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Thesis Liang Tsailing
Performance referred to how native speakers use that knowledge to produce and understand utterances
(Richards, Platt & Platt, 1992:269). 10 language teaching (Hymes, 1979). First, Hymes made the critical shift away from Chomsky’s abstract mental structures of language to its social and cultural aspects. Secondly, Hymes (1979) realized that just as culture allows us to make sense of experience, so did language itself: the communicative event was the metaphor, or perspective, basic to rendering experience intelligible (Hymes, 1979). Hymes referred to the combined aspects of communication and culture in language as communicative competence, which meant knowledge and ability with respect to: l Whether (and to what degree) something was formally possible; l Whether (and to what degree) something was feasible in virtue of the means of implementation available; l Whether (and to what degree) something was appropriate (adequate, happy, successful) in relation to a context in which it was used and evaluated; l Whether (and to what degree) something was in fact done, actually performed, and what its doing entails. (Hymes, 1979:19) As the term spoke for itself, Hymes’ original concept of communicative competence was primarily sociolinguistic and it emphasized language use in social context. Nonetheless, it also embraced Chomsky’s psycholinguistic parameter of linguistic competence by including formal possibility along with feasibility for implementation, appropriateness to a context, and actual performance as defining components of communicative competence. 2.1.1.3 Canale & Swain’s Model Other theorists frequently cited for their views on the communicative nature of language were Canale & Swain (1980) and Canale (1983a). They identified four widely accepted dimensions of communicative competence: grammatical competence, sociolinguistic competence, discourse competence, and strategic competence. 11 Grammatical competence concerned with the mastery of the linguistic code itself. Discourse competence concerned with the combination of form and function to achieve a unified spoken or written text in different genres that consisted of cohesion and coherence. Sociolinguistic competence addressed the extent to which utterances were produced and understood appropriately in different sociolinguistic contexts depending on contextual factors. Strategic competence was composed of verbal and non-verbal communication strategies that might be called into action for two main reasons: (1) to compensate for communication breakdowns due to limiting conditions in actual communication or insufficient competence in one or more of the other areas of communicative competence; and (2) to enhance the effectiveness of communication (Canale, 1983a). 2.1.1.4 Savignon’s Definition Along similar vein, Savignon (1972), who introduced the idea of communicative competence to foreign language teaching, originally defined communicative competence as the “ability to function in a dynamic exchange in which linguistic competence must adapt itself to the total informational input, both linguistic and paralinguistic, of one or more interlocutors” (p. 8). She included the use of gestures and facial expression in her interpretation and later refined her definition of communicative competence to comprise of the following qualifications (Savignon, 1983): l Communicative competence was a dynamic interpersonal trait that depends on the negotiation of meaning between two or more persons who share some knowledge of a language. l Communicative competence applies to both written and spoken language. l Communicative competence was context-specific. A 12 communicatively competent language user knows how to make appropriate choices in register and style to fit the situation in which communication occurs. l Competence was what one knows. Performance was what one did. Only performance was observable, however, it was only through performance that competence could be developed, maintained, and evaluated. l Communicative competence was relative and depends on the cooperation of those people involved. Savignon’s principles about communicative competence might not be used directly in this study. However, many of the ideas were applicable in the development of the working model particularly designed for the participants involved in this study. 2.1.2 Pedagogical Implications of Communicative Approach With the documentation of communicative competence, a number of theories and models were developed and expanded in the field of applied linguistics, second/foreign language acquisition, and syllabus development (Shih, 2001). The concept of communicative competence then became robust (Sung, 1998) and eventually led to the production of so-called communicative language teaching (CLT) practices, which entailed the following pedagogical concerns: (1) appropriateness vs. grammaticality, (2) fluency vs. accuracy, and (3) active participation vs. passive reception. Each of these issues would be discussed in the following sections. Download 453.46 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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