Dr. Stephen Krashen Plenary KOTESOL International Conference 2011

Dr Stephen Krashen
Seeking a Justification for Direct Instruction
Dr. Krashen's website: www.sdkrashen.com/
More about KOTESOL at koreatesol.org/
More videos at koreabridge.net/kotesol2011
Produced by Sliced Pictures
www.slicedpictures.com

Пікірлер: 89

  • @thedeadscientist
    @thedeadscientist12 жыл бұрын

    In my opinion, Krashen has the best ideas of how language is acquired.

  • @SWALAguangzhou
    @SWALAguangzhou9 жыл бұрын

    i speak seven languages,and learning Chinese now, i hope my memory will be intact when i am 90 years

  • @MohsenRezazadeh
    @MohsenRezazadeh Жыл бұрын

    I found his speech to be incredibly impressive - it was both humorous and informative, and also academically sound. 😊

  • @mahindasiriwardena7404
    @mahindasiriwardena74043 жыл бұрын

    This video has been gone pubic 9 years ago. However, I heard of Prof. Krashen accidentally just a month ago. The moment I listened to his speech I was mesmerized by his voice, his fluency, the subject matter he was discussing, the richness of the sentences he used etc. I am learning English as a second language and in actual fact not reached its full fluency yet. After 13 years of schooling and 4 years at the university, I had learnt hardly any English, even though it was a subject in our curriculum for nearly a decade. I have learnt some English, not because I had a good teacher, but I had a motivation to learn it from the day I left school at the age of 19 in 1987. It's the sheer pleasure I found in learning English that has brought me to some appreciable level. My reading and listening have given me the foundation knowledge. That's why I agree to Dr. Krashen's philosophy. Our country has been a British colony for more than hundred years. But unfortunately, today, there's hardly anyone who can speak correct English fluently. English has been an asset of the small elite of the society. The majority have been blaming the British colonialism and English, putting all the blame for the current ills of the country on the British rulers. Educationists, policymakers in the field of education, politicians making decisions about education from the apex level, university gurus, educated people and the students do not know the changes happened in the field of, specially, English teaching and learning. This is an unfortunate situation for us in this island country, Sri Lanka. I pray that the eyes of those who are responsible become open to sources of this type and the right policies are formulated for the younger generation to learn English the correct way! My sincerest regards to Prof. S D Krashen, whose voice I love very much ! Your voice is good to practice pronunciation. I wish you longevity, happiness and success in all your endeavors!

  • @sheltonLE
    @sheltonLE9 жыл бұрын

    He is so right about the reading. I learned English as a second language in school and I got really good at it after I had read Harry Potter (original version) in 6th grade.

  • @abdulazi1
    @abdulazi19 жыл бұрын

    Peace/blessings! What an outstanding video Dr. Krashen, thanks!

  • @danielblanco2945
    @danielblanco29458 жыл бұрын

    I've been following Dr. Krashen since I decided to be more serious about academic studies on Language Acquisition! He is indeed an obligatory reference on EFL/ESL studies! I wish I had a chance to interview him!

  • @sultanal-beshri7536
    @sultanal-beshri75367 жыл бұрын

    free voluntery reading is the key success .

  • @fuzznakano
    @fuzznakano11 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff. He is easy & fun to listen to &what he says makes sense. Tokyo.

  • @marcosmorenobrazil
    @marcosmorenobrazil12 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful video...Loved it!!!! Thanks for posting.

  • @user-hh7wm6nr2e
    @user-hh7wm6nr2e6 жыл бұрын

    Am I the only one who did not like the joke about being Dr.Krashen's PA made by the lady in the intro? Why are so many people speaking at conferences trying to be so artificially entertaining these days? I did enjoy Krashen's speech. He did well)

  • @KeePassDownload
    @KeePassDownload11 жыл бұрын

    Great presentation.

  • @dianarearden
    @dianarearden12 жыл бұрын

    He is awesome!

  • @silverfox7208
    @silverfox720812 жыл бұрын

    I love this man!!!!

  • @annikawawrzyn7629
    @annikawawrzyn76299 жыл бұрын

    I wish I could talk to him. He is amazing!

  • @banglangtim2867
    @banglangtim286710 жыл бұрын

    This guy is simply a genius. I use the word simply because he has taken the most obvious answer and made people smell all of the bullshit they have creative over the years. Inspire kids to read. Its simple.

  • @xochortizmartinez2433
    @xochortizmartinez24336 жыл бұрын

    LOVELY!!!

  • @alejandravazquez8340
    @alejandravazquez834010 жыл бұрын

    Genius.. not less than that.

  • @ementalerlynx4727
    @ementalerlynx47278 жыл бұрын

    Do Koreans have more difficulties with learning English than me? (coming from Croatia). The beautiful lady, intro, I had really to listen carefully ..

  • @chubashijin
    @chubashijin10 жыл бұрын

    good information

  • @mostrolopo
    @mostrolopo11 жыл бұрын

    Krashen rules. nuff said. Krashen es lo maximo! Krashen est le meilleur!

  • @hl8580
    @hl85806 жыл бұрын

    Come on Korea

  • @the_neutral_container
    @the_neutral_container12 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking that! I think there may have been some bad cuts - you can see them clapping at one point and not make a sound. Maybe the editor thought there was too little of them.

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    15:30 comprehensible output

  • @pelcenglishcourses1841
    @pelcenglishcourses18415 жыл бұрын

    Great speech summarising most of Krashen's leanings. Audience members half asleep but they're probably fixed in their grammar-drill ways.

  • @kariecarter
    @kariecarter11 жыл бұрын

    Is it by accident or all youtube's video I get are or have a relation with Korea???? hahaha Anyway this man is amaizing I respect him so much

  • @olifiarachma4349
    @olifiarachma43497 жыл бұрын

    Hi, I'm Olifia from Indonesia. Anyone can give me more information about GPRS or TPRS (honestly I can't hear clearly about that, 18:49) and papap grammar. thank you. a lots of love from Indonesia for amazing Dr. Krasen

  • @Williamottelucas
    @Williamottelucas10 жыл бұрын

    Is it just me, or do most of the audience members -when we see close-ups of individuals- look as if they haven't a clue what Krashen is talking about?

  • @georgiakay1209

    @georgiakay1209

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** ha ha ha you're right!

  • @yusufpolat228

    @yusufpolat228

    8 жыл бұрын

    +William Lucas Most probably it's because they didn't record Krashen and the audience at the same time. They must have recorded the audience seperately and scattered the parts of that video into Krashen's speech totally randomly. That's the reason why it looks kinda weird.

  • @Williamottelucas

    @Williamottelucas

    8 жыл бұрын

    That would explain it

  • @katiespence3980

    @katiespence3980

    8 жыл бұрын

    Yes they are being polite, but I bet not one of them is concentrating on what he says...what a waste.

  • @ementalerlynx4727

    @ementalerlynx4727

    8 жыл бұрын

    +William Lucas The don't have a clue. at all ... :(

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    17:50 linguistics with Chomsky

  • @davidsamirmartinezortega2870
    @davidsamirmartinezortega28705 жыл бұрын

    Is that Kumaravadivelu sitting on the left at 20:15 ?

  • @BigSirZebras
    @BigSirZebras11 жыл бұрын

    is the same true for black or green tea?

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    13:40 applied linguistics

  • @Visual_Insight
    @Visual_Insight8 жыл бұрын

    i wish i could sit infront of you and listen to you.

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    31:00 spelling example and text structure

  • @TopSpinWilly
    @TopSpinWilly12 жыл бұрын

    Is there an easy way to find the next, following video.?

  • @joeldiaz5857
    @joeldiaz58574 жыл бұрын

    Smart witty and funny.

  • @epsilon910
    @epsilon91012 жыл бұрын

    Skip to 3:15 to get to Krashen

  • @scarletovergods
    @scarletovergods11 жыл бұрын

    seeing anything strange at 38:25?

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    42:00 gramática

  • @rodericksibelius8472
    @rodericksibelius84723 жыл бұрын

    Dr. Stephen Krashen = The Bruce Lee of Language Acquisition with Noam Chomsky as his Sparring Partner.

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    34:18 #palabras skill building hypothesis

  • @anhpham1461
    @anhpham14615 жыл бұрын

    lmao he is so hilarious.

  • @sanatabane1141
    @sanatabane1141 Жыл бұрын

    Does he have a channel on KZread??

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    18:40 TPRS

  • @AquiHeme
    @AquiHeme12 жыл бұрын

    He had very great ideas, but I don´t think they are the best.

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    12:17 empieza

  • @redrickschuhart4065
    @redrickschuhart40653 жыл бұрын

    33:10

  • @javieruriel
    @javieruriel5 жыл бұрын

    I have a question, how blind people get comprehensible input? How they learn the language?

  • @javieruriel

    @javieruriel

    5 жыл бұрын

    Alex Barboza sorry I mean blind people.

  • @keegster7167

    @keegster7167

    5 жыл бұрын

    +Frank R Pilot Audio and/or braile.

  • @dvp8748
    @dvp87485 жыл бұрын

    like a politician, he says one important word among one thousand

  • @KimCyunHi
    @KimCyunHi11 жыл бұрын

    How bored is the lady on the right at 10:50?

  • @takforalt
    @takforalt12 жыл бұрын

    I was disturbed by 2 things: The clips of the audience where spliced in not in synch with Krashen's lecture. Second, felt that the audience was, for the most part, uptight. This was a fun lecture and yet the people looked so serious! Krashen, is brilliant and a funny guy and so laugh a little people. Geeish

  • @deborahcomiskey5368

    @deborahcomiskey5368

    Жыл бұрын

    The research he uses to discount phonics is done deceptively. It has been devastating to about 20% of students who need it, and it's sickening. I think you can see it in their faces.

  • @nutterr
    @nutterr12 жыл бұрын

    Krashen the party. AAAWWWWWWWWWWWWWYeeeeaaAAAAAAHHHHH

  • @TopSpinWilly
    @TopSpinWilly12 жыл бұрын

    Studied /spanish grammar 6 yrs.2hrs 1 day/week/3 yrs/community center & still have pronoun difficulty I understand grammatically.but when reading often run into trouble, I read mostly only text book I am going to try reading/listening a lot more I would like to read stuff that is heavy on pronouns. Am I still too stuck on grammar or maybe a bit anal? Thanks for the great ideas and methodology I will search tprs'

  • @fernandocortes1187
    @fernandocortes11872 жыл бұрын

    38:00 predictores del TOEFL

  • @CyberMedic1000
    @CyberMedic10004 жыл бұрын

    I am very confused. Dr Krashen is highly respected, yet how come I don't see his knowledge being implemented in Korea's English education system? From what I gather, the EFL industry is very textbook based. What I mean by that, is that people here seem to think that you learn English by writing in a textbook. There is no room for a teacher make use of any teaching methods. If kids didn't write in their textbook that day, then parents get angry and think you are a bad teacher.

  • @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    4 жыл бұрын

    Obviously, much more money can be made by teaching through traditional methods, just that fact is already a big motivation for academies to refuse using different ways. The whole method would eventually lead to students not needing the academies as much (Dr. Krashen's method is quite individual centered). Academies in Korea are quite a huge deal, teachers earn a lot of money and some have crowded classrooms. The reason is: students are mostly tests oriented. They are fixed on getting the highest grades. So, for that goal, grammar and text/book traditional learning methods should be enough to get good scores on the exams (work scenery is very competitive for young people, so being top students is of great importance). Please, don't be offended, it's just what I see.

  • @CyberMedic1000

    @CyberMedic1000

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-wz6pj4zu5d hi there, yes you are right. Everything is centered around getting high scores, but not necessarily being able to use English effectively. I'm not sure about the earning money thing. The average salary for an EFL teacher in Korea isn't that great. When I worked in China I made nearly double of what I make in Korea. Maybe the Korean teachers make more money. I reckon the best thing is just to accept how things are in Korea. Koreans have their own thing going on and it's not up to me to change their system. I will probably quit teaching in a few years and start a new career.

  • @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@CyberMedic1000 about the money thing, I was thinking more about the teachers of big academies where students spend a lot of time there having big classes to pass highly competitive civil servant exams (but that does apply to all subjects, not only english). You're right, koreans have made up their minds on what teaching methods they want for their kids. It's hard enough in the west to convince someone to drop grammar as a primary source of learning... so we can imagine how much harder it must be in a much more conservative society where they want to SEE the progress in their face (i.e. workbooks, tests and grades as proof of "learning"). Obviously, it does not work very well, realistically, as you said yourself, but it suits their style and its comfortable, so why change it? (that's the mindset). May I ask why do you think about changing careers? you dont think a teacher can autonomously integrate dr. Krashen's method in the classroom? I've been wondering about that, how it works.

  • @CyberMedic1000

    @CyberMedic1000

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-wz6pj4zu5d The problem is that there is rarely time to do anything else in class. You go in, take attendance, and then supervise the students while they complete the textbook quota for the day. You also have to make sure that you leave the HOLY CIRCLE on each page immediately, or else you incur the wrath of the tiger mom and be accused of not caring about the children. So between marking books in class and helping kids complete their work before the bell rings there isn't much time for anything else. And that is why I want to quit teaching. I am not a teacher but rather a supervisor.

  • @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    @user-wz6pj4zu5d

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@CyberMedic1000 Enough said ... sounds harsh indeed, I get it. Well, thank you for the kind replies, I hope you find a good path moving forward.

  • @horkade
    @horkade12 жыл бұрын

    One person doesn't drink coffee.

  • @pels125B
    @pels125B3 жыл бұрын

    Wow subscried^^

  • @michaelenns8872
    @michaelenns88723 жыл бұрын

    Yoooooo, why did I understand "I am clearly brown" instead of I am Clara Lee Brown XD

  • @WML0418
    @WML041812 жыл бұрын

    Why do the audiences look so serious? Did Dr. Krashen make them suffer so much?

  • @jcarloslugo1279
    @jcarloslugo127911 жыл бұрын

    Spanish is a very difficult language, it takes a long time before we "crack" the language code of spanish, and even though after that the variety of spanish is huge: spain, central american, mexican, etc. English somehow is a lot easier to acquire. Be patient, get lost of exposure and practice and you´ll be on your way! good luck!

  • @spoudaois4535

    @spoudaois4535

    5 жыл бұрын

    Porque piensas eso? Espanol suena como se escribe. No es considerado dificil por linguistas.

  • @mohmeegaik6686
    @mohmeegaik66863 жыл бұрын

    I have been watching a few of Dr Krashen videos, and I find his presentation may be intended to be humorous but points given here are repetitive.

  • @purewater77887
    @purewater7788711 жыл бұрын

    The woman in the first 3 minutes is hard to understand. Also what's up with the sunglasses?

  • @keegster7167

    @keegster7167

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Claudia Gonzalez It's not just that they refuse. Well, it could be that they refuse, but not always. If you hear something even in a slightly different way, you may not understand it if you have not heard it much before probably because your subconscious automatically picks up on near-exactly repeated utterances, and if it is slightly different you'll analyse it as something different automatically. In other words, people need a certain amount of redundancy to understand (easily). Many features of the phonology should match rather than what is logically needed. Or I could be wrong, but I also couldn't understand parts of what she said, and a lot of it was more difficult than the usual native speaker.

  • @horizonkage
    @horizonkage9 жыл бұрын

    On Paper one, I used to know a lovely lady that did all those things and died of Alzheimers. The dementia was not not discovered until a reasonably advanced age and the decline was quite rapid over a couple of years.

  • @LuisAlvarez-qv4ko

    @LuisAlvarez-qv4ko

    9 жыл бұрын

    I don't recall him saying it was "the cure..."

  • @horizonkage

    @horizonkage

    9 жыл бұрын

    I didn't deny it didn't work. Im saying it is quite possible it helped her a lot. Thats why it didnt didn't show until she was quite advanced in age.

  • @TheHaining
    @TheHaining3 жыл бұрын

    Yet another case of people mistaking ability to entertain for being right. It is obvious that reading is beneficial for a wide range of purposes but don't expect everyone to have hours every day to dedicate to reading to learn a language. There are more time-effective ways that Krashen (may I say 'arrogantly') dismisses.

  • @davidthegoldsmith4195

    @davidthegoldsmith4195

    2 жыл бұрын

    What ways would you say are more time-effective? I want to speak German, but don't have much time.

  • @EnglishOnlineLearning
    @EnglishOnlineLearning8 жыл бұрын

    Krashen is bombarding the poor audience lol !

  • @slicksalmon6948
    @slicksalmon69482 жыл бұрын

    I love Stephen Krashen...really. But, he has given the same lecture for 40 years. Same pauses; same jokes; same spots. What we need is an update on his 1982 book. Have any commercial language learning methods emerged which are out-performing traditional methods? Be specific. Name names. Why is French In Action so beloved in spite of the fact that almost no one ever finishes the course? Is DuoLingo effective? Krashen loves Steve Kaufmann, yet Kaufmann is not an example of comprehensible input. He had 10 years of traditional teaching before he took the freighter to France. Update the material.

  • @pauld3327

    @pauld3327

    Жыл бұрын

    Kaufmann is definitely an exemple of comprehensible input. Lingq is all about input.

  • @slicksalmon6948

    @slicksalmon6948

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pauld3327 I meant that Kaufmann, himself, is not an example. He learned French, Mandarin and Japanese in classrooms. Those sessions certainly involved comprehensible input, but they were not based on comprehensible input. Furthermore, the most prominent military and intelligence language schools do not feature comprehensible input in low pressure environments. DLI, for example, features grammar and vocabulary in the highest stress environment possible. Professional language academies have rejected Krashen. Kaufmann’s LingQ service is very nice, but it is by no means the whole language learning meal.

  • @pauld3327

    @pauld3327

    Жыл бұрын

    @@slicksalmon6948 You have a point with the Defense Language Institute teaching grammar and vocabulary lists. Paul Nation promotes extensive reading like Stephen Krashen but also promotes software-based flashcards.

  • @jaedth
    @jaedth12 жыл бұрын

    Skip the first 6 minutes - ti's all intro drivel.