David Nunan |
I am quite sure
that people who are reading this post are likely to be aware of the concept of
Task-based Language Teaching (TBLT). In order to remind you of this so-called “learner-centered
approach”, I will share the idea which I got from David Nunan (born 11 October
1949 in Broken Hill, Australia), an Australian
linguist who is well known as an expert on the teaching of English. In his book
entitles “Task-Based Language Teaching”, Nunan explained the definition about
TBLT through the following quotation:
“The task-based
approach (upon which the curriculum is built) aims at providing opportunities
for learners to experiment with and explore both spoken and written language
through learning activities that are designed to engage learners in the
authentic, practical and functional use of language for meaningful purposes. Learners
are encouraged to activate and use whatever language they already have in the
process of completing a task. The use of tasks will also give a clear and
purposeful context for the teaching and learning of grammar and other language
features as well as skills. The role of task-based language learning is to stimulate
a natural desire in learners to improve their language competence by
challenging them to complete meaningful tasks”. (CDC, 1999: 41)
The citation above was
a quote from Hong Kong Ministry of Education and this becomes one of the proofs
that most countries in Asia-Pacific Region claimed that task-based teaching was
a central principle driving their English curricula (Nunan, 2003). In
reference to the quotation above, it can be said that TBLT is an approach (which
is also in the form of curricula) which offers various “target language tasks”
which are worked as a facilitation to build learners’ ability to use the target
language.
In
order to make it clearer, we can see the following principles for TBLT which is
written based on what Nunan established on his book.
SEVEN PRINCIPLES
FOR TASK-BASED LANGUAGE TEACHING
Principle 1: SCAFFOLDING
• Lessons and materials should
provide supporting frameworks within which the learning takes place. At the
beginning of the learning process, learners should not be expected to produce
language that has not been introduced either explicitly or implicitly •
A basic role for
an educator is to provide a supporting framework within which the learning can
take place. This is particularly important in the case of analytical approaches
such as TBLT in which the learners will encounter holistic ‘chunks’ of language
that will often be beyond their current processing capacity. The ‘art’ of TBLT is
knowing when to remove the scaffolding. If the scaffolding is removed
prematurely, the learning process will ‘collapse’. If it is maintained too
long, the learners will not develop the independence required for autonomous
language use.
Principle 2: TASK
DEPENDENCY
• Within a lesson, one task
should grow out of, and build upon, the ones that have gone before. The task
dependency principle is illustrated in the instructional sequence above which
shows how each task exploits and builds on the one that has gone before •
In a sense, the
sequence tells a ‘pedagogical’ story, as learners are led step by step to the
point where they are able to carry out the final pedagogical task in the
sequence. Within the task-dependency framework, a number of other principles are
in operation. One of these is the receptive-to-productive principle. Here, at
the beginning of the instructional cycle, learners spend a greater proportion
of time engaged in receptive (listening and reading) tasks than in productive
(speaking and writing) tasks. Later in the cycle, the proportion changes, and
learners spend more time in productive work. The reproductive-to-creative-language
principle is also used in developing chains of tasks. This principle is
summarized separately below.
Principle 3: RECYCLING
• Recycling language maximizes
opportunities for learning and activates the ‘organic’ learning principle •
An analytical
approach to pedagogy is based on the assumption that learning is not an
all-or-nothing process, which mastery learning is a misconception, and that
learning is piecemeal and inherently unstable. If it is accepted that learners
will not achieve one hundred per cent mastery the first time they encounter a
particular linguistic item, then it follows that they need to be reintroduced
to that item over a period of time. This recycling allows learners to encounter
target language items in a range of different environments, both linguistic and
experiential. In this way they will see how a particular item functions in
conjunction with other closely related items in the linguistic ‘jigsaw puzzle’.
They will also see how it functions in relation to different content areas. For
example, they will come to see how ‘expressing likes and dislikes’ and ‘yes/no
questions with do/does’ function in a range of content areas, from the world of
entertainment to the world of food.
Principle 4: ACTIVE
LEARNING
• Learners learn best by actively
using the language they are learning •
A key principle
behind this concept is experiential learning. This approach let learners learn
best through doing – through actively constructing their own knowledge rather
than having it transmitted to them by the teacher. When applied to language
teaching, this suggests that most class time should be devoted to opportunities
for learners to use the language. These opportunities could be many and varied,
from practicing memorized dialogues to completing a table or chart based on
some listening input. The key point, however, is that it is the learner, not
the teacher, who is doing the work. This is not to suggest that there is no
place at all for teacher input, explanation and so on, but that such teacher-focused
work should not dominate class time.
Principle 5: INTEGRATION
• Learners should be taught in
ways that make clear the relationships between linguistic form, communicative
function and semantic meaning •
Until fairly
recently, most approaches to language teaching were based on a synthetic
approach in which the linguistic elements – the grammatical, lexical and
phonological components – were taught separately. This approach was challenged
in the 1980s by proponents of early versions of communicative language teaching
who argued that a focus on form was unnecessary, and that all learners needed
in order to acquire a language were opportunities to communicate in the
language. This led to a split between proponents of form-based instruction and
proponents of meaning-based instruction, with proponents of meaning-based
instruction arguing that, while a mastery of grammar is fundamental to
effective communication, an explicit focus on form is unnecessary. More recently,
applied linguists working within the framework of systemic-functional linguistics
have argued that the challenge for pedagogy is to ‘reintegrate’ formal and
functional aspects of language, and that what is needed is a pedagogy that
makes explicit to learners the systematic relationships between form, function
and meaning.
Principle 6: REPRODUCTION
TO CREATION
• Learners should be encouraged
to move from reproductive to creative language use •
In reproductive
tasks, learners reproduce language models provided by the teacher, the textbook
or the tape. These tasks are designed to give learners mastery of form, meaning
and function, and are intended to provide a basis for creative tasks. In
creative tasks, learners are recombining familiar elements in novel ways. This
principle can be deployed not only with students who are at intermediate levels
and above but also with beginners if the instructional process is carefully
sequenced.
Principle 7: REFLECTION
• Learners should be given
opportunities to reflect on what they have learned and how well they are doing •
Becoming a
reflective learner is part of learner training where the focus shifts from
language content to learning processes. Strictly speaking, learning-how-to-learn
does not have a more privileged place in one particular approach to pedagogy
than in any other. However, I feel this reflective element has a particular affinity
with task-based language teaching. TBLT introduces learners to a broad array of
pedagogical undertakings, each of which is underpinned by at least one
strategy. Research suggests that learners who are aware of the strategies driving
their learning will be better learners. Additionally, for learners who have done
most of their learning in ‘traditional’ classrooms, TBLT can be mystifying and
even alienating, leading them to ask, ‘Why are we doing this?’ Adding a
reflective element to teaching can help learners see the rationale for the new
approach.
(For Language Teacher: try to evaluate
the materials or textbook you are currently using or one that you are familiar
with in terms of the seven principles written in this blog)
REFERENCE
CDC. (1999). Syllabuses for Secondary Schools: English language secondary 1–5. Hong Kong: Curriculum Development Council, Education Department.
Nunan, D. (2003). The impact of
English as a global language on educational policies and practices in the
Asia-Pacific region. TESOL Quarterly, 37, 4, Winter 2003.
Nunan, David. (2004). Task-Based Language Teaching. New York:
Cambridge University Press.
PICTURE
http://tesolforum.edublogs.org/files/2010/06/David_Nunan_Photo.jpg
PICTURE
http://tesolforum.edublogs.org/files/2010/06/David_Nunan_Photo.jpg
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