Title: Chapter Nine
1 Chapter Nine The Communicative
Approach
2Definition
- An approach to foreign or second language
teaching which emphasizes that the goal of
language learning is communicative competence
3Background
- Developed in the 1970s in Europe
- Reaction to the structural approach to language
teaching - The need for change in language teaching method
4language used in real life and traditional FLT.
Functions and forms Languages skills ways
In real life
The traditional FLT
consequence
perform certain communicative functions.
all skills, including the receptive and
productive skills.
used in a certain context.
isolate language from its context.
focuses on forms
one or two language skills
The learners have learned a lot of sentences or
patterns, but they are unable to use them
appropriately in real social situations.
The students are puzzled about how to use the
language in a particular context.
The learners cannot use the language in an
integrated way.
5Conclusions
The language we teach in traditional FLT is not
what we use in real-life communication.
6Theoretical Basis
7Theory of language
- Language is for communication.
- Language is used in context.
- The relationship between form and meaning is not
a one-to - one correspondence. - Discourse analysis studies language above
sentence level.
8Theory of language
- Pragmatics studies how language is used in
communication. - Hymes and his notion of communicative competence
- Halliday and his functional account of language
use - Richards and Rodgers summary of the
communicative view of language
9Theory of learning
- CLT should follow the natural acquisition
process. - Language is best learned through use in social
context. - Effective language learning will take place if
the emphasis is on communication. - Language learning is a process of meaning
negotiation.
10Basic Principles
11Main features
- 1. Communicative purpose (information gap)
- 2. Communicative desire (real need)
- 3. (Focus on ) Content, not form (message)
- (Exchanging information, not pattern
practice)
12- 4. Variety of language (not just one language
form, free to improve/create) - 5. No teacher intervention (done by Ss no
correcting or evaluating how Ss do it assessment
is based on the product or on communicative
purpose rather than on the language.)
13Objectives
- The final goal of FLT
- to enable the learners to use the foreign
language in work or life (communicative
competence). - we should teach
- that part of the language that will be used in
the way that is used in the real world.
14Techniques
- Ways of integrating language skills
- listening and note-taking using
audio-video materials - giving oral presentation
- role-play/simulation etc.
15Techniques
- Ways of developing separated skills
- speaking problem solving activities,
- simulation/role-play etc.
- listening putting pictures in correct sequence,
- following directions on a map, checking off
- items in a photograph, completing a grid(?
- ???????), time table, or chart etc.
16Techniques
- reading skimming
- scanning
- text unscrambling(????)
- information transfer etc
- writing (mainly done in three steps)
- gathering ideas
- working an drafts
- preparing the final version
17Procedures
- 1) Presentation and comprehension (Students
listen, then answer questions.) - 2) Demonstration of functional patterns
(????)(The teacher exemplifies (????)each
functional pattern.) - 3) Practising functional patterns (Students
practise the dialogue in pairs.)
18Procedures
- 4) Free production (Students make mini-dialogues
of their own.) - 5) Checking students work
- 6) Reading new materials (integrating reading and
writing) - 7) Writing based on reading
19Summary and Comments
20Advantages
- 1) Wider considerations of what is appropriate
and what is accurate - 2) Wider range of language
- 3) Realistic and motivating language practice
- 4) Drawing on (??)learners knowledge and
experience
21Disadvantages
- 1) Unclear about how rules of use can be taught
- 2) Difficult to tailor syllabus(????) to
students needs - 3) Fossilization (??)of learners errors