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4.5 Eliciting

What does it consist of?

Eliciting is a teaching technique in which the teacher draws out language, ideas or information from students instead of directly providing it.

Rather than explaining or translating, the teacher uses prompts such as:

  • questions
  • visuals
  • realia
  • gestures
  • definitions
  • partial sentences
  • examples

The aim is for students to actively produce the target word, structure or idea themselves.

According to Jeremy Harmer and Jim Scrivener, eliciting increases cognitive engagement and avoids over-teaching. It is also consistent with discovery learning principles and communicative methodology supported by the British Council.

Eliciting can be used:

  • before presenting new language (to assess prior knowledge)
  • during presentation (to guide discovery)
  • after practice (to consolidate learning)

It should be structured and purposeful, not improvised guessing.

What do we achieve with this technique?

  • activating prior knowledge
  • increasing learner engagement
  • promoting deeper cognitive processing
  • encouraging learner autonomy
  • diagnosing what students already know
  • reducing teacher talking time

Pedagogical foundation:

  • Constructivist learning theory: learners build knowledge actively.
  • Noticing hypothesis (Schmidt): students notice gaps when they attempt production.
  • Depth of processing theory: language retrieved is more likely to be retained.

It is highly effective at all levels, but especially:

  • Young Learners (with strong visual support)
  • A1–B1 (vocabulary and grammar presentation)
  • B2+ (guided discovery of grammar rules)

Example
Target word: expensive

Instead of saying:
“Expensive means it costs a lot of money.”
Teacher elicits:

  • Teacher shows a picture of a luxury car.
  • Teacher:
    “Is this cheap?”
  • Students:
    “No.”
  • Teacher:
    “Does it cost a lot of money?”
  • Students:
    “Yes.”
  • Teacher:
    “So if something costs a lot of money, we say it is…?”
  • Students:
    “Expensive.”
  • The teacher guides students to produce the word rather than giving it directly.
  • Another grammar example (Past simple):
  • Teacher writes:
    “Yesterday I ___ to the cinema.”
  • Teacher:
    “What is the past of ‘go’?”
  • Students:
    “Went.”
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