Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
Success with English (Broughton, 1968), which used lengthy substitution tables as
the main teaching technique. Here the students have to make up four true sen- tences by combining words from different columns – ‘I have some grey gloves in my drawer’, ‘I have some black stockings in my house’, and so on. Substitution tables continue to appear in coursebooks. A typical modern substitu- tion table is seen in Move (Bowler and Parminter, 2007). The change is that this has moved to the ‘grammar reference’ section of the book; the substitution table is now treated as a method of displaying sentence structure, an alternative to a phrase structure tree, to help the students’ under- standing, not as a way of getting them directly to practise a structure intensively. This depends on the students having some idea of both structural grammar and paradigm displays used in the traditional grammar discussed in Chapter 2. Second language learning and language teaching styles 264 new shoes black clothes in my house. I have some grey socks in my cupboard. white stockings in my drawer. smart gloves in my room. warm hats Table 13.1 Substitution table from Success with English (Broughton, 1968) Are you we they going to set up a new business? Is he she it Table 13.2 Substitution table from Move (Bowler and Parminter, 2007) The mainstream style combines Palmer’s studial and spontaneous capacities. A coursebook such as New Headway (Soars and Soars, 2002), for instance, has ele- ments of the academic style in that it explains structures: ‘We use the Present Continuous to talk about actions that last a short time.’ It has elements of the audio-lingual style in that it is graded around structures and the ‘four skills’. But it has also incorporated elements of social communicative teaching in pair work exercises, such as acting out conversations about solving problems. The pivot around which the lesson revolves is the grammatical point, couched in terms of structural or traditional grammar. The main difference from the early mainstream style is the use of group work and pair work, and the information ori- entation to the exercises. A mainstream EFL method is implied every time a teacher goes through the classic progression from presentation to dialogue to controlled practice, whether it is concerned with grammar or communicative function. Many have seen this sequence of presentation, practice, production (PPP) as the chief characteristic of the mainstream style, or indeed of the audio-lingual and communicative styles (Scrivenor, 1994), but not of task-based learning. The main- stream style is the central style described in TEFL manuals such as The Practice of English Language Teaching (Harmer, 2007). It represents, perhaps, the bulk of EFL teaching of the past 50 years, if not longer. The goals are, in a sense, an updated version of audio-lingualism. What counts is how students use language in the eventual real-world situation rather than their academic knowledge or the spin-off in general educational values. The version of learning involved is similarly a compromise, suggesting that students learn by con- scious understanding, by sheer practice and by attempting to talk to each other. Some aspects of the knowledge models seen in Chapter 12 are reflected here, as are aspects of the processing models. Mainstream EFL teaching tries to have its cake and eat it, by saying that if the student does not benefit from one part of the les- son, then another part will help. Hence, while I have been using EFL courses here to illustrate particular styles, nearly all of them are actual mainstream mixtures bal- ancing the styles. In terms of student types as well, this broadens the coverage. One student ben- efits from grammatical explanation, another from structure practice, another from role play. Perhaps combining these will suit more of the students more of the time than relying on a purer style. Mainstream teaching does not usually encom- pass the information communicative style, with its emphasis on listening, prefer- ring to see listening and speaking as more or less inseparable. It has the drawbacks common to the other styles – the concentration on certain types of grammar and discourse at the expense of others. Is such a combination of styles in one mainstream style to be praised or blamed? In terms of teaching methods, the debate has revolved around ‘eclecticism’. Some have argued that there is nothing wrong with eclectic mixing of methods provided the mixing is rationally based. Others have claimed that it is impossible for the stu- dents to learn in so many different ways simultaneously; the teacher is irresponsi- ble to combine incompatible models of language learning. Marton (1988) argues that only certain sequences are possible. His receptive strategy, for instance, may precede, but not follow, the reconstructive or communicative strategies. Each of the teaching styles we have seen so far captures some aspects of this com- plexity and misses out on others. None of the teaching styles is complete, just as none of the models of L2 learning is complete. Eclecticism is only an issue if two styles concern the same area of L2 learning rather than different areas. Hence, at the moment, it is unnecessary to speculate about the good or bad consequences of The mainstream EFL style 265 eclecticism. When there is a choice between competing styles of language teach- ing, each with a coverage ranging from grammar to classroom language, from memory to pronunciation, from motivation to the roles of the second language in society, then eclecticism becomes an issue. At the moment, all teaching methods are partial in L2 learning terms; some areas of language are only covered by one type of teaching technique; conversely, some methods deal with only a fraction of the totality of L2 learning. The mainstream EFL style cannot be dismissed simply because of its eclecticism, as it is neither more nor less eclectic than any other over- all teaching style in terms of L2 learning. My own feeling is that the mainstream style does indeed reflect a style of its own that is more than the sum of its parts. Second language learning and language teaching styles Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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