Conducting a needs analysis is a great way to find out more about the needs of your students.
EFL teachers may find it useful to devise a needs analysis questionnaire, before designing a teaching programme, to make sure that their lessons address the students’ particular needs and individual learning styles.
Performing a needs analysis can be an excellent way for EFL teachers to find out more about their students and make devising lessons for them much easier in the long run.
It is always helpful to find out about students’ motivation, their prior learning experiences, the situations they are likely to use English in and which skills/language items they need to extra practice with.
Armed with this information, the teacher can select and create the most appropriate and useful learning materials and activities.
The needs analysis questionnaire
When creating a needs analysis questionnaire, it is best to use open question forms such as What…? Why…? How…? When… ? rather than closed questions which are likely to result in only ‘yes’ and ‘no’ answers.
It is also be a good idea to ask for a piece of English writing. The more students express themselves, the easier it is to deduce their capabilities and learning requirements.
A needs analysis questionnaire is often a good way of finding out about your students’ English language experience, their current level of English and their English language requirements.
For example, it is useful to know a little about their job, their company and their responsibilities at work.
If the student is not at work, you need to know where they use English, whether that is at university, at college, at home or socially.
You should include questions which allow you to get to know more about them and their interests, so you can make lessons more personally relevant and stimulating.
Suggested questions for a needs analysis questionnaire:
By studying the answers to needs analysis questionnaire, the teacher can see exactly where the student requires the most help relevant to their lifestyle and job.
Teachers can also assess the general competency level of the student from their examples of writing and their contributions to any classroom discussion.
Once you know a student’s needs and their current ability level, it is possible to identify their knowledge gaps and set targets for their progress.
The needs analysis can be used as you formulate the lessons so that each session moves the student a step closer to their target level in each language learning skill (reading, writing, speaking and listening).
The lessons should also address the individual goals of the student and consider if they need help with specific vocabulary to do their job more effectively.
There are many different ways to teach each point, using books, discussion, grammar exercises and multimedia.
There are also various ways to measure progress. For example: tests, comprehension checks, writing exercises, gap-fill exercises and conversations
At the end of each month or term, teachers and students can re-visit the needs analysis as a benchmark to compare the starting point against the student’s progress. You can then see how close they are to their target competency level.
It is also important to conduct new needs analyses occasionally as student needs and goals can change. Perhaps they have a new job which requires them to talk to customers or use specific vocabulary, for example related to healthcare, education, finance, beauty or sport.
When measuring the needs of students, it can be useful to give an area of knowledge a ‘measurement of need’ using a scale of 1 to 5 from least important to most important.
This is especially useful if you are teaching to a curriculum and you want to analyse the competency level of each student within the set framework.
For example, considering the need of writing skills you could consider essay writing, business writing, report writing, letter writing, and social writing for emails and letters to friends. How important are these areas for the individual student?
If a student is working in an office where they need to answer the telephone in English, but their needs analysis questionnaire also states that they aren’t confident speaking on the telephone, their need to improve speaking skills would be ranked as 5 (i.e. very important).
The teacher should also make a note of their need for telephone English practice and incorporate this into future lesson plans.
Another example would be a student who has to write essays at university. Their need would be high (ranked as 5), for essay writing skills. Their lessons should focus strongly on improving writing skills within an academic context.
If a student often needs to write essays at university, their EFL lessons could include a discussion of English essay writing practice and essay structure.
Learning words and phrases associated with expressing an opinion can also help the student formulate the arguments in their essays.
In many cases, the needs analysis does not need to be measured in any formal sense against a set scale. It can simply be used as a general guide for creating lesson plans.
This is especially useful in private lessons where the teacher can structure a lesson specifically to the needs of the individual student.
For example, if a needs analysis questionnaire revealed the student is a nurse and is also lacking confidence in speaking skills, the teacher knows that medical vocabulary is important and lessons could incorporate role-play in hospital settings.
Do you think that it is always necessary to perform an in-depth needs analysis with a new student?
Are there any other questions you feel should be included in a needs analysis questionnaire for TEFL?
Do you have any tips or advice about lesson preparation?
What are the most common student goals in your experience?
Share your thoughts in the comments box below!