A01 cohe4573 01 se fm. Qxd
0 G R O U N D I N G I N T H E T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G O F L 2 P R A G M A T I C S
Download 1.95 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
1. Teaching and Learning pragmatics, where language and culture meet Norico Ishinara & Andrew D. Coren
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- C H A P T E R 2
2 0
G R O U N D I N G I N T H E T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G O F L 2 P R A G M A T I C S F: Look, Charlie. I’ve been getting reports on your teaching style from more than one student and not just recently. If you are teasing anybody, it’s gotta stop now. We can’t have this kind of thing going on here because . . . C: Listen, Francine. I resent your just accepting whatever the students said to you. How do you know they were telling the truth? It’s unfair to me to make assumptions when you don’t know . . . F: Charles. You’re still relatively new here and in my opinion you have a lot to learn. I have watched how you make quips at faculty meetings. You think you’re being funny, but sometimes people get offended. You really need to be more careful about what you say if you want to continue to work here and . . . C: Well, maybe I should look for another job then – one where I am more appreciated just the way I am. Part II Varying the pragmatics in an apology situation Assume that in a luncheon with colleagues, you said something negative behind the back of another colleague, Harry – namely, that he lacked tact. Unfortunately, it got back to him. Over a cup of coffee, he confronts you with what he heard you had said: Harry: Hey, I just was talking with Bethany, and she said you were saying things about me behind my back. I guess I want to hear it directly from you. . . . You: C H A P T E R 2 Teachers’ pragmatics: knowledge, beliefs, and practice Noriko Ishihara Introduction N ow that we have discussed the basics – what pragmatics is, how it is intertwined with culture, and why it is important to teach it in the L2 classroom – we would like to shift the focus to what the teacher brings to the learning and teaching of pragmatics. Therefore, this particular chapter may be of interest to teacher educators, as well as to teachers and prospective teachers. We know that teachers’ backgrounds, knowledge, experiences, and beliefs have an impact on what and how they teach. As stated earlier, a primary intention of this book is to help narrow the gap between what is currently known about how language is pragmatically used and how that information is (or is not) taught in the classroom. In doing so, it is quite clear that the teacher is the main agent in creating this bridge. In our view, this bridging work can be achieved in part by making available to teachers research-based information about how language is used prag- matically, as well as by demonstrating effective approaches to the teaching of pragmatics (a theme we will come to in upcoming chapters). A recent nationwide survey has found that the treatment of pragmatics in teacher development courses in the US centers on theoretical models (e.g., those relating to linguistic politeness and to speech acts) rather than on practical applications (e.g., how to teach L2 pragmatics). 1 It may be assumed that if given an appropriate theoretical framework, language teachers can devise 1 Vasquez and Sharpless (2009). |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling