4 resultados para Task-Based Instruction (TBI)
em Adam Mickiewicz University Repository
Resumo:
Form-focused instruction is usually based on traditional practical/pedagogical grammar descriptions of grammatical features. The comparison of such traditional accounts with cognitive grammar (CG) descriptions seems to favor CG as a basis of pedagogical rules. This is due to the insistence of CG on the meaningfulness of grammar and its detailed analyses of the meanings of particular grammatical features. The differences between traditional and CG rules/descriptions are exemplified by juxtaposing the two kinds of principles concerning the use of the present simple and present progressive to refer to situations happening or existing at speech time. The descriptions provided the bases for the instructional treatment in a quasi-experimental study exploring the effectiveness of using CG descriptions of the two tenses, and of their interplay with stative (imperfective) and dynamic (perfective) verbs, and comparing this effectiveness with the value of grammar teaching relying on traditional accounts found in standard pedagogical grammars. The study involved 50 participants divided into three groups, with one of them constituting the control group and the other two being experimental ones. One of the latter received treatment based on CG descriptions and the other on traditional accounts. CG-based instruction was found to be at least moderately effective in terms of fostering mostly explicit grammatical knowledge and its effectiveness turned out be comparable to that of teaching based on traditional descriptions.
Resumo:
The aim of the paper is to present the specificity of oral argumentative competence in a foreign language and to propose a tentative model of task-based learning of argumentative discourse. It is assumed in the paper that the communicative situation tasks proposed during classes of French as a foreign language in the French Philology Department should contribute to the academic discourse learning. In the paper we present an analysis of two fragments of argumentative situations; the first one concerns the so-called everyday argumentative situation and another one illustrates an argumentative orientation of academic discourse.
Resumo:
The article focuses on teaching and learning conversational actions in English as a FL in direct instruction based on the guided discovery observation of discourse models such as transcribed video discus-sions and conversations. The aim of the task is to develop students’ communicative awareness, which in turn allows them to find in dis-course those communicative actions which suit their communicative style and contribute to the development of their personal communicative competence. Discourse observation tasks are accompanied by project tasks such as classroom role plays and discussions and interviews with a foreigner in which students are expected to produce the observed communicative actions. The paper is based on a case study of one student’s performance in the selected two types of tasks, discourse observation tasks and an interview with a foreigner.
Resumo:
The article focuses on teaching and learning conversational actions in English as a FL in direct instruction based on the guided discovery observation of discourse models such as transcribed video discus- sions and conversations. The aim of the task is to develop students’ communicative awareness, which in turn allows them to find in dis- course those communicative actions which suit their communicative style and contribute to the development of their personal communic- ative competence. Discourse observation tasks are accompanied by project tasks such as classroom role plays and discussions and inter- views with a foreigner in which students are expected to produce the observed communicative actions. The paper is based on a case study of one student’s performance in the selected two types of tasks, dis- course observation tasks and an interview with a foreigner.