Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
FonF and task-based learning
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
FonF and task-based learning
A central component of TBL for many people is the idea of FonF mentioned in Chapter 2 – discussion of formal aspects of language following non-language- based practice. While the use of tasks in itself is in the direct line of descent from the exploitation phase of audio-lingualism through communicative language teaching, FonF is the distinctive ingredient of the TBL style. In this view, it is ben- eficial to focus on language form, provided this emerges out of a task rather than being its starting point or sole rationale. To some extent this modifies the basic TBL tenet that language itself is not the focus of the task, by letting language form in through the back door. Though explanation of forms has been extensively discussed as part of FonF, there are comparatively few examples of what it means in practice. Dave and Jane Willis (2007) give the example of a task based on a text about a suicide attempt. They sug- gest that the teacher can exploit this to show the various uses of the reflexive pro- noun in the text, such as ‘Jim Burney himself’ and ‘kill himself’, and to introduce other uses such as ‘help yourself’. This is an informal, commonsense view of gram- mar based on some frequent uses of reflexives. Since the tasks have not been designed with language in mind, such follow-up activities are necessarily ad hoc and unsystematic (unless, of course, the teacher cheats and works a language point into the design of the task). The FonF idea thus abandons one aspect of audio-lingualism that had still been implicitly accepted by communicative teaching, namely Rivers’ assumption Second language learning and language teaching styles 258 (3): ‘Analogy provides a better foundation for foreign language learning than analysis’. The FonF approach harks back to earlier models of language teaching, which also saw explicit grammar as a follow-up activity. FonF is foreshadowed, for example, in Article 4 of the International Phonetics Association manifesto of the 1880s: ‘In the early stages grammar should be taught inductively, complementing and generalising language facts observed during reading.’ It resembles the tradi- tional teaching exercise known as ‘explication de textes’, which was an integral Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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