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0 2 T H E N U T S A N D B O L T S O F P R A G M A T I C S I N S T R U C T I O N
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1. Teaching and Learning pragmatics, where language and culture meet Norico Ishinara & Andrew D. Coren
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T H E N U T S A N D B O L T S O F P R A G M A T I C S I N S T R U C T I O N This chapter first discusses the use of pragmatics as an organizing principle – the implications of what that means in the development of a pragmatics- focused curriculum. Then, the chapter introduces several principles that readers may find important and applicable in the development of a pragmatics- focused curriculum in their own instructional contexts. In order to provide illustrations of instructional practice, samples of curricular materials are taken from a web-based curriculum for teaching Japanese pragmatics. Other examples are from a classroom-based, teacher-delivered textbook for Japanese pragmatics, an adaptation of the web-based curriculum. The chap- ter illustrates how these principles can be translated into learner exercises intended to raise learners’ pragmatic awareness and improve their produc- tive skills related to pragmatics. Pragmatics as the organizing principle In developing a curriculum, the curriculum writer’s views, beliefs, and prin- ciples in language learning and teaching guide the organizational decisions at multiple levels. 2 When a curriculum is developed with pragmatics as the focus, the issue of appropriateness in the given context becomes a central concern for the curriculum writer, teachers, and learners alike, and will receive prominence in language instruction. In this curriculum, features of pragmatics may become the organizing principle (or at least given sub- stantial attention) with meaningful, challenging, and realistic tasks focused on enhancing pragmatic language use and awareness. The ultimate goal would be for learners to become able to interpret others’ messages as originally intended and to use the L2 to successfully communicate their own mes- sages (as discussed in Chapter 1). Learners’ tasks and assessment should be informed by a current theoretical and empirical understanding of pragmatics-focused language learning and teaching (e.g., see Chapter 6 for a theoretical discussion). There are at least two ways in which material on pragmatics can be incorporated into the formal L2 curriculum: as an add-on to an existing curriculum (see Chapter 8 for examples) or as the organizing principle of a newly developed curriculum (as demonstrated in the curriculum below). In the first case, presumably the material would be included in the curriculum to narrow gaps. In this case, curriculum writers would provide extra exer- cises focusing on pragmatics or incorporate additional pragmatics-related 2 Graves (2000); Tomlinson (2003). C U R R I C U L U M W R I T I N G F O R L 2 P R A G M A T I C S 2 0 3 insights into already existing activities. 3 Instruction on pragmatics could involve written as well as spoken discourse (e.g., understanding a nuance of a business letter, or writing a complaint via an e-mail message) and could be Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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