Title: Today
1 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
2Instructors role in Developing Good Language
Learners (Reiss, 1983)
- Inform students honestly of the amount of work
involved and the benefits - Create a comfortable classroom climate in which
students feel comfortable and involved - Help students develop a cognitive style that is
conductive to language learning - Personalize language instruction whenever
possible in order to motivate students - Ask students to monitor each other to make them
an active part of the language teaching - Present all material in a meaningful manner
3The 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
4The Good Language Learner (Stern, 1975 Rubin,
1975)
- Has a personal learning style or uses positive
learning strategies - Has an active approach to language learning
- Has a strong drive to communicate and learn from
communication. He is willing to do many things to
get his message across - Practices
- Attends to meaning
- Attends to form and monitors her own speech and
that of others
5The Learners 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 L2 learning
poses
6Proficiency a common goal
- Not a theory of language acquisition
- Not a method of language teaching
- Not a curricular outline or syllabus
- Not a concern with grammar accuracy
7Proficiency?
- Expertise
- Competence
- Ability
- Polished Performance
- High-level Skill
- Well-developed Knowledge
8On Knowing a Language
- Being proficient
- For the medical doctor
- For the businessman
- For the tourist
- For the linguist
9Proficiency for the linguist
- Phonetics knowledge of sounds in terms of
production and perception - Phonologyknowledge of the sound system
- Syntax knowledge of the organization of words
into larger structures, particularly sentences - Semantics knowledge of the meanings of words and
sentences - Pragmatics knowledge of language use
10Competence vs. Performance (Chomsky, 1965)
- Competence what a person knows
- 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! - Performance what a person can actually produce
- we tend not to produce what is in our
competence because of memory limitations,
distractions, errors, false starts, etc.
11Problems 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
12Communicative competence
- Concept coined by Hymes in the 60s who expressed
the need to have a sociolinguistic and
contextual competence as well as grammatical
competence - 70s Campbell and Wales grammatical vs.
communicative competence
13Communicative 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)
14Communicative 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
non-verbal strategies to compensate for the gaps
in knowledge
15Summary
- Competence vs. Performance
- Communicative vs. Grammatical competence
- Communicative Competence
16Assessing ProficiencyThe past
- Need for a national standard
- 50s Common Yardstick by Educational Testing
Service (ETS) - 70s Common Yardstick by Interagency Language
Roundtable (ILR) - 80s American Council on the Teaching of Foreign
Languages (ACTFL)
17Assessing ProficiencyThe 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
18Defining the content of instructionStandards
for foreign language learning
- Content standards, upon which performance
standards are assessed, lie at the heart of
education reforms (Phillips, 1999 p1) - 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