Task Based Language Teaching
Task Based Language Teaching
TBLT advocates
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What is a task?
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A task involves a primary focus on meaning?. A task has some kind of gap. The participants choose the linguistic resources needed to complete the task. A task has a clearly defined outcome.
An example
I am going to play a number game with you. When I have finished: 1. Play the game in pairs. 2. Imagine you are writing a book of games for children and want to include this game. Write an entry in the book for this game. 3. Compare your entry with that of another student. Whose entry is better? 4. Develop a set of criteria for evaluating written entries in the book.
Some questions
1. What type of task is this? - information gap/ opinion gap - one way./ two way - open/closed 2. What language skills were involved in performing this task? 3. What kinds of processing demands does this task place on students? 4. Are there any linguistic forms that are essential or useful for performing this task? 5. How could you decide if this task has worked?
Why do TBLT
1. Tasks can be easily related to students real-life language needs (i.e. pedagogic tasks can be designed to reflect target tasks). 2. Tasks create contexts that facilitate second language acquisition (i.e. an L2 is best learned through communicating). 3. Tasks create opportunities for focusing on form. 4. Students are more likely to develop intrinsic motivation in a task-based approach. 5. A task-based approach enables teachers to see if students are developing the ability to communicate in an L2.
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The organisation of task-based lessons - pre-task phase - main task phase - post-task phase The participatory structure of task-based lessons - individual student activity - teacher-class activity - small group work
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Supporting learners in performing a task similar to the main task Providing learners with a model of how the task might be performed. Engaging learners in non-task activities designed to help them perform the task. Providing learners with the opportunity to plan how to perform the task.
Providing a Model
Providing a demonstration of an ideal performance Analysing the features of an ideal text Training in the use of a strategy (e.g. learning to live with uncertainty) Effects of such task priming need investigating (cf. Lam and Wong 2000)
Strategic Planning
Students have access to task. Options: Unguided planning Guided planning (focus on content vs. focus on linguistic form) Time allocated (Mehnert 1998) Participatory organisation
To acquire the ability to use new linguistic forms communicatively, learners need the opportunity to engage in meaning-focused language use. However, such opportunity will only guarantee full acquisition of the new linguistic forms if learners also have the opportunity to attend to form while engaged in meaning-focused language use. Given that learners have a limited capacity to process the second language (L2) and have difficulty in simultaneously attending to meaning and form they will prioritize meaning over form when performing a communicative activity (VanPatten 1990). For this reason, it is necessary to find ways of drawing learners attention to form during a communicative activity. As Doughty (2001) notes the factor that distinguishes focus-on-form from other pedagogical approaches is the requirement that focus-on-form involves learners briefly and perhaps simultaneously attending to form, meaning and use during one cognitive event (p. 211).
Implicit Focus-on-Form
Two principal procedures: 1. Request for clarification (i.e. Speaker A says something that Speaker B does not understand; B requests clarification allowing A opportunity to reformulate) 2. Recast (i.e. Speaker A says something that Speaker B reformulates in whole or in part)
Explicit Focus-on-Form
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Explicit correction (e.g. Not x, y) Metalingual comment (e.g. Not present tense, past tense) Query (e.g. Why is can used here?) Advise (e.g. Remember you need to use the past tense).
Picas research
Pica (2002) examined the extent to which learners and their teachers modified the interaction that arose in content-based instruction in order to attend to developmentally difficult formmeaning relationships (for example, English articles) - Pica reported very little attention to form. She commented one of the most striking findings of the study was that the majority of student non-target utterances went unaddressed in any way (p. 9). One reason for this was that the students utterances, although often ungrammatical, did not require any adjustment in order to be understood.
In other words, the interesting and meaningful content that comprised these lessons drew learners attention from the need to attend to form.
Repeat Performance
Research shows that when learners repeat a task their production improves in a number of ways (e.g. complexity increases, propositions are expressed more clearly, and they become more fluent). A repeat performance can be carried out under the same conditions as the first performance (i.e. in small groups or individually) or the conditions can be changed.
Attention to Form
Options include: - review of learner errors (proof listening Lynch) - CR tasks - Production practice - Noticing activities (dictation; making a transcript)
Pedagogical problems
Solutions
1. Students lack Devise activities that proficiency to develop ability to communicate in the L2 communicate gradually.
Solutions Review philosophy of education. Develop new more communicative exams Use small group work; develop tasks suited to large classes.
Concluding comments
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Task-based teaching offers the opportunity for natural learning inside the classroom. It emphasizes meaning over form but can also cater for learning form. It is intrinsically motivating. It is compatible with a learner-centred educational philosophy. It can be used alongside a more traditional approach.