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Taskbased Learning at A Glance
Taskbased Learning at A Glance
Practice
Enable sts. to accomplish the final task successfully by helping them: automatise the new language (esp. formulaic chunks). get their tongues round longer chunks of language using correct intonation and pronunciation. Make it easier for the teacher to spot trouble areas and correct relevant errors on the spot (but not mid-sentence!) .
Final task
To give sts. the opportunity to use the new language in realistic situations under realistic operating conditions through unscripted, meaning-focused work. To provide the teacher with evidence that the sts. are in the process of acquiring the target forms.
Purpose
Important features
Pre reading/listening questions should help sts. read/listen with a clear purpose in mind. While reading/listening questions should help sts. understand both global and specific information.
Left to their own devices, learners are believed to process input for meaning rather than form, so noticing activities should help them notice how certain ideas are expressed in the text/dialogue they previously read for meaning. Luiz Otavio Barros. Task-based learning.
Sts. should be encouraged to discover use, meaning and form through simple and straight-forward questions.
Within a TBL framework, controlled practice should as far as possible: Allow at least some degree of linguistic choice. Be meaningful (i.e., sts. should always know what theyre saying). Be fully contextualised. For some language areas, chorus repetition, individual repetition and backchaining are extremely important and must be done. But the pace should be brisk and to be kept on their toes sts. should always be called at random.
A TBL final task should ideally look like something the sts. would be expected to do in real life in relation to the theme chosen. There should always be: A clear, non-linguistic purpose (i.e., talk to each other to find out whether rather than talk to each other to practice these sentences) A realistic (and as far as possible relevant) context.
Exposure to text or dialogue Comprehension Noticing (meaning) (form) Comprehension questions in the moulds of: Listen and check your predictions Listen and decide which statement best describes the womans attitude Read the article again and fill in the missing details Organiser Consultant S T S text Ss S T S Consciousness-raising questions in the moulds of: Listen and write down what the speaker says to express X idea Read the text and underline examples of how the writer expresses X idea Task-based learning.
Enabling tasks Discovery Grammar analysis questions in the moulds of: How is the negative formed? Why did the speaker say Ive been there but I went there in 1988? Look at the examples. When do we use some and any? Practice Chorus and individual repetition (particularly useful for formulaic chunks) Sentence transformation based on cue words/visual stimuli etc Semi-communicative activities. Gap-filling type exercises. Conductor Corrector Ss S T S Ss S (open pairs) Final task
Meaning-focused communicative or semicommunicative activities such as discussions, roleplays and simulations. It is sometimes useful to diagnose sts use of language through meaning-oriented written activities too. Organiser Evaluator T Ss S S Ss Ss Teacher should not attempt to control sts. output at this stage, otherwise he/she may not have enough evidence of how well they can actually use the language. Since in this phase of the lesson the aim is to diagnose what sts. can do, the best policy here is probably to write down examples of their production for subsequent feedback. Short Usually at the beginning
Meaning-focused activities such as problemsolving, discussions, roleplays and simulations. A final task could be a written task, of course, as long as it is something students could be expected to produce in real life (e.g., a memo or e-mail rather than isolated sentences) Organiser Evaluator Consultant S Ss S Ss
Interact ion
Ts roles
Typical activities
Degree of control
Difficult to predict the range of structures and lexis produced by the sts. in this phase of the lesson. Therefore, it doesnt make sense for the teacher to try and control students oral production here. Luiz Otvio Barros.
Only phase of a TBL lesson in which the teacher actually tries to control sts. output, particularly their choice of language. Luiz Otavio Barros. Task-based learning. It is probably sensible to correct sts. on the spot here (but not midsentence!)
Teacher should not try to control sts output at this stage. The final task, however, must be designed to make the use of the target structure as useful as possible. The best policy here is probably to make a note of relevant mistakes and point them out to sts. afterwards. Further controlled practice should follow if necessary.
Correction
Just as it is difficult to predict what language sts. will use in these phases of a TBL lesson, there are no hard and fast rules for error correction. The teachers decision whether or not to intervene will depend on at least two factors: Sts. profile (Shy? Easily discouraged? Fluent but inaccurate? Accurate but not fluent?) The error in question (Recurrent? Serious for the level? Worth correcting at all?)
It depends on the amount of importance you want to attach to skills development in any given lesson.
Short (sts. just have to find out how, say, speaker X expressed idea Y) After sts. have understood the content of the text or dialogue.
Depends on the students needs. But as a rule, the longer it lasts the more likely sts. are to overanalyse and make mountains out of anthills.
Depends on the sts. needs, but as a rule shorter than the final task. Before and, if necessary, after the final task.
As a rule, longer than other phases (i.e., sts. should spend more time using the language communicatively than manipulating or analysing it )