Elicitation terms
Across
- 4. Leading learners to notice and deduce grammar or vocabulary rules through examples and elicitation.
- 7. drawing out language or ideas from students rather than giving them directly.
- 9. using questions to verify students’ understanding of meaning or use.
- 10. supporting students’ responses and gradually reducing help.
- 11. pictures, flashcards, realia, or slides used to elicit vocabulary or ideas.
- 12. giving clues, gestures, or partial answers to help students produce the target language.
Down
- 1. questions with multiple possible answers that encourage thinking and discussion.
- 2. questions that have a specific short answer (e.g., yes/no, one word).
- 3. restating students’ answers in correct or more natural English.
- 5. group elicitation of ideas related to a topic.
- 6. the stage where elicitation activates prior knowledge or interest in the topic.
- 8. questions used to check that students understand what to do.