The Common European Framework in its political and educational context What is the Common European Framework?
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part-whole relations; componential analysis; translation equivalence. Users of the Framework may wish to consider and where appropriate state: • what grammatical elements, categories, classes, structures, processes and relations learners will need/be equipped/required to handle. Users of the Framework may wish to consider and where appropriate state: • what morphological elements and processes the learner will need/be equipped/required to handle. The user/learner’s competences 115 Grammatical semantics deals with the meaning of grammatical elements, categories, structures and processes (see section 5.2.1.2). Pragmatic semantics deals with logical relations such as entailment, presupposition, implicature, etc. Questions of meaning are of course central to communication and are treated passim in this Framework (see particularly section 5.1.1.1). Linguistic competence is treated here in a formal sense. From the point of view of theoretical or descriptive linguistics, a language is a highly complex symbolic system. When an attempt is made, as here, to separate out the many different components of com- municative competence, knowledge (largely unconscious) of and ability to handle formal structure is legitimately identifiable as one of those components. How much, if indeed any, of this formal analysis should enter into language learning or teaching is a different matter. The functional/notional approach adopted in the Council of Europe publications Waystage 1990, Threshold Level 1990 and Vantage Level offers an alternative to the treatment of linguistic competence in Section 5.2.1–3. Instead of starting from language forms and their meanings, it starts from a systematic classification of communicative functions and of notions, divided into general and specific, and secondarily deals with forms, lexical and grammatical, as their exponents. The approaches are complementary ways of dealing with the ‘double articulation’ of language. Languages are based on an organisation of form and an organisation of meaning. The two kinds of organisation cut across each other in a largely arbitrary fashion. A description based on the organisation of the forms of expression atomises meaning, and that based on the organisation of meaning atomises form. Which is to be preferred by the user will depend on the purpose for which the description is produced. The success of the Threshold Level approach indicates that many practitioners find it more advantageous to go from meaning to form rather than the more traditional practice of organising progression in purely formal terms. On the other hand, some may prefer to use a ‘communicative grammar’, as for example, in Un niveau-seuil. What is clear is that a language learner has to acquire both forms and meanings. 5.2.1.4 Phonological competence involves a knowledge of, and skill in the perception and production of: • the sound-units (phonemes) of the language and their realisation in particular con- texts (allophones); • the phonetic features which distinguish phonemes (distinctive features, e.g. voicing, rounding, nasality, plosion); • the phonetic composition of words (syllable structure, the sequence of phonemes, word stress, word tones); • sentence phonetics (prosody) • sentence stress and rhythm • intonation; Users of the Framework may wish to consider and where appropriate state: • what kinds of semantic relation learners are equipped/required to build up/demonstrate. Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: learning, teaching, assessment 116 • phonetic reduction • vowel reduction • strong and weak forms • assimilation • elision. Download 5.68 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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