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Communicative
            Language Teaching
                  (CLT)


                        Approaches and Methods
                    Professor: Sergio Meza P., M.Ed.
                             October 2012




¡Formamos profesionales bilingües con Responsabilidad Social!
Presentation’s outline

• Background
• Approach: Theory of Language and Theory of Learning.
• Design: Objectives, Syllabus, Types of Learning &
  Teaching Activities, Learner & Teacher roles, and The Role
  of Instructional Materials.
• Procedures
• Conclusion
Background
• The origins of Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) are found
  in the changes in the British language teaching tradition in the late
  1960s.
• Situational Language Teaching (SLT) was the major approach to
  teaching English as a FL.
• Language was taught by practicing basic structures in meaningful
  situation-based activities.
• British applied linguists rejected the theoretical assumptions
  underlying SLL because the focus on language teaching was the
  mastery of structures rather than on communicative proficiency.
Background
• Scholars who advocated this view of language: British functional
  linguist Halliday, American sociolinguist Dell Hymes and work in
  philosophy J. Austin.
• There was a need in Europe to teach adults the major languages of
  the European Common market, and in 1971 a group of experts
  began to investigate the possibility of developing language courses,
  in which learning tasks are broken into units.
• In 1972, D. A. Wilkins proposed a functional or communicative
  syllabus for language teaching. His contribution was an analysis of
  the communicative meanings that a language learner needs to
  understand and express.
Background
• Wilkins defined two categories of meanings: notional categories (concepts
  such as time, sequence, quantity, location, frequency) and categories of
  communicative function (requests, denials, offers, complaints). This was
  the birth of notional syllabuses, which had a significant impact on CLT.
• The Council of Europe incorporated Wilkin’s semantic/communicative
  analysis into a set of specifications for a first-level communicative language
  syllabus.
• The work of the Council of Europe, the writings of Wilkin’s, Widdowson,
  Candlin, Brumfit, Keith Johnson, and other British applied linguists on the
  theoretical basis for a communicative or functional approach to language
  teaching, the application of these ideas, the acceptance of these principles
  by British language specialists came to be referred to as the Communicative
  Approach or CLT.
Background
• Communicative Approach aims to: make communicative competence the
  goal of language teaching, and develop procedures for the teaching of
  the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing) that
  acknowledge the interdependence of language and communication.
• There are two version of the CLT:
• The weak version stresses the importance of providing learners with
  opportunities to use their English for communicative purposes (learning to
  use English).
• The strong version advances the claim that language is acquired through
  communication. That is not merely a question of activating an existing but
  inert knowledge of language, but of stimulating the development of the
  language system itself (using English to learn it).
Approach
Theory Of Language
• The Communicative Approach in language teaching starts from a
  theory of language as communication.
• The goal of language teaching is what Hymes (1972) referred to as
  “communicative competence.” Hymes coined this term in order to
  contrast a communicative view of language and Chomsky’s theory of
  competence.
• In Hymes’ view, a person who acquires communicative competence
  acquires both knowledge and ability for language use.
Approach

                                   Knowledge
    1. Whether                                                 2. Whether
something is formally             and language                something is
     possible                     use respond                  convenient
                                        to




               3. Whether                              4. Whether
              something is                        something is in fact
             appropriate in                          done, actually
          relation to a context                  performed, and what
           in which it is used                      its doing entails
Approach
• This theory of what knowing a language entails offers a much more
  comprehensive view than Chomsky’s view of competence, which
  deals primarily with abstract grammatical knowledge.
• Another linguistic theory of CLT is Halliday’s functional account of
  language use. Halliday elaborated a powerful theory of the functions
  of language. He described seven basic function that language
  performs for children learning their L1:
Approach

                               4. Personal function:         7. Representational
    1. Instrumental
                                  using language to        function: using language
function: using language
                              express personal feelings         to communicate
      to get things
                                    and meanings                   information




2. Regulatory function:        5. Heuristic function:
using language to control      using language to learn
 the behavior of others            and to discover




      3. Interactional
                              6. Imaginative function:
function: using language
                              using language to create
 to create interaction with
                              a world of the imagination
           others
Approach
• Learning an L2 was viewed by proponents of CLT as acquiring the
  linguistic means to perform different kinds of functions.
Approach
• Another influential analysis of communicative competence was found in
  Canale & Swain (1980), in which four dimensions of communicative
  competence are identified:


               Grammatical Competence   Sociolinguistic Competence


                                Communicative
                                 Competence


                Discourse Competence      Strategic Competence
Approach
• Grammatical competence: it is the domain of grammatical and lexical
  capacity.
• Sociolinguistic competence: an understanding of the social context in
  which communication takes place, including role relationships, the shared
  information of the participants, and the communicative purpose of the
  interaction.
• Discourse competence: the interpretation of individual message elements
  in terms of their interconnectedness and of how meaning is represented in
  relationship to the entire discourse text.
• Strategic competence: refers to the coping strategies that communicators
  employ to initiate, terminate, maintain, repair, and redirect communication.
Approach
• At the level of language theory, CLT has a rich theoretical base.
  Some of the characteristics of this communicative view of language
  follow: language is a system for the expression of meaning, the
  primary goal of language is to allow interaction and communication,
  the structure of language reflects its functional and communicative
  uses, the primary units of language are categories of functional and
  communicative meanings.
Approach
Theory of Learning
• Little has been written about learning theory in contrast to the
  amount of that has been written about CLT literature.
• Elements of an underlying learning theory can be discerned in some
  CLT practices as follows:
• One element is the communication principle: activities that involve
  real communication promote learning.
• Another element is the task principle: activities in which language is
  used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning.
• A third element is the meaningfulness principle: language that is
  meaningful to the learner supports the learning process.
Approach
• As a consequence, learning activities are selected based on how well
  they engage the learner in meaningful and authentic language use
  (rather than just mechanical practice of language patterns).
• Other accounts of CLT have attempted to describe theories of
  language learning processes that are compatible with CLT. Savignon
  (1983) surveys L2 acquisition research as a source for learning
  theories and considers the role of linguistic, social, cognitive, and
  individual variables in language acquisition.
Design
Objectives
The following are levels of objectives in a communicative approach:
• An integrative and content level (language as a means of expression)
• A linguistic and instrumental level (language as a semiotic system and an
   object of learning)
• An affective level of interpersonal relationships and conduct (language as a
   means of expressing values and judgments about oneself and others)
• A level of individual learning needs (remedial learning based on error
   analysis)
• A general educational level of extra-linguistic goals (language learning
   within school curriculum)
Syllabus
• One of the first syllabus models to be proposed was described as a
  notional syllabus (Wilkins, 1976), which specified the semantic-
  grammatical categories and the categories of communicative function
  that learners need to express.
• The Council of Europe expanded and developed this into a syllabus
  that included the following: description of the objectives of FL
  courses, situations in which they might typically use an L2
  (travel, business), topic they might need to talk about (education,
  shopping), functions they needed language for (requesting
  information, expressing agreement & disagreement), the notions
  made use of in communication (time, frequency, duration), as well
  as vocabulary and grammar needed.
Syllabus
Types of learning and teaching
                   activities
• The range of exercise
  types and activities
  compatible with a
  communicative
  approach is unlimited.
Types of learning and teaching
                     activities

•   Exercises enable Ss to
    attain communicative
    objectives of the
    curriculum, engage Ss in
    communication, require
    the use of communicative
    processes like
    information sharing,
    negotiation of meaning,
    and interaction.
Types of learning and teaching
                    activities
• Classroom activities
  are often designed to
  focus on completing
  tasks that are
  mediated through
  language or involve
  negotiation of
  information and
  information sharing.
Types of learning and teaching
                     activities
•   Littlewood (1981) distinguishes between functional communication activities and
    social interaction activities.

                                   • Comparing sets of pictures and noting similarities and
                                     differences, discovering missing features in a map or
             Functional              picture, one learner communicating behind a screen to
                                     another one giving instructions on how to draw a picture
        Communication Activities     or shape.




                                   • Conversation and discussion sessions, dialogues, role
                                     plays, simulations, skits, improvisations and debates.
            Social Interaction
                Activities
Learner roles

•   The learner is a negotiator
    (between himself, the learning
    process, and the object of
    learning). The implication is that
    the learner should contribute as
    much as he gains, and learn in an
    interdependent way.
•   Ss are expected to interact
    primarily with each other rather
    than with the teacher.
•   Ss give and receive information.
Teacher roles

                                                                              Group process
       Needs analyst                          Counselor
                                                                                manager
• CLT teacher assumes a              • The CLT teacher-counselor, as    • CLT procedures require
  responsibility for determining       in the Community Language          teachers to acquire less
  and responding to Ss language        Learning, is expected to           teacher-centered classroom
  needs.                               exemplify an effective             management skills.
• CLT teacher administer a needs       communicator seeking to          • CLT teacher organizes the
  assessment instrument to             maximize the speaker intention     classroom for communication
  determine an individual’s            and hearer interpretation,         and communicative activities.
  motivation for studying the          through the use of paraphrase,
  language.                            confirmation, and feedback.
• Based on needs assessment
  results, CLT teacher plan
  instruction and activities that
  respond to Ss needs.
The Role Of Instructional
                   Materials
• A wide variety of materials have been used to support
  communicative approaches to language teaching.
• CLT view materials as a way of influencing the quality of classroom
  interaction and language use.
• The primary role of materials is to promote communicative language
  use.
• There are three kinds of material currently used in CLT: text-based,
  task-based, and realia.
The Role Of Instructional
                   Materials

Text-based materials
There are numerous
textbooks designed to
direct and support CLT.
Their table of contents
suggest a kind of grading
and sequencing of
language practice.
The Role Of Instructional
       Materials
                Task-based materials
                A variety of games, role
                plays, simulations, and
                task-based
                communication activities
                have been prepared to
                support CLT classes.
                They are in the form of
                exercise handbooks, cue
                cards, activity cards, and
                interaction booklets.
The Role Of Instructional
                    Materials

Realia
Many proponents of CLT
have advocated the use of
“authentic,” “from life”
materials in class. These
include: signs, magazines,
advertisements,
newspapers, pictures,
symbols.
Procedure
The methodological procedures reflect a sequence of activities
represented as follows:
                     Pre-
                                     Communicative
                 communicative
                                       Activities
                   Activities

                                          Functional
                     Structural
                                        Communication
                     Activities
                                           Activities


                      Quasi-                Social
                   Communicative          Interaction
                     Activities            Activities
Pre-communicative Activities
Communicative Activities
Conclusions
• CLT is best considered an approach rather than a method.
• Approach refers to a diverse set of principles that reflect a
  communicative view of language and language learning used to support
  a variety of classroom procedures.
• CLT has passed through a number of different phases to apply its
  principles to different dimensions of the teaching/learning process.
• The first phase was the need to develop a syllabus that was compatible
  with the notion of communicative competence. This led to proposals of
  syllabuses in terms of notions (a context in which people communicate)
  and functions (a specific purpose for a speaker in a given context).
Conclusions
• The second phase, CLT focused on procedures for identifying
  learners’ needs and this resulted in proposals to make needs
  analysis an essential component of communicative methodology.
• In the third phase, CLT focused on the kinds of classroom activities
  that could be used as the basis of a communicative methodology,
  such as group work, task-work, and information-gap activities.
Conclusions
There are five core identified characteristics that support current applications
of communicative methodology:

 1. Appropriateness: language          2. Message focus: learners need
 use reflects the situations of its    to be able to create and              3. Psycholinguistic processing:
 use and must be appropriate to        understand messages, hence the        CLT activities seek to engage
 that situation, the roles of the      focus on information sharing and      learners in the use of cognitive
 participants, and the purpose of      information transfer in CLT           and other processes in SLA.
 communication.                        activities.



                                                         5. Free practice: CLT encourages
                                                         the use of “holistic practice”
                      4. Risk taking: learners are
                                                         involving the simultaneous use of
                      encouraged to make guesses and
                                                         a variety of subskills, rather than
                      learn from their errors.
                                                         practicing individual skills at a
                                                         time.
Thank you!
Bibliography
Richards, J. & Rodgers, T. 2010. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Larsen-Freeman, D. & Anderson, M. 2011. Techniques and principles in Language
Teaching. Oxford: New York.

McCarthy, M., McCarten, J. & Sandiford, H. 2005. Touchstone: student book, level 1.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Communicative
            Language Teaching
                  (CLT)

                        Approaches and Methods
                    Professor: Sergio Meza P., M.Ed.
                      E-mail: sameza@gmail.com
                          Mobile: 3012698958




¡Formamos profesionales bilingües con Responsabilidad Social!

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Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)

  • 1. Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) Approaches and Methods Professor: Sergio Meza P., M.Ed. October 2012 ¡Formamos profesionales bilingües con Responsabilidad Social!
  • 2. Presentation’s outline • Background • Approach: Theory of Language and Theory of Learning. • Design: Objectives, Syllabus, Types of Learning & Teaching Activities, Learner & Teacher roles, and The Role of Instructional Materials. • Procedures • Conclusion
  • 3. Background • The origins of Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) are found in the changes in the British language teaching tradition in the late 1960s. • Situational Language Teaching (SLT) was the major approach to teaching English as a FL. • Language was taught by practicing basic structures in meaningful situation-based activities. • British applied linguists rejected the theoretical assumptions underlying SLL because the focus on language teaching was the mastery of structures rather than on communicative proficiency.
  • 4. Background • Scholars who advocated this view of language: British functional linguist Halliday, American sociolinguist Dell Hymes and work in philosophy J. Austin. • There was a need in Europe to teach adults the major languages of the European Common market, and in 1971 a group of experts began to investigate the possibility of developing language courses, in which learning tasks are broken into units. • In 1972, D. A. Wilkins proposed a functional or communicative syllabus for language teaching. His contribution was an analysis of the communicative meanings that a language learner needs to understand and express.
  • 5. Background • Wilkins defined two categories of meanings: notional categories (concepts such as time, sequence, quantity, location, frequency) and categories of communicative function (requests, denials, offers, complaints). This was the birth of notional syllabuses, which had a significant impact on CLT. • The Council of Europe incorporated Wilkin’s semantic/communicative analysis into a set of specifications for a first-level communicative language syllabus. • The work of the Council of Europe, the writings of Wilkin’s, Widdowson, Candlin, Brumfit, Keith Johnson, and other British applied linguists on the theoretical basis for a communicative or functional approach to language teaching, the application of these ideas, the acceptance of these principles by British language specialists came to be referred to as the Communicative Approach or CLT.
  • 6. Background • Communicative Approach aims to: make communicative competence the goal of language teaching, and develop procedures for the teaching of the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing) that acknowledge the interdependence of language and communication. • There are two version of the CLT: • The weak version stresses the importance of providing learners with opportunities to use their English for communicative purposes (learning to use English). • The strong version advances the claim that language is acquired through communication. That is not merely a question of activating an existing but inert knowledge of language, but of stimulating the development of the language system itself (using English to learn it).
  • 7. Approach Theory Of Language • The Communicative Approach in language teaching starts from a theory of language as communication. • The goal of language teaching is what Hymes (1972) referred to as “communicative competence.” Hymes coined this term in order to contrast a communicative view of language and Chomsky’s theory of competence. • In Hymes’ view, a person who acquires communicative competence acquires both knowledge and ability for language use.
  • 8. Approach Knowledge 1. Whether 2. Whether something is formally and language something is possible use respond convenient to 3. Whether 4. Whether something is something is in fact appropriate in done, actually relation to a context performed, and what in which it is used its doing entails
  • 9. Approach • This theory of what knowing a language entails offers a much more comprehensive view than Chomsky’s view of competence, which deals primarily with abstract grammatical knowledge. • Another linguistic theory of CLT is Halliday’s functional account of language use. Halliday elaborated a powerful theory of the functions of language. He described seven basic function that language performs for children learning their L1:
  • 10. Approach 4. Personal function: 7. Representational 1. Instrumental using language to function: using language function: using language express personal feelings to communicate to get things and meanings information 2. Regulatory function: 5. Heuristic function: using language to control using language to learn the behavior of others and to discover 3. Interactional 6. Imaginative function: function: using language using language to create to create interaction with a world of the imagination others
  • 11. Approach • Learning an L2 was viewed by proponents of CLT as acquiring the linguistic means to perform different kinds of functions.
  • 12. Approach • Another influential analysis of communicative competence was found in Canale & Swain (1980), in which four dimensions of communicative competence are identified: Grammatical Competence Sociolinguistic Competence Communicative Competence Discourse Competence Strategic Competence
  • 13. Approach • Grammatical competence: it is the domain of grammatical and lexical capacity. • Sociolinguistic competence: an understanding of the social context in which communication takes place, including role relationships, the shared information of the participants, and the communicative purpose of the interaction. • Discourse competence: the interpretation of individual message elements in terms of their interconnectedness and of how meaning is represented in relationship to the entire discourse text. • Strategic competence: refers to the coping strategies that communicators employ to initiate, terminate, maintain, repair, and redirect communication.
  • 14. Approach • At the level of language theory, CLT has a rich theoretical base. Some of the characteristics of this communicative view of language follow: language is a system for the expression of meaning, the primary goal of language is to allow interaction and communication, the structure of language reflects its functional and communicative uses, the primary units of language are categories of functional and communicative meanings.
  • 15. Approach Theory of Learning • Little has been written about learning theory in contrast to the amount of that has been written about CLT literature. • Elements of an underlying learning theory can be discerned in some CLT practices as follows: • One element is the communication principle: activities that involve real communication promote learning. • Another element is the task principle: activities in which language is used for carrying out meaningful tasks promote learning. • A third element is the meaningfulness principle: language that is meaningful to the learner supports the learning process.
  • 16. Approach • As a consequence, learning activities are selected based on how well they engage the learner in meaningful and authentic language use (rather than just mechanical practice of language patterns). • Other accounts of CLT have attempted to describe theories of language learning processes that are compatible with CLT. Savignon (1983) surveys L2 acquisition research as a source for learning theories and considers the role of linguistic, social, cognitive, and individual variables in language acquisition.
  • 17. Design Objectives The following are levels of objectives in a communicative approach: • An integrative and content level (language as a means of expression) • A linguistic and instrumental level (language as a semiotic system and an object of learning) • An affective level of interpersonal relationships and conduct (language as a means of expressing values and judgments about oneself and others) • A level of individual learning needs (remedial learning based on error analysis) • A general educational level of extra-linguistic goals (language learning within school curriculum)
  • 18. Syllabus • One of the first syllabus models to be proposed was described as a notional syllabus (Wilkins, 1976), which specified the semantic- grammatical categories and the categories of communicative function that learners need to express. • The Council of Europe expanded and developed this into a syllabus that included the following: description of the objectives of FL courses, situations in which they might typically use an L2 (travel, business), topic they might need to talk about (education, shopping), functions they needed language for (requesting information, expressing agreement & disagreement), the notions made use of in communication (time, frequency, duration), as well as vocabulary and grammar needed.
  • 20. Types of learning and teaching activities • The range of exercise types and activities compatible with a communicative approach is unlimited.
  • 21. Types of learning and teaching activities • Exercises enable Ss to attain communicative objectives of the curriculum, engage Ss in communication, require the use of communicative processes like information sharing, negotiation of meaning, and interaction.
  • 22. Types of learning and teaching activities • Classroom activities are often designed to focus on completing tasks that are mediated through language or involve negotiation of information and information sharing.
  • 23. Types of learning and teaching activities • Littlewood (1981) distinguishes between functional communication activities and social interaction activities. • Comparing sets of pictures and noting similarities and differences, discovering missing features in a map or Functional picture, one learner communicating behind a screen to another one giving instructions on how to draw a picture Communication Activities or shape. • Conversation and discussion sessions, dialogues, role plays, simulations, skits, improvisations and debates. Social Interaction Activities
  • 24. Learner roles • The learner is a negotiator (between himself, the learning process, and the object of learning). The implication is that the learner should contribute as much as he gains, and learn in an interdependent way. • Ss are expected to interact primarily with each other rather than with the teacher. • Ss give and receive information.
  • 25. Teacher roles Group process Needs analyst Counselor manager • CLT teacher assumes a • The CLT teacher-counselor, as • CLT procedures require responsibility for determining in the Community Language teachers to acquire less and responding to Ss language Learning, is expected to teacher-centered classroom needs. exemplify an effective management skills. • CLT teacher administer a needs communicator seeking to • CLT teacher organizes the assessment instrument to maximize the speaker intention classroom for communication determine an individual’s and hearer interpretation, and communicative activities. motivation for studying the through the use of paraphrase, language. confirmation, and feedback. • Based on needs assessment results, CLT teacher plan instruction and activities that respond to Ss needs.
  • 26. The Role Of Instructional Materials • A wide variety of materials have been used to support communicative approaches to language teaching. • CLT view materials as a way of influencing the quality of classroom interaction and language use. • The primary role of materials is to promote communicative language use. • There are three kinds of material currently used in CLT: text-based, task-based, and realia.
  • 27. The Role Of Instructional Materials Text-based materials There are numerous textbooks designed to direct and support CLT. Their table of contents suggest a kind of grading and sequencing of language practice.
  • 28. The Role Of Instructional Materials Task-based materials A variety of games, role plays, simulations, and task-based communication activities have been prepared to support CLT classes. They are in the form of exercise handbooks, cue cards, activity cards, and interaction booklets.
  • 29. The Role Of Instructional Materials Realia Many proponents of CLT have advocated the use of “authentic,” “from life” materials in class. These include: signs, magazines, advertisements, newspapers, pictures, symbols.
  • 30. Procedure The methodological procedures reflect a sequence of activities represented as follows: Pre- Communicative communicative Activities Activities Functional Structural Communication Activities Activities Quasi- Social Communicative Interaction Activities Activities
  • 33. Conclusions • CLT is best considered an approach rather than a method. • Approach refers to a diverse set of principles that reflect a communicative view of language and language learning used to support a variety of classroom procedures. • CLT has passed through a number of different phases to apply its principles to different dimensions of the teaching/learning process. • The first phase was the need to develop a syllabus that was compatible with the notion of communicative competence. This led to proposals of syllabuses in terms of notions (a context in which people communicate) and functions (a specific purpose for a speaker in a given context).
  • 34. Conclusions • The second phase, CLT focused on procedures for identifying learners’ needs and this resulted in proposals to make needs analysis an essential component of communicative methodology. • In the third phase, CLT focused on the kinds of classroom activities that could be used as the basis of a communicative methodology, such as group work, task-work, and information-gap activities.
  • 35. Conclusions There are five core identified characteristics that support current applications of communicative methodology: 1. Appropriateness: language 2. Message focus: learners need use reflects the situations of its to be able to create and 3. Psycholinguistic processing: use and must be appropriate to understand messages, hence the CLT activities seek to engage that situation, the roles of the focus on information sharing and learners in the use of cognitive participants, and the purpose of information transfer in CLT and other processes in SLA. communication. activities. 5. Free practice: CLT encourages the use of “holistic practice” 4. Risk taking: learners are involving the simultaneous use of encouraged to make guesses and a variety of subskills, rather than learn from their errors. practicing individual skills at a time.
  • 37. Bibliography Richards, J. & Rodgers, T. 2010. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Larsen-Freeman, D. & Anderson, M. 2011. Techniques and principles in Language Teaching. Oxford: New York. McCarthy, M., McCarten, J. & Sandiford, H. 2005. Touchstone: student book, level 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • 38. Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) Approaches and Methods Professor: Sergio Meza P., M.Ed. E-mail: sameza@gmail.com Mobile: 3012698958 ¡Formamos profesionales bilingües con Responsabilidad Social!