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Blowing Winds, SHIFTING SANDSand nowThe Post-Method Era Language Teaching and Learning in 21st Century: A Reverie?
PRESENTER: Gholamabbass Shahheidaripour      Freelance Teacher/Lecturer                                                                                 	gshahheidary@yahoo.com 		 Iran Language Institute               	    	Kerman Branch		      	  Kerman, Iran		     July25, 2008
Languages are crucial for the future of our young people,our society and our economy.
In the knowledge society    of the 21st century language competence and intercultural understanding are not optionalextras, they are an essentialpart of being a citizen.
Languages for ALLLanguages for LIFEThat is why the ILI must have a National LanguagesStrategy to transform the languages capability of the Nation.
21st century skills Knowing more about the world Thinking outside the box Becoming smarter about new sources of information Developing good people skills Adding new depth and rigor to our curriculum and standardized exams Reshaping the teaching force Reorganizing who runs the schools.
 21st Century Skills:Language Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age  21st Century Skills:Language Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age 	Digital Age Literacy 	Inventive Thinking 	  Effective Communication 	High Productivity 	Digital Age Literacy 	Inventive Thinking 	  Effective Communication 	High Productivity
Factors Inducing Change in 21st Century A broadening of the overall goals of Language learning to include social and cultural goods such as the development intercultural awareness A general shift of perspective among methodologists and researchers from focusing on teachers and instructions towards learners and learning process A broadening of theories of language learning to incorporate insights not only from applied linguistics, but also from cognitive psychology The internationalization of teaching methods, aims and assessment, which has been influenced by such factors as the opening of Europe in the last decade of the 20th century, but also the work of the Council of Europe The increasing  opportunities offered by advances in communication technology, which has challenged the centrality of classroom-based teaching
The Process for Bringing 21st Century Skills into Our Schools LEARN : 		Research, reflect, discuss, debate, 			and argue ADVOCATE : 	Set a GOAL worth striving for FOCUS : 		a) Find the fit for our classes				b) Make the commitment ACTIVATE: 	a) Try things   		b) Make necessary system changes      		c) Get everyone ready IMPACT : 	a) Implement with integrity  b) Celebrate, Reflect, Revise
Can we really teach languages?
Learning and Teaching Philosophy TheoryPsychologyApproachMethodTechnique, design and procedure
As fashions in language teaching come and go, the teacher in the classroom needs reassurance that there is some bedrock beneath the shifting sands. Once solidly founded on the bedrock, like the sea anemone, the teacher can sway to the rhythms of any tides or currents, without the trauma of being swept away purposelessly. 		—WILGA RIVERS, 1992, p. 373
Theories of Teaching in Language Teaching (Zahorik in Richards & Renandya 2002) A. Science-Research Conceptions 		1. Operationalizing Learning Principles 		2.  Following a Tested Model of Teaching 		3.  Doing What Effective Teachers Do 	B. Theory-Philosophy Conceptions 		1. Theory-Based Approaches 		2. Value-Based Approaches 	C. Art-Craft Conceptions
The Essential Skills of Teaching A. Science-Research Conceptions 		. Understand the Learning Principles. 		. Develop Tasks and Activities Based on the Learning 			   Principles. 		. Monitor Students’ Performance on Tasks to See the Desired 		   Performance is being Achieved. 	B1. Theory-Based Approaches 		. Understand the Theory and the Principles. 		. Select Syllabi, Materials, and Tasks Based on the Theory. 		. Monitor your Teaching to See that it Conforms to the Theory. 	B2. Value-Based Approaches 		. Understand the Values behind the Approach. 		. Select only those Educational Means which Conform to these 		   Values. 		. Monitor the Implementation Process to Ensure that the Value 		   System is being maintained. 	C. Art-Craft Conceptions 		. Treat each Teaching Situation as Unique. 		. Identify the Particular Characteristics of each Situation. 		. Try out Different Teaching Strategies. 		. Develop Personal Approaches to Teaching.
Chomsky (1965) rephrases Von Humboldt (1836) as follows: 	We cannot really teach 	languages: we can only 	present the conditions under which a language will develop spontaneously in the minds of the learners in its 		own way.
Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own. 				Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe methodsbeliefs Of					 			about 	  language				 			language 	  teaching				 			learning
Teacher 				Learner 	Language
Teachers as Professionals Characteristics of professionals (e.g. doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, etc):  •Extended period of advanced specialized training, etc… •Autonomy– ability to exercise professional judgments and make own decisions, and take responsibility for them.
Teachers as Practitioners (DEWEY) Passive Practitioners Reflective Practitioners Transformative Intellectuals
Teachers as Reflective Practitioners •John Dewey (1933): How We Think. Teachers -not just transmitters of knowledge, but problem-solvers; creative, context-sensitive. •Don Schon (1983): The Reflective Practitioner.  • Zeichner & Liston(1996): Reflective Teaching:  					An Introduction.
Interactive ReflectionB. Kumaravadivelu(2003):  		Reflection should not be merely 	introspective, but interactive as 	well (involving students, 			colleagues, planners, etc.)
	Three Major Types of 					Interaction-Interaction as a 		Textual Activity      	-Interaction as an 	Interpersonal Activity	-Interaction as an 	Ideational Activity
A Reflective Practitioner (Zeichner and Liston, 1996): • “examines, frames, and attempts to solve the dilemmas of classroom practice; • is aware of and questions the assumptions and values he or she brings to teaching; • is attentive to the institutional and cultural contexts in which he or she teaches; • takes part in curriculum development and is involved in school change efforts; and • takes responsibility for his or her own professional development”
Method vs. Methodology •Method= established methods conceptualized and constructed 		by experts in the field. 	•Methodology = what practicing 	teachers actually do in the 	classroom in order to achieve 	their (stated or unstated) 	teaching objectives.
A Methodology that can readily be turned into teaching materials and textbooks and whose use requires no special training will generally be more readily adopted than one lacking these features.( The ILI Methodology)Richards & Renandya (2002)
Methods: Assumptions, Values, and Beliefs 	1. Methods serve as a foil for reflection that can aid   teachers in bringing to conscious awareness the thinking that underlies their actions. 	2. Methods offer teachers alternatives to what they currently think and do. 	3. A knowledge of methods is a part of the knowledge base of teaching. Being a part of discourse community confers a professional identity and connects teachers with others. 	4. Interacting with others’ conceptions of practice helps keeping teachers’ teaching alive—helps prevent it from becoming stale and overly routinized (Prabhu 1990). 	5. A knowledge of methods helps expand a teacher’s repertoire of techniques—an additional avenue for professional growth and new philosophical positions.
 Language Teaching Methods: (Teacher-focused) •Audiolingual Method		  •Communicative Language Teaching •Community Language Learning •Competency-based Language Teaching •Direct Method •Grammar-Translation Method •Natural Approach •Oral & Situational Language Teaching •Lexical Approach •Silent Way •Suggestopedia •Task-Based Language Teaching •Total Physical Response
The  myth of method 1. ‘There is a  best  method out there ready and 	waiting to 	be discovered’.      2. ‘Method constitutes the organizing principle for 	language teaching’.      3. ‘Method has a universal and a historical value’.      4. ‘Theorists conceive knowledge, and teachers 	consume knowledge’.      5. ‘Method is neutral, and has no ideological 	motivation’.   1.‘There is a best method out there ready and waiting to be discovered’.
Some Questions to Ask about a Method 1. What are the method’s ‘Big Ideas’? 2. What are the Theoretical underpinnings behind the method? 3. How much ‘engagement of the mind’ does the method expect? 4. Is the method deductive or inductive in approach? 5. Does the method allow the use the L1in the classroom? (Some methods shun it at all cost.) 6. Which of the four skills are given more emphasis in the method? 7. How much importance does the method give to ‘authenticity of language’?
Causes of Methods’ Demise 1. Methods are too prescriptive, assuming too much about a context before the context has been identified. 2. Methods are quite distinctive at the early beginning stages of a language course and rather indistinguishable from each other at later stages. 3. It was once thought that methods are could be empirically tested by scientific quantification to determine the best one but ….? 4. Methods are laden with what referred to as ‘interested knowledge’—the  quasi-political or mercenary agents of their proponents(linguistic imperialism).
The PainIsGoodfor YouMETHOD!
Currently, EFL/ESL teachers are encouraged to explore what works and what does not work in a certain ELT context, using what Brown(2007) calls an enlightened and eclectic approach/ method.              (This has a lot of Pro’s and Con’s.)
Learner-focused Language Learning Learning Strategy Training 		-Good Language Learner 		-Autonomy 	2. Cooperative Learning 		-Collaborative or Social Skills 	3. Multiple Intelligences 		(Logical/Mathematical, Visual/Spatial, 	Body/Kinesthetic, Musical/Rhythmic, 	Interpersonal, Intrapersonal, Verbal/ 					Linguistic)
Language Learning: Linguistic Content 1. Task-based Instruction 2. Content-based Instruction 3. Participatory  Approach 4. The Whole Language  Approach 5. Competency-based Language  		Teaching 6. Neurolinguistic Programming
Post-method Pedagogy:some proposals •Stern’s Three-Dimensional framework (1992):    (i) the L1-L2 connection,                     (ii) the code-communication 			relationship,                                         		 (iii) the explicit-implicit option. Strategy = ‘intentional action’, 	Technique= ‘practical action’. •Allwright’s ‘Exploratory Practice’ 			framework (2003 etc.)
Core Principles for Teachers’ Plans and Instructional Decisions (Baily 1996) 	-- Engage all learners in the lesson. 	-- Make learners, and not the teacher, the focus of the lesson. 	-- Provide maximum opportunities for students’ participation. 	-- Develop learner responsibility. 	-- Be tolerant of learners’ mistakes. 	-- Develop learners’ confidence. 	-- Teach learning strategies. 	-- Respond to learners’ difficulties and build on them. 	-- Use a maximum amount of student-to-student activities. 	-- Promote cooperation among learners. 	-- Practice both accuracy and fluency. 	-- Address learners’ needs and interests.
Brown’s(2001) Teaching by Principles:Integration and Interaction Cognitive Principles: 		1. Automaticity 	2. Meaningful Learning 3. The Anticipation of Reward 	4. Intrinsic  Motivation 	5. Strategic Investment       B. Affective Principles: 6. Language Ego 	7. Self-Confidence 8. Risk-Taking 9. The Language-Culture Connection       C. Linguistic Principles: 10. The Native Language Effect 	11. Interlanguage 	12. Communicative Competence
Maintaining an environment for first-class Language Teaching and Learning Principle 1: An atmosphere of intellectual excitement Principle 2: An intensive research and knowledge transfer 	culture permeating all teaching and learning activities  Principle 3: A vibrant and embracing social context  Principle 4: An international and culturally diverse learning 		environment  Principle 5: Explicit concern and support for individual 			development  Principle 6: Clear academic expectations and standards  Principle 7: Learning cycles of experimentation, feedback 		and assessment  Principle 8: Premium quality learning spaces, resources and 		technologies  Principle 9: An adaptive curriculum
7/23/2008 10:09 AM Slide number 39
Heightened Awarenesses Witnessed  in L2 Profession in Waning Years of the 20th Century: An awareness that there is no best method out there ready and waiting to be discovered; An awareness that the artificiality created dichotomy between theory and practice has been more harmful than helpful for teachers; An awareness that teacher education models that merely transmit a body of interested knowledge do not produce effective teaching professionals; and An awareness that teacher beliefs, teacher reasoning, and teacher cognition play a crucial role in shaping and reshaping the context and character of the practice of everyday teaching.
Post-Method Pedagogy MUST:a) Facilitate the advancement of a context-sensitive 	language education based on a true understanding 	of local linguistic, sociocultural, and political 	particularities;	b) Rupture the reified role relationship between the 	theorists and practitioners by enabling teachers to 	construct their own theory of practice; and   	c) Tap the sociopolitical consciousness that 	participants bring with them in order to aid their 	quest for identity formation and social 	transformation. Treating learners, teachers, and 	teacher educators as explorers, I discuss their roles 	and functions in a post-method pedagogy.
Post-Method Main Assumptions: 1. Particularity  where, when and 			to whom 2. Practicality     applicable in real 			situation 3. Possibility	   socially, culturally 			and politically appropriate
Post-Method Education’s Three Broad Projects: 1. Macrostrategy Projects 2. Microstrategy Projects 3. Exploratory Projects
MAIN PURPOSE: To Facilitate  			the growth 			 			and development of 	teachers’ own theory 				of practice. 	(Kumaravadivelu, 2006) To teach is to be full of hope. 				(Larry Cuban, 1989)
Kumaravadivelu(2003):‘Macro-strategic’ Framework   • Theory-neutral and method-neutral   • ‘Macro-strategies’:General plansderived from currently available theoretical, empirical, and pedagogical knowledge related to L2 learning and teaching; broad guidelinesbased on which teachers can generate their own location-specific, need-based ‘micro-strategies’or classroom procedures.
Raising cultural consciousness Practicality Particularity Possibility Activating intuitive heuristics Facilitating negotiated interaction Integrating language skills Integrating language skills Minimizing perceptual mismatch Fostering language awareness Contextualizing linguistic input Maximizing learning opportunities Ensuring social relevance
Macro-strategies 1.Maximize learning opportunities 	•Teaching as a process of creating     and utilizing learning opportunities;     teachers as planners and mediators 			 of learning.
2.Facilitate negotiated interaction • Meaningful learner-learner 	and learner-teacher interaction, 	where learners have 	freedom 	to actively initiate and navigate 	talk, not just react and respond 	to it. 	• Textual, interpersonal and 	 	        ideational functions.
3.Minimize perceptual mismatches  • Cognitive, communicative, linguistic,  pedagogic, strategic, cultural,  evaluative, procedural, instructional  and attitudinal mismatches between  teacher’s and learners’ perceptions
4. Activate intuitive heuristics  	• Provide enough language   data for learners to discover and    infer underlying rules of form and 	   function for themselves.
5.Foster language awareness  	•Draw students’ attention to     less obvious properties of L2 to  		promote learning 		(where necessary).
6.Contextualize linguistic input • Discourse features  need to be contextualized              instead  of introduced in 	 isolated and discrete fashion.
7. Integrate language skills  	• Language skills are essentially    interrelated and mutually reinforcing.  The traditional separation of skills is  		more logistic than logical.
8. Promote learner autonomy 	• Help learners learn how 	   To learn, equip them with the   necessary cognitive (etc.)  strategies, and help them take  responsibility for their own  			   learning.
9.Ensure social relevance 	• Understand learning  purpose and language use  in the local social context
10.Raise cultural consciousness • Global 					cultural consciousness,  			 not just  	awareness of L2 culture
Micro-strategies 	•Classroom procedures that are        designed to realize the objectives of            	a particular macro-strategy, 	keeping in mind the learners’ needs, wants and lacks, and their 	current level of language ability. 												[see examples in 				Kumaravadivelu2006]
In short, the framework 	seeks to provide a   	possible mechanism 	for classroom teachers 	to 	begin to theorize 	from their practice 	and practice what they 				theorize.
The framework,  	then,  	seeks to transform 	classroom practitioners 	into strategic thinkers, 	strategic teachers, and 	strategic explorers who 	channel their time and 	effort in order to 
post-method pedagogists: 	• reflect on the specific needs, wants, situations, and processes of learning and 	teaching; 	• stretch their knowledge, skill, and attitude to stay informed and involved; 	• design and use appropriate micro-strategies to maximize learning potential 	in the classroom; and 	• monitor and evaluate their ability to react to myriad situations in meaningful 	ways.
Post-Method Condition signifies three interrelated Attributes: It signifies a search for an alternative to method not an alternative method. (a Bottom-up Process) It signifies Teacher autonomy (self-observe, self-analyze, self-evaluate.) It is principled pragmatism (how classroom practices can be shaped or reshaped.)
DISCOVERY LEARNING TEACHING ACCESSIBLE INFORMATION
		Next Steps?!
Three broad and overlapping Strands of Thought Emerging from our Discussion The Traditional Concept of Method with its Generic Set of theoretical Underpinnings Unpredictably Numerous Learning and Teaching  Needs, Wants, and Situations The Primary Task of In-Service and Pre-Service Teacher Education to Create Conditions for Present and Prospective Teachers to Acquire the Necessary Knowledge, Skill, Authority, and Autonomy to Construct Their Own Pedagogic Knowledge i.e. reflect, stretch, design, monitor, and evaluate …
References •Allwright, R. L. 2003. ‘Exploratory Practice: Rethinking practitioner research in language  teaching’ . Language Teaching Research, 7, 113-141. . Brown, H.D. 2000, 4th ed. Principles of Language Learning and Teaching. Longman. . _________. 2001. Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy. Longman. .Carter, R. & Nunan, D. 2001. The Cambridge Guide to Teaching English to Speakers of Other  Languages. CUP. . Doughty, C. J. & Long, M. H. 2003. The Handbook of Second Language Acquisition. Blackwell. . Ellis, R. &Barkhuizen, G. 2005. Analysing Learner Language. OUP. . Kaplan, R. B. (ed.). 2002.The Handbook of Applied Linguistics. OUP. .Kumaravadivelu, B. 2003. Beyond Methods: Macro-strategies for Language Teaching. Yale  University Press. •_______________. 2006. Understanding Language Teaching: From Method to Post-method. Lawrence Erlbaum. •Larsen-Freeman D. 2000. Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching. OUP. . Lindsay, C. & Knight P. 2006. Learning and Teaching English. OUP. . McDonough, S. 2002. Applied Linguistics in Language Education. Arnold. •Mackey W.F. 1965. Language Teaching Analysis. Indiana Univ. Press. •Richards J.C. & Rodgers T. 2001. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. CUP. . __________ &Renandya, W.A. 2002. Methodology in Language Teaching. CUP. •Schon, D. 1983. The Reflective Practitioner.  •Stern H.H. 1992. Issues and Options in Language Teaching. OUP. . Widdowson, H. G. 2003. Defining Issues in English Language Teaching. OUP. •Zeichner, K. M., & Liston, D.P. 1996. Reflective Teaching: An Introduction. Lawrence Erlbaum.
Many Thanks to Those Who Made this Possible!ANDThose Who Encouraged and Tolerated Me!

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A Review of Teaching English as a Foreign Language

  • 1. Blowing Winds, SHIFTING SANDSand nowThe Post-Method Era Language Teaching and Learning in 21st Century: A Reverie?
  • 2. PRESENTER: Gholamabbass Shahheidaripour Freelance Teacher/Lecturer gshahheidary@yahoo.com Iran Language Institute Kerman Branch Kerman, Iran July25, 2008
  • 3. Languages are crucial for the future of our young people,our society and our economy.
  • 4. In the knowledge society of the 21st century language competence and intercultural understanding are not optionalextras, they are an essentialpart of being a citizen.
  • 5. Languages for ALLLanguages for LIFEThat is why the ILI must have a National LanguagesStrategy to transform the languages capability of the Nation.
  • 6. 21st century skills Knowing more about the world Thinking outside the box Becoming smarter about new sources of information Developing good people skills Adding new depth and rigor to our curriculum and standardized exams Reshaping the teaching force Reorganizing who runs the schools.
  • 7. 21st Century Skills:Language Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age 21st Century Skills:Language Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age Digital Age Literacy Inventive Thinking Effective Communication High Productivity Digital Age Literacy Inventive Thinking Effective Communication High Productivity
  • 8. Factors Inducing Change in 21st Century A broadening of the overall goals of Language learning to include social and cultural goods such as the development intercultural awareness A general shift of perspective among methodologists and researchers from focusing on teachers and instructions towards learners and learning process A broadening of theories of language learning to incorporate insights not only from applied linguistics, but also from cognitive psychology The internationalization of teaching methods, aims and assessment, which has been influenced by such factors as the opening of Europe in the last decade of the 20th century, but also the work of the Council of Europe The increasing opportunities offered by advances in communication technology, which has challenged the centrality of classroom-based teaching
  • 9. The Process for Bringing 21st Century Skills into Our Schools LEARN : Research, reflect, discuss, debate, and argue ADVOCATE : Set a GOAL worth striving for FOCUS : a) Find the fit for our classes b) Make the commitment ACTIVATE: a) Try things b) Make necessary system changes c) Get everyone ready IMPACT : a) Implement with integrity b) Celebrate, Reflect, Revise
  • 10. Can we really teach languages?
  • 11. Learning and Teaching Philosophy TheoryPsychologyApproachMethodTechnique, design and procedure
  • 12. As fashions in language teaching come and go, the teacher in the classroom needs reassurance that there is some bedrock beneath the shifting sands. Once solidly founded on the bedrock, like the sea anemone, the teacher can sway to the rhythms of any tides or currents, without the trauma of being swept away purposelessly. —WILGA RIVERS, 1992, p. 373
  • 13. Theories of Teaching in Language Teaching (Zahorik in Richards & Renandya 2002) A. Science-Research Conceptions 1. Operationalizing Learning Principles 2. Following a Tested Model of Teaching 3. Doing What Effective Teachers Do B. Theory-Philosophy Conceptions 1. Theory-Based Approaches 2. Value-Based Approaches C. Art-Craft Conceptions
  • 14. The Essential Skills of Teaching A. Science-Research Conceptions . Understand the Learning Principles. . Develop Tasks and Activities Based on the Learning Principles. . Monitor Students’ Performance on Tasks to See the Desired Performance is being Achieved. B1. Theory-Based Approaches . Understand the Theory and the Principles. . Select Syllabi, Materials, and Tasks Based on the Theory. . Monitor your Teaching to See that it Conforms to the Theory. B2. Value-Based Approaches . Understand the Values behind the Approach. . Select only those Educational Means which Conform to these Values. . Monitor the Implementation Process to Ensure that the Value System is being maintained. C. Art-Craft Conceptions . Treat each Teaching Situation as Unique. . Identify the Particular Characteristics of each Situation. . Try out Different Teaching Strategies. . Develop Personal Approaches to Teaching.
  • 15. Chomsky (1965) rephrases Von Humboldt (1836) as follows: We cannot really teach languages: we can only present the conditions under which a language will develop spontaneously in the minds of the learners in its own way.
  • 16. Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own. Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe methodsbeliefs Of about language language teaching learning
  • 18. Teachers as Professionals Characteristics of professionals (e.g. doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, etc): •Extended period of advanced specialized training, etc… •Autonomy– ability to exercise professional judgments and make own decisions, and take responsibility for them.
  • 19. Teachers as Practitioners (DEWEY) Passive Practitioners Reflective Practitioners Transformative Intellectuals
  • 20. Teachers as Reflective Practitioners •John Dewey (1933): How We Think. Teachers -not just transmitters of knowledge, but problem-solvers; creative, context-sensitive. •Don Schon (1983): The Reflective Practitioner. • Zeichner & Liston(1996): Reflective Teaching: An Introduction.
  • 21. Interactive ReflectionB. Kumaravadivelu(2003): Reflection should not be merely introspective, but interactive as well (involving students, colleagues, planners, etc.)
  • 22. Three Major Types of Interaction-Interaction as a Textual Activity -Interaction as an Interpersonal Activity -Interaction as an Ideational Activity
  • 23. A Reflective Practitioner (Zeichner and Liston, 1996): • “examines, frames, and attempts to solve the dilemmas of classroom practice; • is aware of and questions the assumptions and values he or she brings to teaching; • is attentive to the institutional and cultural contexts in which he or she teaches; • takes part in curriculum development and is involved in school change efforts; and • takes responsibility for his or her own professional development”
  • 24. Method vs. Methodology •Method= established methods conceptualized and constructed by experts in the field. •Methodology = what practicing teachers actually do in the classroom in order to achieve their (stated or unstated) teaching objectives.
  • 25. A Methodology that can readily be turned into teaching materials and textbooks and whose use requires no special training will generally be more readily adopted than one lacking these features.( The ILI Methodology)Richards & Renandya (2002)
  • 26. Methods: Assumptions, Values, and Beliefs 1. Methods serve as a foil for reflection that can aid teachers in bringing to conscious awareness the thinking that underlies their actions. 2. Methods offer teachers alternatives to what they currently think and do. 3. A knowledge of methods is a part of the knowledge base of teaching. Being a part of discourse community confers a professional identity and connects teachers with others. 4. Interacting with others’ conceptions of practice helps keeping teachers’ teaching alive—helps prevent it from becoming stale and overly routinized (Prabhu 1990). 5. A knowledge of methods helps expand a teacher’s repertoire of techniques—an additional avenue for professional growth and new philosophical positions.
  • 27. Language Teaching Methods: (Teacher-focused) •Audiolingual Method •Communicative Language Teaching •Community Language Learning •Competency-based Language Teaching •Direct Method •Grammar-Translation Method •Natural Approach •Oral & Situational Language Teaching •Lexical Approach •Silent Way •Suggestopedia •Task-Based Language Teaching •Total Physical Response
  • 28. The myth of method 1. ‘There is a best method out there ready and waiting to be discovered’. 2. ‘Method constitutes the organizing principle for language teaching’. 3. ‘Method has a universal and a historical value’. 4. ‘Theorists conceive knowledge, and teachers consume knowledge’. 5. ‘Method is neutral, and has no ideological motivation’. 1.‘There is a best method out there ready and waiting to be discovered’.
  • 29. Some Questions to Ask about a Method 1. What are the method’s ‘Big Ideas’? 2. What are the Theoretical underpinnings behind the method? 3. How much ‘engagement of the mind’ does the method expect? 4. Is the method deductive or inductive in approach? 5. Does the method allow the use the L1in the classroom? (Some methods shun it at all cost.) 6. Which of the four skills are given more emphasis in the method? 7. How much importance does the method give to ‘authenticity of language’?
  • 30. Causes of Methods’ Demise 1. Methods are too prescriptive, assuming too much about a context before the context has been identified. 2. Methods are quite distinctive at the early beginning stages of a language course and rather indistinguishable from each other at later stages. 3. It was once thought that methods are could be empirically tested by scientific quantification to determine the best one but ….? 4. Methods are laden with what referred to as ‘interested knowledge’—the quasi-political or mercenary agents of their proponents(linguistic imperialism).
  • 32. Currently, EFL/ESL teachers are encouraged to explore what works and what does not work in a certain ELT context, using what Brown(2007) calls an enlightened and eclectic approach/ method. (This has a lot of Pro’s and Con’s.)
  • 33. Learner-focused Language Learning Learning Strategy Training -Good Language Learner -Autonomy 2. Cooperative Learning -Collaborative or Social Skills 3. Multiple Intelligences (Logical/Mathematical, Visual/Spatial, Body/Kinesthetic, Musical/Rhythmic, Interpersonal, Intrapersonal, Verbal/ Linguistic)
  • 34. Language Learning: Linguistic Content 1. Task-based Instruction 2. Content-based Instruction 3. Participatory Approach 4. The Whole Language Approach 5. Competency-based Language Teaching 6. Neurolinguistic Programming
  • 35. Post-method Pedagogy:some proposals •Stern’s Three-Dimensional framework (1992): (i) the L1-L2 connection, (ii) the code-communication relationship, (iii) the explicit-implicit option. Strategy = ‘intentional action’, Technique= ‘practical action’. •Allwright’s ‘Exploratory Practice’ framework (2003 etc.)
  • 36. Core Principles for Teachers’ Plans and Instructional Decisions (Baily 1996) -- Engage all learners in the lesson. -- Make learners, and not the teacher, the focus of the lesson. -- Provide maximum opportunities for students’ participation. -- Develop learner responsibility. -- Be tolerant of learners’ mistakes. -- Develop learners’ confidence. -- Teach learning strategies. -- Respond to learners’ difficulties and build on them. -- Use a maximum amount of student-to-student activities. -- Promote cooperation among learners. -- Practice both accuracy and fluency. -- Address learners’ needs and interests.
  • 37. Brown’s(2001) Teaching by Principles:Integration and Interaction Cognitive Principles: 1. Automaticity 2. Meaningful Learning 3. The Anticipation of Reward 4. Intrinsic Motivation 5. Strategic Investment B. Affective Principles: 6. Language Ego 7. Self-Confidence 8. Risk-Taking 9. The Language-Culture Connection C. Linguistic Principles: 10. The Native Language Effect 11. Interlanguage 12. Communicative Competence
  • 38. Maintaining an environment for first-class Language Teaching and Learning Principle 1: An atmosphere of intellectual excitement Principle 2: An intensive research and knowledge transfer culture permeating all teaching and learning activities Principle 3: A vibrant and embracing social context Principle 4: An international and culturally diverse learning environment Principle 5: Explicit concern and support for individual development Principle 6: Clear academic expectations and standards Principle 7: Learning cycles of experimentation, feedback and assessment Principle 8: Premium quality learning spaces, resources and technologies Principle 9: An adaptive curriculum
  • 39. 7/23/2008 10:09 AM Slide number 39
  • 40. Heightened Awarenesses Witnessed in L2 Profession in Waning Years of the 20th Century: An awareness that there is no best method out there ready and waiting to be discovered; An awareness that the artificiality created dichotomy between theory and practice has been more harmful than helpful for teachers; An awareness that teacher education models that merely transmit a body of interested knowledge do not produce effective teaching professionals; and An awareness that teacher beliefs, teacher reasoning, and teacher cognition play a crucial role in shaping and reshaping the context and character of the practice of everyday teaching.
  • 41. Post-Method Pedagogy MUST:a) Facilitate the advancement of a context-sensitive language education based on a true understanding of local linguistic, sociocultural, and political particularities; b) Rupture the reified role relationship between the theorists and practitioners by enabling teachers to construct their own theory of practice; and c) Tap the sociopolitical consciousness that participants bring with them in order to aid their quest for identity formation and social transformation. Treating learners, teachers, and teacher educators as explorers, I discuss their roles and functions in a post-method pedagogy.
  • 42. Post-Method Main Assumptions: 1. Particularity  where, when and to whom 2. Practicality  applicable in real situation 3. Possibility  socially, culturally and politically appropriate
  • 43. Post-Method Education’s Three Broad Projects: 1. Macrostrategy Projects 2. Microstrategy Projects 3. Exploratory Projects
  • 44. MAIN PURPOSE: To Facilitate the growth and development of teachers’ own theory of practice. (Kumaravadivelu, 2006) To teach is to be full of hope. (Larry Cuban, 1989)
  • 45. Kumaravadivelu(2003):‘Macro-strategic’ Framework • Theory-neutral and method-neutral • ‘Macro-strategies’:General plansderived from currently available theoretical, empirical, and pedagogical knowledge related to L2 learning and teaching; broad guidelinesbased on which teachers can generate their own location-specific, need-based ‘micro-strategies’or classroom procedures.
  • 46. Raising cultural consciousness Practicality Particularity Possibility Activating intuitive heuristics Facilitating negotiated interaction Integrating language skills Integrating language skills Minimizing perceptual mismatch Fostering language awareness Contextualizing linguistic input Maximizing learning opportunities Ensuring social relevance
  • 47. Macro-strategies 1.Maximize learning opportunities •Teaching as a process of creating and utilizing learning opportunities; teachers as planners and mediators of learning.
  • 48. 2.Facilitate negotiated interaction • Meaningful learner-learner and learner-teacher interaction, where learners have freedom to actively initiate and navigate talk, not just react and respond to it. • Textual, interpersonal and ideational functions.
  • 49. 3.Minimize perceptual mismatches • Cognitive, communicative, linguistic, pedagogic, strategic, cultural, evaluative, procedural, instructional and attitudinal mismatches between teacher’s and learners’ perceptions
  • 50. 4. Activate intuitive heuristics • Provide enough language data for learners to discover and infer underlying rules of form and function for themselves.
  • 51. 5.Foster language awareness •Draw students’ attention to less obvious properties of L2 to promote learning (where necessary).
  • 52. 6.Contextualize linguistic input • Discourse features need to be contextualized instead of introduced in isolated and discrete fashion.
  • 53. 7. Integrate language skills • Language skills are essentially interrelated and mutually reinforcing. The traditional separation of skills is more logistic than logical.
  • 54. 8. Promote learner autonomy • Help learners learn how To learn, equip them with the necessary cognitive (etc.) strategies, and help them take responsibility for their own learning.
  • 55. 9.Ensure social relevance • Understand learning purpose and language use in the local social context
  • 56. 10.Raise cultural consciousness • Global cultural consciousness, not just awareness of L2 culture
  • 57. Micro-strategies •Classroom procedures that are designed to realize the objectives of a particular macro-strategy, keeping in mind the learners’ needs, wants and lacks, and their current level of language ability. [see examples in Kumaravadivelu2006]
  • 58. In short, the framework seeks to provide a possible mechanism for classroom teachers to begin to theorize from their practice and practice what they theorize.
  • 59. The framework, then, seeks to transform classroom practitioners into strategic thinkers, strategic teachers, and strategic explorers who channel their time and effort in order to 
  • 60. post-method pedagogists: • reflect on the specific needs, wants, situations, and processes of learning and teaching; • stretch their knowledge, skill, and attitude to stay informed and involved; • design and use appropriate micro-strategies to maximize learning potential in the classroom; and • monitor and evaluate their ability to react to myriad situations in meaningful ways.
  • 61. Post-Method Condition signifies three interrelated Attributes: It signifies a search for an alternative to method not an alternative method. (a Bottom-up Process) It signifies Teacher autonomy (self-observe, self-analyze, self-evaluate.) It is principled pragmatism (how classroom practices can be shaped or reshaped.)
  • 62. DISCOVERY LEARNING TEACHING ACCESSIBLE INFORMATION
  • 64. Three broad and overlapping Strands of Thought Emerging from our Discussion The Traditional Concept of Method with its Generic Set of theoretical Underpinnings Unpredictably Numerous Learning and Teaching Needs, Wants, and Situations The Primary Task of In-Service and Pre-Service Teacher Education to Create Conditions for Present and Prospective Teachers to Acquire the Necessary Knowledge, Skill, Authority, and Autonomy to Construct Their Own Pedagogic Knowledge i.e. reflect, stretch, design, monitor, and evaluate …
  • 65. References •Allwright, R. L. 2003. ‘Exploratory Practice: Rethinking practitioner research in language teaching’ . Language Teaching Research, 7, 113-141. . Brown, H.D. 2000, 4th ed. Principles of Language Learning and Teaching. Longman. . _________. 2001. Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy. Longman. .Carter, R. & Nunan, D. 2001. The Cambridge Guide to Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages. CUP. . Doughty, C. J. & Long, M. H. 2003. The Handbook of Second Language Acquisition. Blackwell. . Ellis, R. &Barkhuizen, G. 2005. Analysing Learner Language. OUP. . Kaplan, R. B. (ed.). 2002.The Handbook of Applied Linguistics. OUP. .Kumaravadivelu, B. 2003. Beyond Methods: Macro-strategies for Language Teaching. Yale University Press. •_______________. 2006. Understanding Language Teaching: From Method to Post-method. Lawrence Erlbaum. •Larsen-Freeman D. 2000. Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching. OUP. . Lindsay, C. & Knight P. 2006. Learning and Teaching English. OUP. . McDonough, S. 2002. Applied Linguistics in Language Education. Arnold. •Mackey W.F. 1965. Language Teaching Analysis. Indiana Univ. Press. •Richards J.C. & Rodgers T. 2001. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. CUP. . __________ &Renandya, W.A. 2002. Methodology in Language Teaching. CUP. •Schon, D. 1983. The Reflective Practitioner. •Stern H.H. 1992. Issues and Options in Language Teaching. OUP. . Widdowson, H. G. 2003. Defining Issues in English Language Teaching. OUP. •Zeichner, K. M., & Liston, D.P. 1996. Reflective Teaching: An Introduction. Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • 66. Many Thanks to Those Who Made this Possible!ANDThose Who Encouraged and Tolerated Me!

Notas do Editor

  1. •‘While sciences have advanced by approximations in which each new stage results from an improvement, not rejection, of what has gone before, language-teaching methods have followed the pendulum of fashion from one extreme to the other’(Mackey 1965, p.138)