are by definition complex and unguided within TPRS, because they are aimed at natural, flexible and communicative language use. Telling and restructuring stories in many variants requires flexible language skills at every level and higher cognitive skills such as structuring and arguing. Due to the many repetitions in the input that precedes these tasks, students are able to actually perform these complex tasks.
Meaningful Grammar
According to recent insights from research in cognitive linguistics, grammar in our brains does not exist in the form of rules, but generalizations. In the brain, every word is part of many networks, in which semantic and grammatical properties are linked. When acquiring our mother tongue, the brain receives enough comprehensible input (20,000 hours up to the age of 6 alone) to be able to puzzle out for itself which properties each word has and in which way all grammatically correct sentences can be composed.
In language classes, there simply isn't enough time to let our brains figure it out for themselves. Awareness and “awareness” of grammatical elements appears to be of great help in acquiring grammatical correctness more quickly. TPRS chooses to do this through very brief explanations about the meaning of grammatical elements in context, and then asking many, often contrastive, questions about the element in question, each time it reappears. This is a low-threshold and (because non-abstract) form of grammar instruction accessible to everyone, which has proven to be very effective.
Personalised conversations
All language didactics textbooks speak of the need to make the teaching material interesting for students by to establish a relationship with one's own world of experience from the students. TPRS takes this literally and makes the students' own living and experiential world the focus of the lessons.
On the one hand, students carry with their own ideas contribute to the stories that are made up in the classroom, and on the other hand, the teacher conducts conversations with students in which the teacher real interest shows and goes much deeper into the subject than usual. The high level of detail of information obtained with this (all within the bounds of propriety, of course, and with respect for the limits of the individual learner) makes these conversations also more interesting for the other students than the mere fact of whether someone is wearing a red or a blue shirt. In addition, all other students are consistently actively involved in the “personal conversations”.
The advantages of this method include: it automatically supplies the vocabulary required for this target group; students are more motivated when it comes to themselves; there are naturally use different verb forms than in the narrative part.​
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When can you use TPRS?
TPRS can be used as a stand-alone teaching method, especially in the first three years of the curriculum. However, many teachers who work with TPRS choose to use some techniques from TPRS, or only use TPRS at certain moments in the curriculum, for various reasons.
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So... can I combine TPRS with the teaching method used at my school?
In principle, this is not necessary, because with TPRS you can learn all language skills and therefore do not need a regular textbook. However, it is possible to combine, and in practice this is often done. Also read the article by Helen Hol and Barbara Hoevenaars about the TPRS practice in the Netherlands.
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