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Actional Competence

This document summarizes the components of communicative competence as defined by Hymes and expanded upon by others. It outlines six components: 1) linguistic competence, 2) actional competence, 3) discourse competence, 4) sociocultural competence, 5) strategic competence, and 6) provides examples to illustrate each component. Communication strategies like approximation and repair are matched with examples.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
2K views4 pages

Actional Competence

This document summarizes the components of communicative competence as defined by Hymes and expanded upon by others. It outlines six components: 1) linguistic competence, 2) actional competence, 3) discourse competence, 4) sociocultural competence, 5) strategic competence, and 6) provides examples to illustrate each component. Communication strategies like approximation and repair are matched with examples.
Copyright
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Lecture 7/UP

The Components of Communicative Competence


Coping and Carrying on Coherent Communication in (and outside) the Classroom What is communicative competence? The term communicative competence was coined y ! "ell Hymes (#$7%) in opposition to the Chomskys a stract notion o& ideal speaker competence' (or )ymes! such competence involves
*not only +nowing the grammatical rules of a language ut also what to say to whom in what circumstances and how to say it, that is! the rules o& grammar are useless without the rules o& language use' Thus! the real o -ective o& linguistic research should e the study o& how language is per&ormed in di&&erent conte.ts! with di&&erent people! on di&&erent topics! &or di&&erent purposes'/

0 componential model o& Co1Co was &irst developed y Canale & Swain (#$23) and later re&ined y Canale (#$24)' Celce-Murcia, Drnyei & Thurrell (#$$5) &urther modi&ied the model' 6n their view! CoCo may e seen as a comple. o& +nowledge and s+ills'

1 Linguistic competence 6t is the knowledge of the asic elements of the language code (synta.! morphology! voca ulary! phonology! orthography)' )istorically the most thoroughly discussed/analysed component this competence needs no &urther speci&ication! though distinctions may not e as clear1cut as o&ten assumed (vi7' grammar vs' le.is)' 2 Actional competence 6t is the a ility to understand and con!ey communicati!e intent y interpreting and performing language functions (complimenting! reporting! agreeing/disagreeing! predicting! suggesting! etc')' There is no one1to1one relationship etween linguistic &orms and &unctions! e'g'
Come here8 (&orm) 9 command! threat! tempting! etc' command (&unction) 96 want you to chec+ this'/ Perhaps you can chec+ this:/ ;ou may want to chec+ this

The appreciation o& this +ind o& competence very much underlies the emergence o& &unctional/notional sylla uses in the #$23s (c&' <an =+ #$$3)' 3 Discourse competence 6t is the a ility to com ine language structures into different types of unified spoken and written discourse (dialogue! political speech! poetry! academic paper! coo+ery recipe! etc')' This happens as an interplay o& two levels> microlevel o& grammar and le.is (9 cohesion) macrolevel o& communicative intent and sociocultural conte.t (9 coherence) 0lthough cohesion and coherence are interrelated! it occurs that (6) a cohesive te"t may appear to e non1coherent or (66) that a coherent te.t has no cohesive ties
#' 0> ?esus Christ! the schools on &ire8 @> ;es! it is! isnt it: %' 0> ;esterday was =aster Aonday' Bo 6 C' 0> Thats the telephone8 (Can you answer it! please:) @> DEo! 6 cant answer it ecauseF1 6m in the ath8 0> GH' D6ll answer it'F (#iddowson! #$72)

$ral discourse competence re&ers to a spea+ers a ility to recogni7e and contri ute to regular dialogic patterns' These &ollow a num er o& rules that regulate! e'g' openings! turn1ta+ing! Iuestion and answer seIuences and closings in everyday conversations'

4 Sociocultural competence 6t is the mastery of the sociocultural rules of language use> the appropriate application o& voca ulary! register! politeness! and style in a given social situation within a given culture' Bociocultural varia les are> Bocial conte.tual (age! gender! status! time! place! etc') Btylistic appropriateness (politeness! degrees o& &ormality! etc')
Task #hat might e %pro lematic&in this e"change' Teacher> 0nna> Than+ you! Peter! that was very interesting' 0nna! its your turn to give your tal+' 6 cant do it today ut 6 will do it ne.t wee+'

Cultural (+nowledge o& TL community! regional di&&erences! cross1cultural awareness! etc') Eon1ver al communicative (+inesic! prosemic! paralinguistic! etc') ! Strategic competence 6t is the knowledge of !er al and non-!er al communication strategies which ena le us to overcome di&&iculties when communication rea+downs occur! ie' 6t is the a ility to e.press onesel& in the &ace o& di&&iculties or limited language pro&iciency' Competent language users employ di&&erent types o& strategies in order to cope in real1time interaction! e'g' achie!ement(compensation! self-monitoring or interactional or time-gaining strategies' Task Aatch the communication strategies with the appropriate e.amples'

Compensatory #' Paraphrase> descri ing or e.empli&ying the o -ect or action whose name you dont +now' %' 0ppro.imation> using an alternative term which e.presses the meaning o& the target word as closely as possi le' )nteractional 4' 0ppeal &or help> eliciting the word you are loo+ing &or &rom your communication partner! e'g' y as+ing Iuestions J' 6nterpretive summary> re&ormulating the spea+ers message to chec+ that you understood correctly' Self-monitoring 5' Kepair> correcting something in your own or the other spea+ers speech' Stalling *time-gaining+ L' Using &illers/hesitation devices> to &ill pauses! to stall and to gain time to thin+ when in di&&iculty' a) ) c) d) e) &) Mell'''actually! yes! thats an interesting Iuestion' Lets see''' '''my Lit'Keview! no! sorry! 6 mean! Btatement o& 6ntent''' 6ts a +ind o& little round cage without a roo& &or a a y to play in' Me had to pay some money &or driving too &ast' 6 was drin+ing this'''er'''6 dont +now what its called in =nglish''' Bo are you trying to say that you didnt ring your homewor+ ecause your dog chewed it:

"eferences Canale! A' N Bwain! A' (#$23) Theoretical ases o& communicative approaches to second language teaching and testing' ,pplied -inguistics #! #1J7' "Ornyei! P' N Thurrell! B' (#$$%) Con!ersation and Dialogues in ,ction. )emel )empstead> Prentice )all' Qrice! P' (#$75) Logic and conversation 6n> Cole! P' and ?'L' Aorgan (#$75) Bynta. and semantics <ol' 4> Bpeech 0cts' Eew ;or+> 0cademic Press' )ymes! "' (#$7%) Gn communicative competence' 6n ?'@' Pride N ?' )olmes (=ds') Sociolinguistics' Selected /eadings. )armondsworth> Penguin' van =+! ?'0' N Trim! ?'L'A' (#$$3) Threshold -e!el 0112. Btras ourg> Council o& =urope Press' Middowson! )'Q' (#$72) Teaching -anguage as Communication. G.&ord> G.&ord University Press' "e#uire$ rea$ing Celce1Aurcia! A'! "Ornyei! P' N Thurrell! B' (#$$5) Communicative competence> 0 pedagogically motivated model with content speci&ications' )ssues in ,pplied -inguistics L(%)! 5145'

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