Friday, 12 August 2016

The Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing





A wolf found great difficulty in getting at sheep owing to the vigilance of the shepherd and his dogs. But one day it found the skin of a sheep that had been played and thrown aside, so it put it on over its own pelt and slow down among the sheep. the lamb that belongs to the sheep, whose skin the wolf was wearing, began to follow the wolf in sheep’s clothing; so, leading the lamb a little apart, he soon made a meal of her, and for some time he succeeded in deceiving the sheep and enjoying hearty meals.

The Goose with the Golden Eggs




Well, here is the story. One day a countryman was going to the nest of his goose and found there was an egg all yellow and glittering. When he took it up, it was as heavy as lead and he was going to throw it away, because he thought a trick had been played upon him. But he took it home on a second thought and soon found to his delight that it was an egg of pure gold. Every morning the same thing occurred and he soon became rich by selling its eggs. As he grew rich he grew greedy and thought to get at once all the gold the goose could give. He killed the goose and opened it:: only to find nothing.

The Faithful Lovers

The following story will be special for each of you who want to know the real meaning of love.
Hmm, there once lived a chief’s daughter who had many admirers. all the young men in the village wanted to have her for a wife and were all eager to fill her skin bucket when she went to the brook for water.
There was young man in the village. he was a good hunter but he was poor and had a mean family. He loved the maiden and wished he could marry her. So, one day when she went for water, he threw his robe over her head while he whispered in her ear: “will you marry me?”






For a long time the maiden acted as if she hadn’t heard anything, but one day she whispered back telling that she would be willing to marry him if he took a scalp.
So he made a war party of seven, himself and six other young men. Before they started, they sat down to smoke and rest beside a beautiful lake at the foot of a green grass and somehow as they looked at it. They had a feeling that there was something about it that was mysterious and uncanny.
One of the lover’s was so curious about it that he ventured into the knoll.  Four of the young men followed.  Having reached to the top of the knoll, all five began to jump and stamp about in sport.
But, suddenly they stopped. The knoll had begun to move toward the water.  It was a gigantic turtle! The five men cried out in alarm and tried to run, but it was to late! They cried; but the others could do nothing. In just a few moments, the waves had closed over them.
The others two men: the lover and his friend, went on, but heavy heart. After some days, they came to a river. Worn out with fatigue, the lover threw himself down on the bank. Fortunately, the lover’s friend came to help him.

The following days, his friend told him that he found a fish which he had cleaned and asked him to eat the fish together. The lover said that if he ate the fish, his friend had to promise to fetch him all the water that he could drink. When they had eaten, the kettle was rinsed out and the lover’s friend bought it back with full of water. The lover drank the water at a draught. Again his friend filled the kettle at the river and again the lover drank it dry but still asked for more water. The lover’s friend then took the lover to the river. When the lover saw the river, he walked to the river, sprang in, and lying down in the water with his head toward land, drank greedily.
Then he called out his friend. The friend came and was amazed to see that the lover was now a fish from his feet to his middle. Sick at heart he ran of a little away and threw himself upon the ground in grief. After awhile, he returned to find that the lover was now a fish up to his neck.

The friend went home and told his story. There was great mourning over the death of the five young men and for the lost lover. In the river, the lover had become a great 

Thursday, 11 August 2016

TIPS MENGHILANGKAN CEGUKAN

Pemicu cegukan

Sebagian besar cegukan berlangsung singkat atau hanya beberapa menit. Hal ini normal dan tidak perlu dikhawatirkan. Cegukan singkat ini diduga terpicu oleh beberapa hal, di antaranya akibat:
  • Minuman panas
  • Minuman bersoda
  • Minuman beralkohol
  • Mengonsumsi makanan pedas
  • Makan terlalu cepat
  • Merokok
  • Stres, takut, atau gembira
  • Perut yang kembung


Namun dalam beberapa kasus, cegukan juga ada yang bisa berlangsung lama, yaitu lebih dari dua hari. Biasanya cegukan seperti ini disebabkan oleh masalah kesehatan atau kondisi-kondisi yang mendasari, seperti:
  • Gangguan metabolisme, seperti hipoglikemia, hiperglikemia, dan diabetes.
  • Gangguan saraf vagus, misalnya akibat meningitis, faringitis, dan penyakit gondok.
  • Gangguan sistem saraf, seperti cedera berat pada otak, radang jaringan otak atau ensefalitis, tumor, dan stroke.
  • Gangguan pernapasan, seperti penyakit pleuritispneumonia, dan asma.
  • Reaksi psikologi, seperti stres, gembira, sedih, takut, atau syok.
  • Gangguan pencernaan, seperti obstruksi usus, radang usus, dan penyakit refluks gastroesofagus (GERD).
Cegukan yang berlangsung lama juga bisa disebabkan oleh konsumsi obat-obatan.
  • Obat-obatan kemoterapi untuk penanganan kanker.
  • Obat golongan opioid atau pereda nyeri, seperti metadon dan morfin.
  • Benzodiazepine atau obat penenang untuk mengatasi kecemasan.
  • Anastesi atau obat bius praoperasi.
  • Methyldopa,yaitu obat untuk hipertensi.
  • Barbiturate, yaitu obat pencegah kejang.
  • Kortikosteroid,yaitu obat untuk mengatasi pembengkakan dan radang.
Cegukan seringkali terjadi ketika kita sedang makan dengan terlalu cepat. Cegukan sendiri merupakan sebuah kontraksi tiba-tiba pada diafragma, di mana ruang antar pita suara menutup sehingga menyebabkan suara 'hik' yang terjadi berulang-ulang.

Bagaimana cara menyembuhkannya dengan cepat?
Nah ini cara menghilangkan cegukan dalam waktu 15 detik saja tanpa air minum. Tahapannya adalah sebagai berikut

1. Hirup udara sebanyak mungkin, dan penuhi paru-paru dengan udara.
2. Jika sudah, tahan napas selama 10 detik penuh.
3. Lalu telan udara tersebut.

Sebagian besar orang yang mempraktikan hal diatas telah berhasil, namun mungkin saja berbeda tiap orang tergantung pada tingkat penyebab cegukan kamu.
Selamat mencoba!

Cara Praktis & Hemat Hilangkan Komedo

Komedo merupakan penyumbatan pada pori-pori kulit sehingga muncul tonjolan kecil berwarna putih yang disebut whitehead dan yang berwarna hitam dikenal sebagai blackhead, pada sekitar kulit atau wajah anda. Terkadang komedo juga berwarna kekuningan. Biasanya sasaran utama munculnya komedo yaitu pada wajah, area hidung dan sekitar mata. Komedo dapat berkembang menjadi jerawat, yang dikenal sebagai papul atau pustule. Komedo secara umum biasanya muncul dan berkembang pada saat dan setelah masa pubertas, ketika kadar hormon menghasilkan sebum yang berlebih.Selain dengan facial, kamu bisa menghilangkan komedo cukup dengan uap air garam.






Caranya sebagai berikut :Siapkan :- baskom ukuran kecil (se lebar wajah)- air mendidih- 3 sdt garamLangkah-langkahnya :1. Hadapkan wajah di atas baskom kecil atau wadah yang berisi air mendidih ditambah garam, usahakan agar uap air menyentuh kulit wajah.2. Tutup kepala dengan handuk untuk mendapatkan uap yang maksimal.Tunggu kurang lebih selama 15 menit.3. Cuci muka dengan air dingin bersih.Cara ini sangat efektif karena uap akan membuka pori-pori kulit yang tersumbat. Trik ini tidak hanya akan menghilangkan komedo namun juga akan membuat kulitmu lebih lembab dan lembut. Uap air garam membantu untuk membuka pori-pori, melebarkan pembuluh kapiler darah di bawah kulit dan meningkatkan sirkulasi darah ke kulit. Kulitmu dijamin akan lebih sehat.Selamat mencoba ya!

4 Buah Yang Wajib Dikonsumsi Untuk Jantung Sehat


Jantung adalah rongga organ berotot yang memompa darah melalui pembuluh darah oleh kontraksi berirama yang berulang. Sarana jantung istilah yang terkait dengan jantung, dari kata Yunani cardia untuk jantung. Jantung adalah salah satu organ tubuh manusia yang berperan dalam sistem peredaran darah.Jantung terletak di rongga dada. Ukuran jantung kira-kira sebesar kepalan tangan dengan berat sekitar 300 gram. jantung dalam sistem sirkulasi berfungsi sebagai pompa darah. Jika penurunan fungsi jantung, kinerja jantung yang abnormal menyebabkan penyakit jantung. Ada beberapa jenis penyakit jantung disebabkan fungsi jantung yang abnormal sebagai berikut:







1. Penyakit Jantung Koroner Adalah penyumbatan pada pembuluh darah yang memberi makan otot jantung (arteri koroner) karena timbunan lemak dan kolesterol. Jika darah tidak mengalir sama sekali karena arteri koroner tersumbat, pasien dapat menderita serangan jantung fatal.

2. Penyakit Jantung Bocor Adalah suatu kondisi di mana ada lubang di septum jantung karena kelainan struktur jantung. Secara garis besar, penyakit ini merupakan penyakit bawaan. Dalam kasus jantung bocor, sirkulasi darah mengalir sirkulasi darah kotor ke net sehingga bayi menjadi biru. Jika terlalu banyak darah kotor sirkulasi darah beredar untuk membersihkan dan memasuki organ-organ vital seperti otak, bisa ada sesak napas, disertai kejang-kejang, dan bahkan kematian.


3. Penyakit Jantung Lemah Adalah suatu kondisi di mana jantung tidak dapat memompa cukup darah untuk jumlah anggota badan. Hal ini disebabkan semakin besar otot jantung sehingga kemampuannya untuk memompa akan ditolak. Ini adalah salah satu dari banyak konsekuensi dari tekanan darah tinggi atau hipertensi.

Untuk mencegah penyakit tersebut, ada baiknya anda mengkonsumsi buah-buahan yang dapat membantu menjaga kesehatan anda, diantaranya :
1. Blueberry
blueberry mengandung senyawa anthocyanin dan flavonoid yang merupakan antioksidan-- dapat menurunkan tekanan darah dan melebarkan pembuluh darah.

2. Jeruk citrus
citrus jika dikonsumsi memiliki 19 persen risiko lebih rendah terserang stroke. Buah yang kaya akan vitamin C ini juga memiliki keuntungan bagi risiko penyakit jantung, dengan mengonsumsi buah jenis ini maka jantung akan sehat setiap saat.

3. Alpukat
alpukat mengandung lemak sehat yang baik untuk kesehatan jantung.

4. Delima
mengandung banyak antioksidan, termasuk polifenol yang berguna untuk mencegah pengerasan & menormalkan laju pembuluh darah pada jantung.

Saturday, 23 July 2016

CHAPTER II THEORETICAL BACKGROUND

CHAPTER II
THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
A. Theoritical Description
1. Speaking
a. The Nature of speaking
According to Harmer (2001) that the ability to speak fluently presupposes not only knowledge of language features, but also the ability to process information and language spot. In addition, he says that effective oral communication requires the ability to use the language appropriately in social interactions that involves not only verbal communication but also paralinguistic elements of speech such as pitch, stress, and intonation. Moreover, nonlinguistic elements such as gestures, body language, and expressions are needed in conveying messages directly without any accompanying speech.
Harmer (2007) also says that good speaking activities can and should be extremely engaging for the students. If they are all fully and if the teacher has set up the activity properly and can then give sympathetic and useful feedback, they will get tremendous satisfaction from it. And finally, the more students have opportunities to activate the various elements of language. They have stored in their brains, the more automatic their use of these elements become. As a result, students gradually become autonomous language users. This means that they will be able to use words and phrases fluently without very much conscious thought.

According to Nunan (1989) that successful oral communication involves:
1) The ability to articulate phonological features of the language comprehensibly.
2)  Mastery of stress, rhythm, intonation patterns.
3)  An acceptable degree of fluency.
4)  Transactional and interpersonal skills.
5)  Skills in taking short and long speaking turns.
6)  Skills in the management of interaction.
7)  Skills in negotiating meaning.
8) Conversational listening skills (successful conversations require good listeners as well as good speakers).
9)  Skills in knowing about and negotiating purposes for conversations.
10)  Using appropriate conversational formulae and fillers.
From some definitions above it can be concluded that speaking skill is always related to communication. Speaking skill itself can be stated as the skill to use the language accurately to express meanings in order to transfer or to get knowledge and information from other people in the whole life situation.
b. Element of speaking
Harmer (2001) states that among the elements necessary for spoken production are following:
1) Connected speech
Effective speakers of English need to be able not only to produce the individual phonemes of English but also to use fluent connect speech. In connected speech sounds are modified (assimilation), omitted (elision), added (linking r), or weakened. It is for this reason that we should involve students in activities designed specifically to improve their connected speech.
2) Expressive devices
Native speakers of English change the pitch and stress of particular parts of utterances, vary volume and speed, and show by other physical and non-verbal means how they are feeling. The use of these devices contributes to the ability to convey the meanings.
They allow the extra expression of emotion and intensity. Students should be able to deploy at least some of such supra segmental features and devices in the same way if they are to be fully effective communicators.
3) Lexis and grammar
Spontaneous speech is marked by the use of a number of common lexical phrases, especially in the performance of certain language functions. Teachers should therefore supply a variety of phrases for different functions such as agreeing or disagreeing, expression surprise, shock, or approval.
4) Negotiation language
Effective speaking benefits from the negotiatory language we use to seek clarification and to show the structure of what we are saying.

2. Collaborative learning
a. The Nature of Collaborative Learning
“Collaborative Learning” is an umbrella term for a variety of educational approaches involving joint intellectual effort by students and teachers together. Usually, students are working in groups of two or more, mutually searching for understanding, solutions, meanings, or creating product. Srinivas (2012) says that collaborative learning is an instruction method in which learners work in groups toward a common academic goal. Collaborative learning assumes that knowledge is socially, rather than individually, constructed by communities of individuals and that the shaping and testing of ideas is a process in which anyone can participate.
The most important factor in language teaching is not on the methodology or approach but rather on the understanding on what happens inside the learner when he/she is learning a new language. M.B. Tinzmann, B.F. Jones, T.F. Fennimore, J. Bakker, C. Fine, and J. Pierce (1990) explain collaborative classrooms seem to have four general characteristics. The first two capture changing relationships between teachers and students. The third characterizes teachers' new approaches to instruction.
The fourth addresses the composition of a collaborative classroom.
1) Shared knowledge among teachers and students
2) Shared authority among teachers and students
3) Teachers as mediators
4) Heterogeneous groupings of students

b. The Characteristic of Collaborative Classroom
Collaborative classrooms seem to have four general characteristics. The first two capture changing relationships between teachers and students. The third characterizes teachers' new approaches to instruction. The fourth addresses the composition of a collaborative classroom.
1). Shared knowledge among teachers and students
In traditional classrooms, the dominant metaphor for teaching is the teacher as information giver; knowledge flows only one way from teacher to student. In contrast, the metaphor for collaborative classrooms is shared knowledge. The teacher has vital knowledge about content, skills, and instruction, and still provides that information to students. However, collaborative teachers also value and build upon the knowledge, personal experiences, language, strategies, and culture that students bring to the learning situation.
Consider a lesson on insect-eating plants, for example. Few students, and perhaps few teachers, are likely to have direct knowledge about such plants. Thus, when those students who do have relevant experiences are given an opportunity to share them, the whole class is enriched. Moreover, when students see that their experiences and knowledge are valued, they are motivated to listen and learn in new ways, and they are more likely to make important connections between their own learning and "school" learning. They become empowered.
This same phenomenon occurs when the knowledge parents and other community members have is valued and used within the school.

2). Shared authority among teachers and students
In collaborative classrooms, teachers share authority with students in very specific ways. In most traditional classrooms, the teacher is largely, if not exclusively, responsible for setting goals, designing learning tasks, and assessing what is learned. Collaborative teachers differ in that they invite students to set specific goals within the framework of what is being taught, provide options for activities and assignments that capture different student interests and goals, and encourage students to assess what they learn.
Collaborative teachers encourage students' use of their own knowledge, ensure that students share their knowledge and their learning strategies, treat each other respectfully, and focus on high levels of understanding. They help students listen to diverse opinions, support knowledge claims with evidence, engage in critical and creative thinking, and participate in open and meaningful dialogue.
Suppose, for example, the students have just read a chapter on colonial Netherlands and are required to prepare a product on the topic. While a more traditional teacher might ask all students to write a five-page essay, the collaborative teacher might ask students to define the product themselves.
The point here is twofold: (1) students have opportunities to ask and investigate questions of personal interest, and (2) they have a voice in the decision-making process. These opportunities are essential for both self-regulated learning and motivation.
3) Teachers as mediators
As knowledge and authority are shared among teachers and students, the role of the teacher increasingly emphasizes mediated learning.

Successful mediation helps students connect new information to their experiences and to learning in other areas, helps students figure out what to do when they are stumped, and helps them learn how to learn. Above all, the teacher as mediator adjusts the level of information and support so as to maximize the ability to take responsibility for learning.
4) Heterogeneous groupings of students
The perspectives, experiences, and backgrounds of all students are important for enriching learning in the classroom. As learning beyond the classroom increasingly requires understanding diverse perspectives, it is essential to provide students opportunities to do this in multiple contexts in schools. In collaborative classrooms where students are engaged in a thinking curriculum, everyone learns from everyone else, and no student is deprived of this opportunity for making contributions and appreciating the contributions of others.
Thus, a critical characteristic of collaborative classrooms is that students are not segregated according to supposed ability, achievement, interests, or any other characteristic. Segregation seriously weakens collaboration and impoverishes the classroom by depriving all students of opportunities to learn from and with each other. Students we might label unsuccessful in a traditional classroom learn from "brighter" students, but, more importantly, the so-called brighter students have just as much to learn from their more average peers.
Teachers beginning to teach collaboratively often express delight when they observe the insights revealed by their supposedly weaker students. Thus, shared knowledge and authority, mediated learning, and heterogeneous groups of students are essential characteristics of collaborative classrooms.
These characteristics, which are elaborated below, necessitate new roles for teachers and students that lead to interactions different from those in more traditional classrooms.
3. Motivation
a. The Nature of Motivation
Dornyei and Otto (1998) cited in Dornyei (2001) says that motivation can be defined as the dynamically changing cumulative arousal in a person that initiates directs , coordinates, amplifies, terminates and evaluates the cognitive and motor process. Locke (1996) states that motivation has been widely accepted by both teachers and researchers as one of the key factors that influence the rate and success of second/foreign language learning. Motivation provides the primary impetus to initiate learning English language and later the driving force to sustain the long and often tedious learning process. Ryan and Deci (2000) suggest that to be motivated means to be moved to do something. A person who feels no impetus or inspiration to act is thus characterized as unmotivated, whereas someone who is energized or activated toward an end is considered motivated.
b. Gardner’s Theory
According to Gardner (1985) cited in Dornyei, Gardner’s motivation theory has four distinct areas:
1) Integrative motive
The integrative motive is a composite construct made up of three main components. There are:
a) Integrativeness
Integrativeness which subsumes integrative orientation, interest in foreign languages, and attitudes towards the second language community, reflecting the individual’s willingness and interest in social interaction with members of the other groups.
b) Attitudes towards the learning situation
Attitudes towards the learning situation which comprises attitudes towards the language teacher and the second language course.
c) Motivation
Motivation, that is, effort, desire and attitude towards learning
2) The socio-educational model
The socio-educational model is concerned with the role of the various individual difference characteristics of the student in the learning of a second language. Its main importance lies in its clear separation of four distinct aspects of the second language acquisition process:
a) Antecedent factors
b) Individual difference variables
c) Language acquisition contexts
d) Learning outcomes
The main learner variables covered by the model are intelligence language aptitude, language strategies, language attitudes, motivation, and anxiety. These, in turn, affect second language attainment in formal and informal learning contexts, resulting in both linguistic and non-linguistic learning outcomes.
3) The attitude / motivation test battery
The attitude / motivation test battery is a multi component motivation test made up of over 130 items which has been shown to have very good psychometric properties, including construct and predictive validity. It operationalises the main constituents of Gardner’s theory and it also includes language anxiety measures as well as an index of parental encouragement.
4) Tremblay and Gardner’s revised model
In responses to calls for the ‘adoption of a wider vision of motivation’ in the 1990s, Tremblay and Gardner extended Gardner’s social psychological construct of second language motivation by incorporating into it new elements from expectancy- value. The novel element is the inclusion of three mediating variables between attitudes and behavior:
a) Goal salience
Goal salience, referring to the specificity of the learner’s goals and the frequency of goal-setting strategies used.
b) Valence
Valence, subsuming the traditional scales of the’ desire to learn the second language’ and ‘attitudes towards learning the second language’, thus denoting a second language-learning-related value component.
c) Self-efficacy
Self-efficacy, comprising anxiety and ‘performance expectancy (the latter referring to the expectancy to be able to perform various language activities by the end of the course)

c. Kinds of Motivation
Motivation is an important issue because it determines not only the extent of the learners’ active involvement but also their attitude toward learning. In the second language and foreign language learning, motivation is divided into two main categories. Ryan and Deci (2000) states that motivation divides into two, those are intrinsic and extrinsic motivations:
1). Intrinsic motivation
Intrinsic motivation is defined as the doing of an activity for its inherent satisfactions rather than for some separable consequence. When intrinsically motivated a person is moved to act for the fun or challenge entailed rather than because of external prods, pressures, or rewards. Hammer (2001) states that intrinsic motivation is motivation which comes from within the individual. Thus, a person might be motivated by the enjoyment of learning process itself or by desire to make themselves feel better. For example, a student interests in studying English because of he is very interested in mastering the skills, and able to speak English fluently. These spontaneous behaviors, although clearly bestowing adaptive benefits on the organism, appear not to be done for any such instrumental reason, but rather for the positive experiences associated with exercising and extending ones capacities.
2). Extrinsic motivation
External motivation is a kind of motivation that emerges in studying activity. It is started and continued based on the stimulus which has not relationship with study activity. Extrinsic motivation is a construct that pertains whenever an activity is done in order to attain some separable outcome. Extrinsic motivation thus contrasts with intrinsic motivation, which refers to doing an activity simply for the enjoyment of the activity itself, rather than its instrumental value.
It means that the students study unmotivated by the eager to be able in the lesson, or the stimulus that emerge aim at to get something. For example, a student studies because of he will get praise and his parents will be glad to him.
The level of extrinsic motivation of a student is influenced by many factors.  For example, the learner’s motivation will be probably affected in negative or positive depending on whether the parents are against or forward the target language.  In addition, the student’s peers also play an important role in the influence on his or her attitude toward the language.
Harmer (2001) defines extrinsic motivation as a kind of motivation which is caused by any number of outside factors, such as the need to pass an exam, the hope of financial reward, or the possibility of future travel. For example, a student who does the work because she personally believes it is valuable for her chosen career is also extrinsically motivated because she too is doing it for its instrumental value rather than because she finds it interesting.
In conclusion, intrinsic and extrinsic motivations are both used in the classroom learning. Extrinsic or external motivation can be demonstrated by an effective teacher to encourage students to be more confident and independent and, in a long term, to become intrinsically motivated.
d. The Way to Motivate the Students in Learning English
After knowing the kinds of motivation, in learning and teaching process, the role of motivation, both of intrinsic and extrinsic are needed. The motivation for students can develop some activities in their study. In this case, it needs to know how to motivate the students in learning English.
Mihalas, et al. (2009) write about the importance of good relations between teachers and students.
They notice what the effects can be if the relations function in a good way and also the negative ones if the relations are poor. The authors say that the teacher’s relations to his or her students can influence whether the students will want to try to develop and learn more. Important factors for the quality of the relations between the student and the teacher are that the student can trust the teacher, respects him or her and that the communication goes well.
Dornyei and Csizer (1998) cited in Dornyei (2001) suggest that the Ten Commandments for motivating language learners
1) Set a personal example with your own behavior
It means that the most prominent model in the classroom is the teacher. Dörnyei, focuses on the teacher itself as the model of classroom obeyed by the learner. So that when the teacher is in teaching and learning process, the teacher should always motivate the language learner, hence they feel better and enjoy in the class. As the result, setting a personal example cannot only be found in the class, but the environment influence the motivation of learner also.
2) Create a pleasant, relaxed atmosphere in the classroom
Class atmospheres can always be better and there is a framework to think about them provided by the senses. Brains do not thrive in environments with a narrow range of stimuli, so poorly kept classrooms inhibit learning. The teacher must make a relaxed atmosphere in the classroom.
The process of learning should be enjoyable and students should feel comfortable about different aspects of learning English. Create a good condition in the class is also can make the motivation of the learners improve such as making role, giving game, singing together, those are the way the teacher to make the relaxed atmosphere in the classroom.
3) Present the task properly
It means that the teacher should choose the task which is appropriate for the learner and must be different from the previous. In line with Gardner (2001) that he argue that the teacher should make the learner enjoyable of the task.
4) Develop a good relationship with the learners
Developing the mutual relationship with the learner is a good idea, because we think that the teacher should understand the condition of the learner, the teacher should communicate with them as like their son or daughter. The mutual relationship is good for motivating language learners, they can talk each other closely, the learner open mind to the teacher and tell the difficulties in learning, so that the teacher know what he is going to do to make it better.
5) Increase the learners’ linguistic self-confidence
To improve the self confidence of the learner, when the teacher has been closed each other, it will be easy for the teacher to persuade and make the learner active in the class. Lecturers’ appreciation helps student-teachers to value their own effort and gain confidence in their learning.
6) Make the language classes interesting
It means that to make the language classes interesting is not so far from create a pleasant and relaxed atmosphere of the class. Accordingly, the concept of ‘interest’ has been given its due importance in Gardner’s (1985) original model and also in more recent approaches to second language motivation.
In all, it is expected that by finding teaching strategies to make class more engaging and interesting, a learner’s general attitude toward learning English will improve, and furthermore, there may be an improvement in long-term motivation.
7) Promote learner autonomy
Some writers says that autonomy leads motivation such as Decy and Ryan for example, state in their 1985 work on intrinsic motivation that ‘intrinsic motivation will be operative when action is experienced as autonomous’. Autonomy and motivation has relationship, their research about which one come first motivation or autonomy.
8) Personalize the learning process
It means that the language course should be personally relevant to the learner. we can say that the personalize is similar with making mutual relationship, because both of them want to teacher and the learner close each other, they want the learner can share personal information.
9) Increase the learners’ goal-orientedness
Goal-setting can have exceptional importance in stimulating second language learning motivation, and it is therefore shocking that so little time and energy are spent in the second language classroom on goal-setting. Then, goal has oriented that which according to Gardner and Lambert (1985) cited in Dornyei (2001) distinguish two classes of goals (orientations) in language learning: (a) the integrative orientation, in which one desires to learn to communicate with the other, and (b) instrumental orientation, which refers to a desire to learn the second language in getting the occupation or for the future life. As the result, the learners should know the goal that will reach by learning second or foreign language.
10) Familiarize learners with the target language culture
It is the important thing to give information for the learner. That is way to make the second language become real by giving the background of the language and promoting contact for the native speaker. Those are the Ten Command according to Dornyei and Csizer (1998) cited in Dornyei (2001) are able to use in motivating the language learner. By looking of those, the knowledge of the strategy can be applied for the teacher that teaches language as a second or foreign language, because the ideas are clear, those are based on the teacher and the learners.
B. Framework of Theory
Collaborative learning plays a very important role in developing the students’ motivation to speak English. When teacher explain the material, the students don’t confidence to speaking English. They are lack of motivation underlying rare practices affecting on the speaking ability. Collaborative learning will help students to improve their motivation to speak English.
As a good English teacher, we should improve our ability and knowledge about teaching method and try to be more creative and innovative to make the students interest and enjoy in speaking activity. Teacher may use a new teaching method, different material, and create a different situation in the learning process. Teacher may try to use collaborative learning to improve students’ motivation to speak English and practice it well. This method brings different atmosphere for both teacher and students. It will create a good connection between teacher and students. Because both of them will involve together in the learning process and they will enjoy the collaborative learning which is practiced.

C. HYPOTESIS
In this research, formulation of hypothesis must describe the relation between two variable or more. There are two variables that are going to be analyzed by the writer. The first variable is about students’ motivation in Speaking English as dependent variable and the second variable is collaborative learning as independent variable. Based on statement above, the writer would like to give the hypothesis as follows:
H0    :    Collaborative learning is not effective to improve students’ motivation in speaking English.

Ha   : Collaborative learning is effective to improve students’ motivation in speaking English.

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