Title:
1AUTHENTIC TASKSAS AMEANINGFUL AND
RELEVANTFRAMEWORKFORTEACHINGCONTEMPORARY
TARGET CULTURE
- BY
- ELVIRA SANATULLOVA-ALLISON, PH.D.
- State University Of New York College at Potsdam,
New York, U.S.A. - sanatue_at_potsdam.edu
-
- MARAT SANATULLOV, PH.D.
- Wichita State University, Kansas, U.S.A.
- marat.sanatullov_at_wichita.edu
2AUTHENTIC TASKSDEFINITIONS
- Authentic task is an assignment given to
students designed to assess their ability to
apply standard-driven knowledge and skills to
real-world challenges. - In other words, a task that teachers ask students
to perform is considered authentic when - students are asked to construct their own
responses rather than select from ones presented - the task replicates challenges faced in the real
world. - As teachers, we are ultimately less interested in
how much information students can acquire than
how well they can use it. Thus, our most
meaningful and relevant assessments ask students
to perform authentic tasks authentic
assessment as compared to traditional
assessment. - (J. Mueller, 2003)
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4AUTHENTIC TASKSCHARACTERISTICS
TRADITIONAL AUTHENTIC
selecting a response performing a task
contrived real-world
recall/recognition of knowledge construction/application of knowledge
teacher-structured student-structured
indirect evidence direct evidence
5AUTHENTIC TASKSTYPES
CONSTRUCTED RESPONSE PRODUCT PERFORMANCE
short-answer essay questions essay conducting research
show your work research reports performance
concept map portfolio oral presentation
figural representation poster debate
6COGNITIVE APPROACH
- Promotion and use of learning and teaching
strategies that reflect the way knowledge is
organized in the human brain should be a language
teachers major aim. Understanding specific
processes of human cognition helps the teacher
understand the fundamentals of human learning
and, thereby, how to build and improve
instruction. The inter-relatedness of the
processes of acquisition, transfer, and retention
of information in the mechanism of human learning
emphasizes the importance of the relationship
between teaching and assessment, language
acquisition and language production, previous
knowledge and new information in the
instructional practices.
7Blooms TaxonomyOfCognitive Development
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9Information Processing
- SLA is seen as the building up of knowledge
systems that can eventually be called on
automatically for speaking and understanding. At
first, learners have to pay attention to any
aspect of the language which they are trying to
understand or produce. Gradually, through
experience and practice, learners become able to
use certain parts of their knowledge so quickly
and automatically that the are not even aware
that they are doing it. This frees them to focus
on other aspects of the language which, in turn,
gradually become automatic (McLaughlin, 1987).
Practice, in this context, is not seen as
something mechanical, but rather as something
involving effort on the part of the learner.
10Constructivism
- It promotes the view of learning as a
constructive and reconstructive process. It
emphasizes the learners active role in
constructing their own knowledge through both
individual and social activity and interactions.
The aim of constructivist teaching is not so
much to transmit information as to encourage
knowledge formation and metacognitive processes
for judging, organizing, and acquiring new
information (Bruning, Schraw, Ronning, 1999).
Vygotskys Zone of Proximal Development as an
example of his dialectical constructivism is one
of the most powerful concepts of mutual influence
between the cognitive and social aspects of human
cognition.
11Connectionism
- It attributes great importance to the role
of the environment in language learning arguing
that learners gradually build up their knowledge
of language through exposure to thousands of
instances of the linguistic features they
eventually learn. Language is viewed as a complex
system of units which become inter-connected in
the mind as they are encountered together. The
more units are heard or seen together, the more
likely it is that the presence of one will lead
to the activation of the other.
12INTER-DISCIPLINARY APPROACH
- Movement in the profession from the emphasis
on particular methods of language teaching toward
a proficiency- and performance-oriented
instruction, curriculum, and assessment that
define learners language ability in terms of
functions, contexts/contents, and accuracy (Buck,
Byrnes, Thompson, 1989) helps language teachers
to skillfully organize their instruction based on
what language learners should know and can do
with the target language on different levels of
proficiency, in the integration of skills of
listening, speaking, reading, and writing, and in
different goal areas such as Communication,
Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, and
Communities (Standards for Foreign Language
Learning Preparing for the 21st Century,
American Council on the Teaching of Foreign
Languages).
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21OBJECT LESSON
- What are its physical qualities? (shape, size,
texture, etc.) - How was it made? (by hand or machine, etc.)
- Was it designed for a particular use?
- What facts can we determine about the culture by
looking/touching/tasting/smelling/etc. the object?
22SIX INSTRUCTIONAL GOALS(H. N. Seelye Teaching
Culture Strategies for Intercultural
Communication 3rd ed., 1994)
- GOAL 1 INTEREST
- The student shows curiosity about another
culture (or another segment or subculture of
ones own culture) and empathy toward its
members. - GOAL 2 WHO
- The student recognizes that role
expectations and other social variables such as
age, sex, social class, religion, ethnicity, and
place of residence affect the way people speak
and behave. - GOAL 3 WHAT
- The student realizes that effective
communication requires discovering the culturally
conditioned images that are evoked in the minds
of people when they think, act, and react to the
world around them.
23- GOAL 4 WHERE WHEN
- The student recognizes that situational
variables and convention shape behavior in
important ways. - GOAL 5 WHY
- The student understands that people
generally act the way they do because they are
using options their society allows for satisfying
basic physical and psychological needs, and that
cultural patterns are interrelated and tend
mutually to support need satisfaction. - GOAL 6 EXPLORATION
- The student can evaluate a generalization
about the target culture in terms of the amount
of evidence substantiating it, and has the skills
needed to locate and organize information about
the target culture from the library, the mass
media, people, and personal observation.
24LICENSE PLATES
- GOAL 1 INTEREST
- Bring in and display as many license plates as
you have available. (R) - Ask if anyone knows what they are and where they
have seen them before. (LS) - Ask if anyone drives and how many of them
like/would like to drive a car. - Have students read all of the information on the
license plate and then explain its meaning. - Lead into the importance of driving in U.S.
culture and how it is similar and/or different
from their native cultures.
25- GOAL 2 WHO
- Ask students where people drive cars in the
United Sates. Brainstorm different types of
roads in this country. - Talk about American free spirit and Americas
obsession with driving automobiles all over the
country. - Show several advertisements of various vehicles
(cars, trucks, RVs, SUVs, etc.). Focus on images
of wide open America and the freedom of movement
in this country. Have students pick out the
advertisements that represent the American driver
the best in their minds. - Connect the previous to the importance of knowing
how to drive in this country/state (Drivers
Manual).
26- GOAL 3 WHAT
- Bring out a large road map of the United States
or a road atlas. Pass out U.S. road maps or road
atlases to each student or break class into small
groups. Going around the class or around small
groups have students take turns reading each of
the states names. - Display a large poster containing cut out
pictures of each states license plate. As a
class (one student at a time) match each license
plate with the corresponding state by taping them
up on the large road map in the front of the
room.
27- GOAL 4 WHERE AND WHEN
- Break class into small groups. Give each group a
large picture of different state license plates.
Have each group discuss together the symbols they
find on the license plate. Have the group write
down the following - What the symbols mean to each member of
the group. - What the symbols make them think about
the state they are representing. - Bring class back together and have each group
read to the class what they wrote down in their
group discussions.
28- GOAL 5 WHY (conclusion)
- Discuss the purpose of license plates. Discuss
the use of so many different symbols on plates.
Talk about different parts of the United States.
How are they different? What do symbols mean to
different people across the country? Focus on
Nebraskas license plate. - GOAL 6 EXPLORATION
- Pass out to each student a piece of paper with a
blank rectangle shaped like a license plate.
Have students design a license plate for their
native country/province/state/city/town/etc. On
the back, have students write down what symbols
they used and what those symbols mean in their
own culture.
29EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES
- Furthermore, research and practice have
shown that teachers knowledgeable use of
educational technologies in the language
classroom can contribute to enhance input
processing by bringing context into language
teaching (Shrum Glisan, 2000). Moreover,
according to Garrett (1991), technology enhanced
language learning and teaching allows for further
integration of language, literature, and culture.
In our second/foreign language methodology
courses we use PowerPoint and HyperStudio
multimedia programs as well as a web design
program Dreamweaver 4 and Inspiration software in
order to create activities and materials that
relate language learning to other disciplines,
academic content, and to the world at large.
These programs have become common tools in
language learning and language teacher
preparation programs (Pusack Otto, 1997).
30Dreamweaver 4
- Dreamweaver 4 a program for Professional
Web Site Design of Macromedia Web Design Studio
enables the language teacher to create
interactive web activities developing students
skills of searching, selecting, and using
information on the web in relation to the target
language and culture. A WebQuest is an example of
such activities.
31WebQuest
- A WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented activity
in which most or all of the information used by
learners is drawn from the Web (Website of the
College of Education at San Diego State
University, the WebQuest Page). WebQuests are
designed to support learners' thinking at the
higher levels of analysis, synthesis, and
evaluation that Blooms Taxonomy of thinking
processes emphasizes. In French Foods (K-6
level) and French Olympic Games 2012 (K-12
level) two bilingual WebQuests that we have
built inquiry-based approach is complimented
with proficiency- and group-oriented learning
individual and group rubrics enable students to
evaluate their own and others performances
according to the specific tasks assigned and web
resources analyzed. In these activities learning
a foreign language is also integrated in studying
the content area of social studies geography,
lifestyle, and eating traditions are closely
addressed by the instruction. Authenticity of
resources, increased visual input, structural
organization of materials and their availability
are definite advantages of WebQuests. -
-
32Please, feel free to visit our instructional
websitehttp//www.msanatullov.comto explore how
these task-based technologies and activities
workfor teaching contemporary French culture.