Reconceptualizing language teaching: an in-service teacher education course in uzbekistan
Table 7. Distinctive Features of Audio-lingual Method & Communicative
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Table 7. Distinctive Features of Audio-lingual Method & Communicative
Approach taken from Brown (2000). Audiolingual Method Communicative Approach Attends to structure and form more than meaning. Meaning is paramount. Language learning is learning structures, sounds, or words. Language learning is learning to commu- nicate. Grammatical explanation is avoid- ed Any device which helps the learners is accepted – varying according to their age, interest, etc. Communicative activities only come after a long process of rigid drills and exercises. Attempts to communicate may be en- couraged from the very beginning. Linguistic competence is the desired goal. Communicative competence is the desired goal (i.e., the ability to use the linguistic system effectively and appropri- ately). The teacher controls the learners and prevents them from doing anything that conflicts with the theory. Teachers help learners in any way that motivates them to work with the lan- guage. “Language is habit” so error must be prevented at all costs. Language is created by individuals often through trial and error. Students are expected to interact with the language system, em- bodied in machines or controlled materials. Students are expected to interact with other people, either in the flesh, through pair and group work, or in their writings. Intrinsic motivation will spring from an interest in the structure of language. Intrinsic motivation will spring from an interest in what is being communicated by the language. ACTION 1. Choose 2-3 features of Communicative Language Teaching from the table above which you think better represents this approach. Explain your choice by providing examples from your learning or teaching experience. 2. Bearing in mind Section 1.1. Communicative Competence Principles, define the difference between grammatical and communicative compe- tence. 75 CHAPTER TWO: LANGUAGE TEACHING Klapper (2003) points out that the lack of prescribed classroom tech- niques makes CLT “fuzzy” in teacher’s understanding. This “fuzziness” gave CLT flexibility and space for teacher creativity and own interpretations. Some teachers consider it “a little more than an integration of grammatical and functional teaching” and others accept it as “procedures where learners work in pairs or groups employing available language resources in prob- lem-solving tasks” (Richards and Rogers, 2001, p. 40). Larsen-Freeman and Anderson (2016) admit that “It is probably fair to say that there is no single agreed upon version of CLT” (p. 115). More than that, Richards and Rogers (2001) also note that there is no single text or authority on it, nor any single model that is universally accepted as authoritative. ACTION Here is a lesson plan (see below) that was created by Prof. Peter Shaw from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey for the CLT Paradigm. How is CLT conceptualized in this lesson plan? Download 1.4 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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