What is it about?
Storytelling provides young learners with language exposure and context-the natural environment to acquire language. Therefore, it can create a greater impact on learners for remembering vocabulary and understanding the meaning of a given text, as well as form some habits for foreign language learners, such as the use of some specific pairs of words, which has been shown in the findings of this project. This nurtures learner’s graduation to automaticity in using language and develops their reading-comprehension.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
Regarding the practical implications of this case study, the findings of the role of storytelling and the role of time in improving students’ reading-comprehension have important implications for L2 English teachers, especially for the ones teaching English for young learners. Due to the fact that learners need time to become successful language users, who not only understand but also analyze and use language fluently without thinking much about the forms or the rules, teachers should not over-analyze language forms. Instead, they should provide learners with an inductive process of language exposure, including the use of storytelling.
Perspectives
This paper is all originated from a study researching the effect of storytelling in helping students read and comprehend English by carrying out an experiment with two groups, namely, the control and the experimental in a semi private primary school in Tarragona, Spain. This study carries an important value, as it proves the effect of storytelling in improving students' ability of remembering vocabulary and understanding separate sentences, as well as points out the role of time in students' progress of mastering a foreign language.
Tú Anh Hà
Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Assessing storytelling as a tool for improving reading comprehension in the EFL primary classroom, English Teaching Practice & Critique, April 2020, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/etpc-11-2018-0096.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







