Not of course that the answer is necessarily Dogme, but I do like anything that encourages teachers to make a more principled selection of materials and texts (with an eye, and ear, to more authentic spoken interaction - "demonstration"/exemplification, "practice" etc. The same phrases may occur again and again, and would, in a course constructed along more real-time lines. Some things can't be rushed with lots of handwaving, but need given and new say to be or better become established etc).
Just out of interest (not that it's from a textbook, but it is a textbook example of dodgy discourse nontheless), here's a gem that was posted over on the Japan forum recently (in reply to a request for 5-minute activities with which to wow a local Board of education hiring for for JHS AET positions - I didn't bother voicing any objections there, because doubtless it would've been deemed unconstructive, off-topic, confrontational or whatever (besides, there were enough general complaints about its unsuitability for at least Japanese JHS students)):
Lambert Sauveur is is!The easiest formula I think is to have the "students" pair up and do drills back and forth. You'd be amazed how quickly five minutes pass by.
Here is an example:
"OK, students, what are some good foods?"
"Why do you like them?"
"What are some bad foods?"
"Why do you not like them?"
Now ask one student "what food do you like?" and "Why," and do the same for "bad food."
Now tell the students to "find a partner," and ask each other what foods they like and don't like, and why, then switch roles.
After a few repetitions, introduce harder vocabulary with leading questions like this:
"You don't like candy because it makes you...?" "Fat!"
"Who makes you eat vegetables?" "Mom!"
More repetitions.
Introduce some more complex sentences if you have time, like "What do you like to eat on vacation?" Always try these out on one student before asking the whole class to perform the question in pairs.
Congratulations, your five minutes are over!
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=g2e7 ... #PPA218,M1