Summarizing Study Concerning The Problems of FLT Curricula and Communicative Classrooms
Summarizing Study Concerning The Problems of FLT Curricula and Communicative Classrooms
Summarizing Study Concerning The Problems of FLT Curricula and Communicative Classrooms
theory has consequently been one of the most active branches of applied linguistics in
recent years.
In a discussion of principles of syllabus design, Corder (1973: 322) warns that there
is no such thing as a perfect, ideal or logical syllabus Ideally, each learner requires a
personalized syllabus of his/her own. But we teach groups, not individuals. Any
syllabus is bound, therefore, to be something of a compromise. But we have seen that
it is unsatisfactory in principle to separate the learning of a language from the social
use of a language, and any use of a language as compromise. It is specifically within
the process of compromising with the demands and strategies of other language users
that language acquisition occurs. Perhaps, therefore, if we can find an appropriate way
of compromising, we shall benefit the learner more than if we try to identify the inbuilt syllabus of a learner operation in isolation.
But it is isolated syllabuses that constitute the main body of traditional language
syllabuses - isolated in the sense that they assume that language learning will be
carried out by individuals requiring a special body of content. Corder comments (p.
322) that what we finish up with is some sort of integrated but parallel set of
syllabuses: syntactic, phonological, cultural and functional and within each of these a
parallel set of learning tasks, and other have made the same point with even larger
lists. Swan (1981: 39), for example, includes Corders four syllabuses, but adds
lexical, notional, topic, situational, discourse, rhetorical, and stylistic syllabuses as
well. There is in fact some confusion here, for the various types of syllabuses can be
related to one another more systematically than Swan implies (discourse, rhetoric,
and style, as he defines them, are three different ways of looking at the same
phenomenon), but they are all based on analytical categories from the point of view of
the observer of language activity.
Another writer who also has written on general curriculum designs, McNeil (1977:1),
offers guidelines for planning which are extremely valuable for identifying the role
that a curriculum plays in establishing the intellectual backdrop or policy for
instructional plans. He categorizes recent curriculum designs in the United States
under four general headings based on their educational-cultural orientations:
humanistic, social-reconstructionist, technological, and academic subject matter. Any
one of these orientations could serve as the basis for a curriculum for a language
program. However, since McNeil's model is not specifically concerned with language
programs, what is lacking is some mechanism for including a theoretical view toward
language and language learning.
CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT
Recently, it has been suggested that at the very minimum a curriculum should offer
the following:
A In planning:
1. Principles for the selection of content - what is to be learned and thought.
2. Principles for the development of a teaching strategy - how is to be learned and
taught.
3. Principles for the making of decisions about sequence.
4. Principles on which to diagnose the strengths and weakness of individual students
and differentiate the general principles 1, 2 and 3 above, to meet individual cases.
B. In empirical study:
1. Principles on which to study and evaluate the progress of students.
2. Principles on which to study and evaluate the progress of teachers.
3. Guidance as to the feasibility of implementing the curriculum in varying school
contexts, pupil contexts, environments and peer-group situations.
4. Information about the variability of effects in differing contexts and on different
pupils and an understanding of the causes of the variation.
C. In relation to justification:
A formulation of the intention or aim to the curriculum which is accessible to critical
scrutiny.
(Stenhouse 1975: 5)
This list, although by no means exhaustive, demonstrates just how comprehensive the
field of curriculum study can be.
Language curriculum development, Richards says, like other areas of curriculum
activity, is concerned with principles and procedures for the planning, delivery,
management, and assessment of teaching and learning (Richards, Jack C. 1990: 1).
Curriculum development processes in language teaching comprise needs analysis,
goal setting, syllabus design, methodology, and testing and evaluation.
itself. This does not mean, however, that effective teaching cannot be planned for and
conceptualized in advance (Richards, Jack C. 1990: 11).
Methodology can be characterized as the activities, tasks, and learning experiences
selected by the teacher in order to achieve learning, and how these are used within the
teaching/learning process. These activities are justified according to the objectives the
teacher has set out to accomplish and the content he or she has set out to teach. They
also relate to the philosophy of the program, to the view of language and language
learning that the program embodies, and to the roles of teachers, learners, and
instructional materials in the program. Since the assumptions underlying methodology
are not necessarily shared by teachers, administrators, and learners, it is a useful
exercise for all who are involved in a language program to clarify their assumptions
about the kind of teaching and learning the program will try to exemplify. This can be
done through teacher preparation activities that examine attitudes, beliefs, and
practices concerning five central issues (Richards, Jack C. 1990: 1):
1. the approach or philosophy underlying the program
2. the role of teachers in the program
1 the role of the learners
1 the kinds of learning activities, tasks, and experiences that will be used in the
program
2 the role and design of instructional materials.
Turning more specifically to language teaching, the distinction drawn between
syllabus design and methodology suggests that syllabus design deals with the
selection and grading of content, while methodology is concerned with the selection
and sequencing of learning activities. If one sticks to the traditional distinction, then
task design would seem to belong to the realm of methodology. However with the
development of communicative language teaching the distinction between syllabus
design and methodology becomes difficult to sustain: one needs not only to specify
both the content (or ends of learning) and the tasks (or means to those ends) but also
to integrate them. This suggests a broad perspective on curriculum in which
concurrent consideration is given to content, methodology and evaluation.
In this perspective, David Nunan (Nunan, D. 1989: 15) makes one substantial
departure from the traditional approach to curriculum design. With a traditional
approach, such as the one suggested by Tyler, the curriculum designer first decides on
the goals and objectives of instruction. Once these have been satisfactory specified,
the curriculum content is specified. The learning experiences are then decided upon,
and, finally, the means for assessing learners and evaluating the curriculum are
established. The process is thus a linear one which operates in one direction, with a
feedback loop from evaluation to goals as the following diagram shows:
terms, the curriculum committee might define the terminal goal of the program as
follows: The student finishing this program will be able to converse effectively with
a native speaker on topics of interest, will be able to read authentic materials for
pleasure or professional needs, and will be able to correspond with friends, colleagues
or business associates in the target language. This definition is still very general, but
it is an attempt to give some description of the terminal competencies which are the
expected outcome of the course.
A great deal has been written in the last few years about the theory and practice of
communicative language teaching. However, a basic principle underlying all
communicative approaches is that learners must learn not only to make grammatically
correct (propositional) statements about the world, but must also develop the ability to
use language to get things done. These two aspects of language are captured in the
distinction between the propositional and illocutionary (or functional) levels of
language (Widdowson 1978). It was recognized that simply being able to create
grammatically correct structures in language did not necessarily enable the learner to
use the language to carry out various real-world tasks. While the learners have to be
able to construct grammatically correct structures, they also have to do much more. In
working out what this much more includes, linguists and sociolinguists began to
investigate the concept of speech situation. In so doing they were able to define some
of the ways in which language is likely to be influenced by situational variables. Some
of the most important of these variables are the situation itself, the topic of
conversation, the conversational purpose, and probably the most important of all, the
relationship between interlocutors in an interaction (Nunan, D. 1988: 25). All of these
interact in complex ways in communicative interaction.
The development of communicative language teaching has had a dramatic effect on
the roles that learners are required to adopt. This is particularly true of oral interaction
tests. In the small-group interaction tasks learners are required to put language to a
range of uses, to use language which has been imperfectly mastered, to negotiate
meaning, in short, to draw on their own resources rather than simply repeating and
absorbing language. This can sometimes cause problems if the learners have rather set
ideas about language and learning, particularly if these differ greatly from their own.
In such cases the teacher has a number of options. On the one hand he/she can insist
that, as a teacher, he/she knows best and the learners must resign themselves to doing
as the teacher says. On the other hand, the teacher can give in to the learners and
structure activities around their preferences. In Nunans words, a more positive option
would be to discuss the issue with the learners, explain why you want them to engage
in communicative tasks, and attempt to come to a compromise (Nunan, D. 1989: 86).
The roles of teachers and learners are, in many ways, complementary. Giving the
learners a different role (such as greater initiative in the classroom) requires the
teacher to adopt a different role. According to Breen and Candlin (1980), the teacher
has three main roles in the communicative classroom. The first is to act as facilitator
of the communicative process, the second is to act as a participant, and the third is to
act as an observer and learner (Breen and Cadlin 1980).
Conversation is a multifaceted activity. In some language programs it is an
opportunity for untrained native speakers to get students to talk, using whatever
resources and techniques the teacher can think of. In language programs where trained
teachers are available, they are often left to their own resources and encouraged to use
whatever materials they choose in order to provide practice in
both accuracy and fluency. Consequently the content of conversation classes varies
widely. In one class, the teachers primary emphasis might be on problem solving.
Students work on communication games and tasks in pairs or small groups with
relatively little direct teacher input. In another class, the teacher might have a more
active role, employing grammar and pronunciation drills and structured oral tasks. A
third teacher may use the conversation class as an opportunity for unstructured free
discussion, while in another class the teacher might have students work on a
situational dialogue such as At the bank and At the supermarket.
The following diagram from Wright (1987) illustrates the different ways in which
learners might be grouped physically or arranged within the classroom.
Social organization Pupils
and teaching activity Products
Activities. Forms of interaction
Small Group Whole
Work class
Pair work
Individual
Presentation,
Film, etc.
TASKS
Wright: Roles of Teachers and Learners (1987: 58)
Part of the difficulty in deciding what to do in the conversation class is due to the
nature of conversation itself. In order to appreciate the complex nature of conversation
and conversational fluency, Richards shows some of the most important dimensions of
conversation: the purposes of conversation, turn-taking, topics, formal features of
conversation, and the notion of fluency (Richards, Jack C. 1990: 67).
Purposes of conversation
Conversations serve a variety of purposes. Two different kinds of conversational
interaction can be distinguished - those in which the primary focus is on the exchange
of information (the transactional function of conversation), and those in which the
primary purpose is to establish and maintain social relations (the interactional function
of conversation) (Brown and Yule 1983). In transactional uses of conversation the
primary focus is on the message, whereas interactional uses of conversation focus
primarily on the social needs of the participants. Approaches to the teaching of both
conversation and listening comprehension are fundamentally affected by whether the
primary purposes involved are transactional or interactional.
Turn-taking
Conversation is a collaborative process. A speaker does not say everything he or she
wants to say in a single utterance. Conversations progress as a series of turns; at any
moment, the speaker may become the listener. Basic to the management of the
collaborative process in conversation is the turn-making system.