В настоящее время объектом активного изучения лингводидактики стало
Comparison of traditional and innovative methods
Download 2.75 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
INNOVATIVE PEDAGOGICAL TECHNOLOGIES
2. Comparison of traditional and innovative methods Firstly we answer the question: “What is traditional methodology?” To answer this question we should address to different sources on the FL methodology. 1. A very typical feature of traditional methodology, “teacher- dominated interaction”, the teaching is deeply teacher-centered (Broughton et al., 1994). 2. “Traditional view of education, where teachers serve as the source of knowledge while learners serve as passive receivers” (Kuzu, 2007). 3. “Traditional teaching [is imagined to work as] the knowledge being poured from one receptacle into an empty one.” This widespread attitude is based on a precondition that “being in a class in the presence of a teacher and ‘listening attentively’ is [...] enough to ensure that learning will take place” (Scrivener, 2005). 4. Traditional methodology – “learning was very much seen as under the control of the teacher” (Richards, 2008). 5. Traditional methodology does not present the language as a means of communication. Rather, this approach to teaching conceives “language [as] a body of esteemed information to be learned, with an emphasis on intellectual rigor” (White, 1988). To sum up, the traditional methodology puts the responsibility for teaching and learning mainly on the teacher and it is believed that if students are present in the lesson and listen to the teacher’s explanations and examples, they will be able to use the knowledge. 20 Traditional language teaching is based on a traditional approach to the target language teaching and learning, which regards the language as a body of grammatical rules and an enormous number of words that are combined according to the rules. Traditional methodology thus focuses on grammatical structures and isolated items of vocabulary. Unlike traditional methodology, modern methodology is much more student-centered. According to Jim Scrivener (2005), the teacher’s main role is to “help learning to happen,” which includes “involving” students in what is going on “by enabling them to work at their own speed, by not giving long explanations, by encouraging them to participate, talk, interact, do things, etc.” Moreover J. Broughton adds that “the language student is best motivated by practice in which he senses the language is truly communicative, that it is appropriate to its context, that his teacher’s skills are moving him forward to a fuller competence in a foreign language” (Broughton, 1994). Briefly put, the students are the most active element in this process. The teacher is here not to explain, but to encourage and help students to explore, try out, make learning interesting, etc. That’s why a great emphasis nowadays is put on negotiation of meaning and the communicative competence as “being able to use the language for meaningful communication” (Richards, 2008). Instead of memorizing grammatical rules and isolated vocabulary, modern methodology prefers to present contextualized language and to develop skills. Taking into consideration the educators’ statements we point out the following advantages and disadvantages of traditional methods which still have been used in practice of ELT in Uzbekistan (see Table 2). Download 2.75 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling