Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
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- Compensatory strategies
Avoidance strategies
These Faerch and Kasper divide into: ● Formal avoidance. The speaker avoids a particular linguistic form, whether in pronunciation, in morphemes or in syntax. ● Functional avoidance. The speaker avoids different types of function. Again, this approach, in general, reminds the teacher of the processes going on in the students’ minds when they are trying to speak in a new language. Practice Strategies for communicating and learning 108 with communication techniques, such as information gap games, forces the stu- dents to use these types of communication strategy, whether they want to or not, provided that they have to say things that are just beyond their current level of functioning in the second language. Communication strategies 109 Box 6.1 Test of communication strategies A B D C Figure 6.1 Describe either (i) A or B or (ii) C or D in writing, so that other people could distinguish it from the other member of the pair (without, of course, being told ‘left’ or ‘right’). Then check against the types of strategies on page 112. Some examples of stu- dents’ responses are given at the end of the chapter on page 120. Compensatory strategies To some extent, Tarone’s social communicative strategies and Faerch and Kasper’s psychological strategies are complementary ways of coping with the problems of communicating in a second language. But as we have seen, they end up as rather long and confusing lists. Eric Kellerman and his colleagues (1987) feel that these approaches can be considerably simplified. The common factor to all communica- tion strategies is that the L2 learner has to deal with not knowing a word in a sec- ond language; it is lack of vocabulary that is crucial. The strategies exist to plug gaps in the learners’ vocabulary by allowing them to refer to things for which they do not know the L2 words; a better name, then, is compensatory strategies – L2 learners are always having to compensate for the limited vocabulary at their disposal. Nanda Poulisse (1990) set up an experiment in which Dutch learners of English had to carry out tasks such as retelling stories and describing geometrical shapes. She ended up with a new division of strategies into two main types, called archis- trategies, each with two subdivisions, according to the way that they coped with words they did not know. Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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