Today Find out your own beliefs about language
Today • Find out your own beliefs about language learning and teaching • Start Chapter 1: • What is it to know a language? • Standards used to determine language proficiency On Knowing a Language 1
Instructor’s role in Developing Good Language Learners (Reiss, 1983) 1. Inform students honestly of the amount of work involved and the benefits 2. Create a comfortable classroom climate in which students feel comfortable and involved 3. Help students develop a cognitive style that is conductive to language learning 4. Personalize language instruction whenever possible in order to motivate students 5. Ask students to monitor each other to make them an active part of the language teaching 6. Present all material in a meaningful manner On Knowing a Language 2
The good language teacher (Mollica and Nuessel, 1997) Out-of-class Roles • Researcher • Planner • Manager • Advocate • Organizer • Evaluator • Communicator In-class Roles • Teacher • Motivator • Evaluator • Facilitator • Innovator • Communicator • Disciplinarian On Knowing a Language 3
The Good Language Learner (Stern, 1975; Rubin, 1975) 1. Has a personal learning style or uses positive learning strategies 2. Has an active approach to language learning 3. Has a strong drive to communicate and learn from communication. He is willing to do many things to get his message across 4. Practices 5. Attends to meaning 6. Attends to form and monitors her own speech and that of others On Knowing a Language 4
The Learner’s Role (Cook, 1991) • Find a learning style that suits you • Involve yourself in the language learning process • Develop an awareness of language both as system and communication • Pay consistent attention to expanding your language • Take into account the demands that L 2 learning poses On Knowing a Language 5
Proficiency: a common goal • • Not Not a a theory of language acquisition method of language teaching curricular outline or syllabus concern with grammar accuracy On Knowing a Language 6
Proficiency? • • • Expertise Competence Ability Polished Performance High-level Skill Well-developed Knowledge On Knowing a Language 7
On Knowing a Language • Being proficient • • For For the the medical doctor businessman tourist linguist On Knowing a Language 8
Proficiency for the linguist 1. Phonetics: knowledge of sounds in terms of production and perception 2. Phonology: knowledge of the sound system 3. Syntax: knowledge of the organization of words into larger structures, particularly sentences 4. Semantics: knowledge of the meanings of words and sentences 5. Pragmatics: knowledge of language use On Knowing a Language 9
Competence vs. Performance (Chomsky, 1965) 1. Competence: what a person knows 1. we have the ability to distinguish between “grammatical” and “ungrammatical” expressions, as well as recognize ambiguity. We are capable of judging sentences we have never heard before! 2. Performance: what a person can actually produce 1. we tend not to produce what is in our ‘competence’ because of memory limitations, distractions, errors, false starts, etc. On Knowing a Language 10
Problems with the competence vs. performance distinction • Limited to grammatical compentence • Does not include notions of • Appropriateness in the use of language, i. e. context • sociocultural significance On Knowing a Language 11
Communicative competence • Concept coined by Hymes in the 60 s who expressed the need to have a “sociolinguistic and contextual competence” as well as “grammatical competence” • 70 s Campbell and Wales: grammatical vs. communicative competence On Knowing a Language 12
Communicative vs. grammatical competence: Criticisms • Distinction forces the following assumptions: • Grammatical and communicative competence need to be developed separately • Grammatical competence is not an essential component of communicative competence • “Communicative competence may be defined as the ability to function in a truly communicative setting-that is, in a dynamic exchange in which linguistic competence must adapt itself to the total informational input, both linguistic and paralinguistic, of one or more interlocutors” (Sauvignon 1972, p. 8) On Knowing a Language 13
Communicative Competence: A framework (Canale and Swain, 1980) • grammatical competence: mastery of the linguistic code • sociolinguistic competence: ability to use language appropriately in different contexts and shift registers • discourse competence: ability to be cohesive and coherent • strategic competence: use of verbal and nonverbal strategies to compensate for the gaps in knowledge On Knowing a Language 14
Summary • Competence vs. Performance • Communicative vs. Grammatical competence • Communicative Competence On Knowing a Language 15
Assessing Proficiency: The past • Need for a national standard • 50 s Common Yardstick by Educational Testing Service (ETS) • 70 s Common Yardstick by Interagency Language Roundtable (ILR) • 80 s American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) On Knowing a Language 16
Assessing Proficiency: The present ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines • Global tasks/functions: from naming objects to developing an argument • Context/content: from memorized utterances in a familiar context, to supporting your point of view in a political discussion • Accuracy: “fluency, grammar, pronunciation, vocabulary, pragmatic competence and sociolinguistic competence” • Text type: from words in isolation to extended discourse On Knowing a Language 17
Defining the content of instruction: Standards foreign language learning “Content standards, upon which performance standards are assessed, lie at the heart of education reforms” (Phillips, 1999 p 1) The five Cs (1996): • Communication: Communicate in languages other than English • Cultures: Gain knowledge and understanding of other cultures • Connections: Connect with other disciplines and acquire information • Comparisons: Developing insight into the nature of language and culture • Communities: Participate in multilingual communities at home and around the world On Knowing a Language 18
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