Thanks so much, Larry, for your last post. Your example of your wife is excellent and exactly the example I use in class (anecdote about a Spanish friend commenting that he preferred the person I am when speaking Spanish over the one I am when speaking English, not because of the language, but rather because of the personality changes he noted through the change of voice).
Your comments in the second paragraph are also quite on the mark.
"Note, especially, the variety of communicative uses he introduces."
These are objectives that can be gleaned from the material in question, from any material that will be used in class, and that must be identified by the teacher before entering the class in order to highlight them through the activities using the materials. Class preparation is not simply noting down what page or exercise you will cover, but most importantly, the reasons and the objectives for covering that material with that particular group of students.
"He is not so much interested that they pronounce every word "correctly" .... but emphasises that they pronounce clearly (it can be understood) and appropriately to the context."
In my classes, the clear pronunciation of individual words is considered an "error" and my students rapidly learn to correct that habit, especially when they listen to me and realize that I never say "to" or "at" or "on" as a separate entity but rather use it as an important part of the whole. If they want to spit out entire sentences, they have to stop trying to do so using individual words.
"Drill it most certainly is, but revel has a specific, definite, and logically supportable reason for drilling like this."
This reason is supported in a number of teaching theories: Remembering is Repetition. There is no discipline in the world that does not require the repetition of its most basic parts in order to construct its complexity. I have mentioned ballet and music many times before as examples, but driving a car, washing the dishes, reading a novel, all of these are activities heavily based on habit, and habit is nothing more than the repetition of action.
"It takes preparation and skill to lead this kind of drill...."
I must admit that it took me about a year to get a handle on this type of drill work. It has improved my own English very much. It has made my articulatory apparatus more flexible and thus has aided my learning of Spanish (which, by the way, I have learned applying my own "method"). Though it is not now always necessary (I've been drilling this way for twenty years), I usually go over a new exercise a couple of times before presenting it to a class. I am supposed to be, after all, the expert.
"....done with sensitivity and attention to the students' "boredom scale", it can be fun."
It is incredible fun! Not only with kids, who are more open to sing-alongs and chants. Adults may be more reticent to singing, but I am a domineering teacher and they have no choice and finally recognize the value of the exercise when they feel they are communicating. I remember one particularly long drill that practiced "There's a" and "There are" that I did with adults. Nearly thirty sentences "There's a book in the room, There's a table in the room, There are two windows in the room." etc... that we did without even pausing for breath. At the end of the exercise the students broke out spontaneously in applause, congratulating themselves and me for the experience. Be firm from the first day and you will soon find your students "trained" into doing just about anything.
Well, tomorrow morning, a new step for all of you to contemplate and perhaps try out in your classrooms.
Thanks again Larry (we're creating a monster here!

peace,
revel. [/i] [/i]