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Thesis Liang Tsailing
Talk-Pair and Inside-Outside Circle were explicitly designed to provide redundancy
of output opportunities (Kagan, 1995). The three methods of Three-Step Interview, Talk-Pair, and Inside-Outside Circle mentioned above would be explained in more details later in the discussions on cooperative learning methods. Even informal cooperative learning discussion provided redundancy as students discuss a topic with each of their teammates. There was not enough time in the traditional classroom to call on each student to talk more than once on a topic. As Yu (1995) noted that the active use of language such as comprehending a discourse or producing a discourse involved complexity of communication and use of language. In conclusion, Yu (1995) claimed that a cooperative learning class was an ideal place for such language development. 2.2.3 Context In addition to the variables of input and output discussed above, language acquisition was fostered if it occurred in a context that was supportive, friendly, 25 motivating, communicative, developmentally appropriate, and feedback rich (Kagan, 1995). Kagan (1995) argued that the traditional classroom was far from supportive as students were easily labeled “right” or “wrong” after they answered questions before the whole class (Chen & Feng, 2000; Lai, 2002; Wei & Chen, 1993) The advocate of supportive and feedback rich context for language acquisition corresponded in part to the Affective Filter Hypothesis (Dulay, Burt & Krashen, 1982), which stated that if learners were anxious, on the defensive, or not motivated, they might understand the input, but the input would not necessarily enter the language acquisition device, and would not, of course, produce output. The Affective Filter Hypothesis, though a hypothesis in need of further experimental support, was not hard to detect in most traditional classrooms. It was often the case that some students were not ready to give a speech to a whole class but were quite at ease talking to their group members. Speech to a whole class was often a threatening experience to most students. We, teachers in Taiwan, usually experience silence when we ask our students: “Do you have any questions?” Even some of the students were still confused and were in need of further explanation, they tend to choose silence when given the opportunity to clarify their confusion (Wei, 1997b). Another reason for the silence in class, according to Huang (1995), was the feeling of anxiety that students brought to a language classroom. The emotions of discomfort and apprehension would be aggravated with the fear of losing face when using the target language incorrectly, which, in turn, inhibited the EFL learners from speaking up in class (Huang, 1995). As the examination on how cooperative learning transformed input, output, and context variables in the direction of facilitating language acquisition, it was not hard to draw the conclusion that communicative language teaching could be best enacted in EFL classroom through cooperative learning (Kagan, 1995). Put it in Kagan’s (1995) 26 words: cooperative learning and communicative language teaching was natural match. Download 453.46 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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