Reconceptualizing language teaching: an in-service teacher education course in uzbekistan
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- SECTION 4.3 Writing and Communicative Competence
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Word Definition without a social context Definition with a social context. What is the inten- tion of the speaker? 1 Hello 2 Hello 3 Hello 4 Hello 5 Hello 6 Hello 7 Hello 8 Hello 9 Hello 10 Hello 11 Hello 12 Hello 13 Hello 14 Hello CONCLUSION The activity in this section has shown how listening comprehension is not limited to meanings fixed in a dictionary. Social circumstances play a role in defining the meanings of words. People, while comprehending oral speech, should also be able to recognize a social context, which listening and listening comprehension depend upon. 146 RECONCEPTUALIZING LANGUAGE TEACHING REFERENCES 1. Celce-Murcia, M. & Olshtain, E. (2000). Discourse and context in lan- guage teaching: A guide for language teachers . Cambridge: Cam- bridge University Press. 2. Celce-Murcia, M., Brinton, D. and Snow, A. (Eds.) (2014). Teaching English as a second or foreign language . Boston, the USA: National Geographic Learning. 147 CHAPTER FOUR: PRACTICAL EXAMPLES OF USING COMMUNICATIVE COMPETENCE SECTION 4.3 Writing and Communicative Competence “From the sociocultural perspective, writing is seen as part of a socially and culturally situated set of literacy practic- es shared by a particular community. From this perspective, the process of learning to write is the process of becoming a member of a discourse community, a group of people (e.g., biologists, politicians, or even fans of a particular musical genre) who share values and assumptions about using lan- guage and also have certain ways of using language (oral or written) for particular purposes” (Weigle, 2014, p. 223). INTRODUCTION Teaching writing is perceived as a difficult task for language teachers. In a traditional classroom, students are asked to do translations, read texts, retell them, and conduct grammar exercises. Thus, most students from uni- versities throughout the Republic of Uzbekistan demonstrate insufficient knowledge of how to write well-organized, genre-specific, and cultural- ly-situated texts. Additionally, most language teachers in Uzbekistan report that writing is an individual activity. Therefore, at the end of a semester of study, what is going to be measured is the final written product instead of the process of writing. As is assumed by most teachers in Uzbekistan, to know syntactical rules and to be competent in logically ordering texts leads to the production of successful information in a paper. However, with the development and implementation of CLT writing has started to be re- garded as a socialized discursive process. In this process, a reader of a writ- ten message plays a great role in interpreting a conveyed meaning. It is not only a writer that should follow syntactical rules and logical coherence to successfully communicate a meaning, but a reader (his culture, his shared knowledge, the truth that he is embedded in, etc.) of this written message should be taken into consideration. GOALS This section illustrates how one can teach sociolinguistic competence through writing. Download 1.4 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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