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1 An Overview of Language Teaching
Methods and Approaches
MARIANNE CELCE-MURCIA
KEY QUESTIONS
» What are the methods and approaches that language teachers
have used over the years to teach
foreign or second languages?
» What are the current methodological trends and challenges?
» Where does language teaching methodology appear to be
heading?
EXPERIENCE
A committee of professors reviewing applications
for their graduate program in TESOL come upon
the statement of another applicant who declares
in his statement of purpose that he wishes to be
admitted to discover or (more ambitiously) to
develop the one best method for teaching English
as a second or foreign language. Several com-
mittee members utter words of impatience and
disappointment:
"Oh, no! Not another one!"
"Here we go again!"
The reasons for the committee's reactions to this
statement of purpose will become clear in the
course of this chapter.
WHAT IS A METHOD OR AN
APPROACH TO LANGUAGE
TEACHING?
A.nthony ( 1963) was one of the first applied lin-
guists to distinguish the terms approach, method,
and technique as they apply to language teach-
ing.1 For Anthony, an approach reflects a theo-
retical model or research pa1·adigm. It provides
a broad philosophical perspective on language
teaching, such as found in the justifications for
the direct method, the reading approach, or
the communicative approach (all are discussed
2
in this chapter). A method, on the other hand,
is a set of procedures for Anthony. It spells out
rather precisely in a step-by-step manner how to
teach a second or foreign language. Examples of
methods are the Silent ''Vay, Community Language
Learning, and Suggestopedia (all ofwhich are also
described here). A method is more specific than
an approach but less specific than a technique.
Anthony's methods are typically compatible with
one (or sometimes two) approaches. A technique
in Anthony's system is a specific classroom activity;
it thus represents the most specific and concrete
of the three concepts that he discusses. Some tech-
niques are widely used and found in many methods
(e.g., dictation, listen and repeat drills, and read
the passage and fill in the blanks); other tech-
niques, however, are specific to or characteristic of
a given method (e.g., using cuisenaire rods in the
Silent Way) (Gattegno, 1976).
A more recent framework for discussing lan-
guage teaching methodology has been proposed
by Richards and Rodgers (2001); it is presented
in Figure l. Richards and Rodgers use method as
the most general and overarching term. Under
method, they have the terms aptJroach, design, and
procedure. Their use of the term approach is similar
to Anthony's use, but their concept is more com-
prehensive and explicit. It includes theories of the
nature of language (including units of language
analysis) and the natlll·e of language learning
with reference to psychological and pedagogical
principles. The design portion of Richards and
- j
Approach
a. A theory of the nature of language
-an account of the nature of language
proficiency
-an account of the basic units of language
structure
b. A theory of the nature of language learning
-an account of the psycholinguistic and cog-
nitive processes involved in language
learning
- an account of the conditions that allow for
successful use of these processes
~ Metd ~
Design
a. The general and speci{lc objectives of the method
b. A syllabus model
- criteria for the selection and organization of linguis-
tic and/or subject-matter content
c. Types of learning and teaching activities
- kinds of tasks and practice activities to be employed
in the classroom and in materials
d. Learner roles
- rypes of learning tasks set for learners
-degree of control learners have over the content of
learning
- patterns of learner groupings that are recommended
or implied
- degree to which learners influence the learning of
others
-the view of the learner as a processor, performer, in-
itiator, problem solver, etc.
e. Teacher roles
-types of functions teachers fulfill
- degree of teacher influence over learning
- degree to which the teacher determines the content
of learning
- types of interaction between teachers and learners
The role of instructional materials
-primary function of materials
-the form materials take (e.g .. textbook, audiovisual)
- relation of materials to other input
-assumptions made about teachers and learners
I Procedure I
a. Classroom techniques, practices, and behaviors
observed when the method is used
- resources in terms of time, space, and equip-
ment used by the teacher
- interactional patterns observed in lessons
- tactics and strategies used by teachers and
learners when the method is being used
Figure I. Summary of elements and subelements that constitute
a method (adapted from J. C. Richards &
T. S. Rodgers, 200 I).
Rodgers's framework entails the curriculum objec-
tives and syllabus types (e.g., structural, notional-
functional, or content-based). (See Graves, this
volume.) It also includes learning and teaching
activities and spells out the roles of teachers and
learners. Finally, it includes instructional materials
along with their form, function, and role in the
teaching-learning process. The term procedure for
Richards and Rodgers refers to techniques, prac-
tices, behaviors, and equipment observable in the
classroom. The interactional patterns and the strat-
egies used by teachers and students are also part
of their pt·ocedural component. (See Brinton, this
volume.)
CONCEPTUAL UNDERPINNINGS
The field of second language (L2) teaching has
undergone many fluctuations and shifts over the
years. In contrast to disciplines like physics or
chemistry, in which progress is more or less steady
until a major discovery causes a radical theoretical
revision (referred to as a paradigm shift by Kuhn,
1970), language teaching is a field in which fads
and heroes have come and gone in a manner
fairly consistent with the kinds of changes that
occur when people jump from one bandwagon
to the next (M. Clarke, 1982). One reason for the
frequent swings of the pendulum is that very few
language teachers have a sense of history about
their profession and are thus unaware of the
linguistic, psychological, and sociocultural under-
pinnings of the many methodological options
they have at their disposal. It is hoped that this
overview will encourage language teachers to learn
more about the origins of their profession. Such
knowledge will ensure some perspective when
teachers evaluate any so-called innovations or new
approaches to methodology, developments that
will surely arise in the future.
Chapter I 3
Pre-twentieth-century trends: A survey
of key approaches
Prior to the twentieth century, language teach-
ing methodology vacillated between two types of
approaches: getting learners to use a language
(i.e., to speak and understand it) and getting
learners to analyze a language (i.e., to learn its
grammatical rules). Both the classical Greek and
medieval Latin periods were characterized by
an emphasis on teaching people to use foreign
languages. The classical languages, first Greek
and then Latin, were used as lingua francas (i.e.,
languages used for communication among people
speaking different first languages). Higher learn-
ing was conducted primarily through these lan-
guages all over Europe. Manuscripts and letters
were written in these languages. They were used
widely in philosophy, religion, politics, and busi-
ness. Thus the educated elite became fluent
speakers, readers, and writers of the classical
language appropriate to their time and context
(Prator, 1974).
We can assume that during these earlier eras
language teachers or tutors used informal and
more or less direct approaches to convey the form
and meaning of the language they were teaching
and that they used aural-oral techniques with no
language textbooks per se; instead, they probably
had a small stock of hand-copied written manu-
scripts of some sort, perhaps a few texts in the
target language (the language being learned), or
crude dictionaries that listed equivalent words in
two or more languages side by side.
During the Renaissance, the formal study of
the grammars of Greek and Latin became popu-
lar through the mass production of books made
possible by Gutenberg's invention of moveable
type and the printing press in 1440. In the case of
Latin, it was discovered that the grammar of the
classical texts was different from that of the Latin
then being used as a lingua franca-the latter sub-
sequently being labeled vulgate Latin (the Latin
of the common people). Major differences had
developed between the classical Latin described
in the Renaissance grammars, which became
the formal object of instruction in schools, and
the Latin being used for everyday purposes.
This occurred at about the same time that Latin
was gradually beginning to be abandoned as
a lingua franca. No one was speaking classical
4 Unit I
Latin as a first language anymore, and various
European vernaculars (languages with an oral
tradition but vvith little or no written tradition)
had begun to rise in respectability and popularity;
these vernacular languages, such as French and
German, had begun to develop their own written
traditions (Prator, 1974).2
Since the European vernaculars had grown in
prestige and utility, it is not surprising that people
in one country or region began to find it necessary
and useful to learn the language of another coun-
try or region. Thus during the early seventeenth
century the focus on language study shifted from
an exclusive analysis of the classical languages back
to a focus on utility. Perhaps the most famous lan-
guage teacher and methodologist of this period
is Johann (or Jan) Amos Comenius, a Czech
scholar and teacher, who published books about
his teaching techniques between 1631 and 1658.
Some of the techniques that Comenius used and
espoused were:
ii'l Use imitation instead of rules to teach a lan-
guage.
:::J Have your students repeat after you.
a Use a limited vocabulary initially.
u Help your students practice reading and
speaking.
CJ Teach language through pictures to make it
meaningful.
Thus Comenius, perhaps for the first time, made
explicit an essentially inductive approach to learn-
ing a foreign language (i.e., an approach based on
exposure to the target language in use rather than
through rules), the goal of which was to teach the
use rather than the analysis of the language being
taught (Kelly, 1969).
The next section of this chapter outlines the
major approaches that still resonate and influence
the practice of language teaching today-some to
a greater and some to a lesser degree.
The grammar-translation approach. Comenius's
progressive views held sway for some time; however,
by the beginning of the nineteenth century, the
systematic study of the grammar of classical Latin
and of classical texts had once again taken hold in
schools and universities throughout Europe. The
analytical grammar-translation approach became
firmly entrenched as a way to teach not only Latin
but also, by extension, the vernaculars that had
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become modern languages as well. Grammar-
translation was perhaps best codified in the work
of Karl Ploetz (1819-1881), a German scholar
who had a tremendous influence on the language
teaching profession during his lifetime and after-
ward. The following is a synthesis of the key ele-
ments of the grammar-translation approach (Kelly,
1969):
~ Instruction is given in the native language of
the students.
iii There is little use of the target language for
communication.
iii The focus is on grammatical parsing, that is,
the forms and inflections of words.
D There is early reading of difficult texts.
II A typical exercise is to translate sentences
from the target language into the mother
tongue (or vice versa).
IDll The result of this approach is usually an
inability on the part of the student to use the
language for communication.
~ The teacher does not have to be able to speak
the target language fluently.
The direct method. The swinging of the
pendulum continued. By the end of the nine-
teenth century, the direct method, which once
more stressed as its goal the ability to use rather
than to analyze a language, had begun to func-
tion as a viable alternative to grammar-translation.
Fran<;:ois Gouin, a Frenchman, began to publish his
work on the direct method in 1880. 3 He advocated
exclusive use of the target language in the class-
room, having been influenced by an older friend,
the German philosopher-scientist Alexander von
Humboldt, who had espoused the notion that
a language cannot be taught, that one can only
create conditions for learning to take place (Kelly,
1969). The direct method became very popular
in France and Germany, and even today it has
enthusiastic followers among language teachers in
many countries (as does the grammar-translation
approach). Key features of the direct method are:
~ No use of the mother tongue is permitted
(i.e., the teacher does not need to know the
students' native language).
L] Lessons begin with dialogues and anecdotes
in rnoden1 conversational style.
IS Actions and pictures are used to make mean-
ings clear.
EJ
!iii
[]
EJ
Grammar is learned inductively (i.e., by
repeated exposure to language in use, not
through rules about forms).
Literary texts are read for pleasure and are
not analyzed grammatically.
The target culture is also taught inductively.
The teacher must be a native speaker or have
native-like proficiency in the target language.
The influence of the direct method grew;
it crossed the Atlantic in the early twentieth
century when Emile de Sauze, a disciple of Gouin,
traveled to Cleveland, Ohio, to see to it that all
foreign language instruction in the public schools
there implemented the direct method. De Sauze's
endeavor, however, was not completely successful
(in Cleveland or elsewhere) since at the time there
were too few foreign language teachers in the
United States who were highly proficient speakers
of the language they were teaching (Prator, 1974).
The reform movement. In 1886, during the same
period that the direct method first became popular
in Europe, the International Phonetic Association
was established by scholars such as Henry Sweet,
Wilhelm Vietor, and Paul Passy. They developed
the International Phonetic Alphabet-a transcrip-
tion system designed to unambiguously represent
the sounds of any language-and became part
of the reform movement in language teaching
in the 1890s. These phoneticians made some of
the first truly scientific contributions to language
teaching when they advocated principles such as
the following (Howatt, 2004):
EJ The spoken form of a language is primary
and should be taught first.
GJ The findings of phonetics should be applied
to language teaching.
u Language teachers must have solid training
in phonetics.
u Learners should be given basic phonetic
training to establish good speech habits.
The work of these influential phoneticians focused
on the teaching of pronunciation and oral skills,
which they felt had been ignored in grammar-
translation. Thus, although the reform movement
is not necessarily considered a full-blown peda-
gogical approach to language teaching, its adher-
ents did have a significant influence on certain
subsequent approaches, as we will see.
Chapter I 5
Early and mid-twentieth-century
approaches
The reading approach. In the early decades
of the twentieth century, the Modern Language
Association of America, based on the Coleman
Report (Coleman, 1929), endorsed the reading
approach to language teaching. The report's
authors felt that, given the skills and limitations of
most language teachers, all that one could reason-
ably expect was for students to come away from
the study of a foreign language being able to read
the target language, with emphasis on some of the
great works of literature and philosophy that had
been produced in that language. As reflected in
the work of Michael West (1941) and others, this
approach held sway in North America until the
late 1930s and early 1940s. Elements of the reading
approach are:
LJ Only the grammar useful for reading com-
prehension is taught.
D Vocabulary is controlled at first (based on fre-
quency and usefulness) and then expanded.
CJ Translation is once more a respectable class-
room procedure.
CJ Reading comprehension is the only language
skill emphasized.
CJ The teacher does not need to have good oral
proficiency in the target language.
D The first language is used to present reading
material, discuss it, and check understanding.
The audiolingual approach. Some historians of
language teaching (e.g., Howatt, 2004) believe
that the earlier reform movement played a role
in the simultaneous development of both the
audiolingual approach in the United States and
the oral-situational approach in Britain (discussed
next). vVhen World War II broke Out and made
it imperative for the U.S. military to quickly and
efficiently teach members of the armed forces
how to speak foreign languages and to under-
stand them when spoken by native speakers, the
U.S. government hired linguists to help teach
languages and develop materials: the audiolingual
approach was born (Fries, 1945). It drew on both
the reform movement and the direct method but
added features from structural linguistics and
behavioral psychology. Structural linguistics begins
with describing minimally distinctive sound units
6 Unit I
(phonemes), which then form lexical and gram-
matical elements (morphemes), which then form
higher structures such as phrases and clauses/sen-
tences (Bloomfield, 1933). In behavioral psychol-
ogy, learning is based on getting learners to repeat
behaviors (verbal or nonverbal) until they become
fully learned habits (Skinner, 1957). The audio-
lingual approach became dominant in the United
States during the late 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. Its
features include:
LJ Lessons begin with dialogues.
CJ Mimicry and memorization are used, based
on the assumption that language learning is
habit formation.
Q Grammatical structures are sequenced and
rules are taught inductively (through planned
exposure).
CJ Skills are sequenced: first listening and speak-
ing are taught; reading and writing are post-
poned.
LJ Accurate pronunciation is stressed from the
beginning.
Q Vocabulary is severely controlled and limited
in the initial stages.
Q A great effort is made to prevent learner
errors.
D Language is often manipulated without
regard to meaning or context.
CJ The teacher must be proficient only in the
structures, vocabulary, and other aspects of
the language that he or she is teaching, since
learning activities and materials are carefully
controlled.
The oral-situational approach. In Britain the
same historical pressures that prompted the
development of the audiolingual approach
gave rise to the oral or situational approach
(Eckersley, 1955). It arose as a reaction to the
reading approach and its lack of emphasis on
listening and speaking skills (Howatt, 2004). This
approach was dominant in Britain during the late
1940s, 1950s, and 1960s; it drew on the reform
movement and the direct approach but added
features from Firthian linguistics (Firth, 1957) 4
and the emerging professional field of language
pedagogy. It also drew on the experience that
Britain's language educators had accn1ed in oral
approaches to foreign language teaching (e.g.,
Palmer, 1921/1964). Although inf1uenced by,
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but less dogmatic than, its American counterpart
(the audio lingual approach), the oral-situational
approach advocated organizing structures around
situations (e.g., "at the pharmacy" or "at the
restaurant") that provided the learner with maxi-
mum opportunity to practice the target language.
However, practice often consisted of little more
than pattern practice, choral repetition, or read-
ing of texts and memorization of dialogues.
Features of the oral-situational approach include:
w The spoken language is primary.
:l All language material is practiced orally
before being presented in written form (read-
ing and writing are taught only after an oral
base in lexical and grammatical forms has
been established).
D Only the target language should be used in
the classroom.
D Efforts are made to ensure that the most gen-
eral and useful lexical items are presented.
D Grammatical structures are graded from sim-
ple to complex.
i.J New items (lexical and grammatical) are intro-
duced and practiced situationally (e.g., "at the
post office," "at the bank," "at the dinner table").
More recent approaches to language
teaching
In addition to the above approaches whose his-
torical developments have been sketched here,
there are four other discernible approaches to
foreign language teaching that developed and
were widely used during the final quarter of the
twentieth century; some of them continue into the
early twenty-first century. In this section, I briefly
describe key features of the cognitive, affective-
hurnanistic, comprehension-based, and communi-
cative approaches.
The cognitive approach. This approach was a
reaction to the behaviorist features of the audiolin-
gual approach, influenced by cognitive psychology
and Chomskyan linguistics. Cognitive psychology
(Neisser, 1967) holds that people do not learn com-
plex systems like language or mathematics through
habit formation but through the acquisition of
patterns and rules that they can then extend and
apply to new circumstances or problems. Likewise,
in Chomskyan linguistics (Chomsky, 1959, 1965),
language acquisition is viewed as the learning of
a system of infinitely extendable rules based on
meaningful exposure, with hypothesis testing and
rule inferencing, not habit formation, driving
the learning process. Features of the cognitive
approach include:
Cl Language learning is viewed as rule acquisi-
tion, not habit formation.
D Instruction is often individualized; learners
are responsible for their own learning.
:J Grammar must be taught, but it can be taught
deductively (rules first, practice later) and/
or inductively (rules can either be stated after
practice or left as implicit information for the
learners to process on their own).
:l Pronunciation is deemphasized; perfection is
viewed as unrealistic and unattainable.
WI Reading and writing are once again as impor-
tant as listening and speaking.
D Vocabulary learning is again stressed, espe-
cially at intermediate and advanced levels.
::J Errors are viewed as inevitable, to be used
constructively for enhancing the learning
process (for feedback and correction).
D The teacher is expected to have good general
proficiency in the target language as well as
an ability to analyze the target language.
The affective-humanistic approach. This approach
developed as a reaction to the general lack of
affective considerations in both the audiolingual
approach and the cognitive approach (e.g., Curran,
1976; Moskowitz, 1978) .5 It put emphasis on the
social climate in the classroom and the develop-
ment of positive relationships between the teacher
and the learners and among the learners them-
selves. It argues that learning a language is a social
and personal process and that this has to be taken
into account in the methods and materials used.
Following are some of the defining characteristics
of the affective-humanistic approach:
:J Respect for each individual (students and
teachers) and for their feelings is empha-
sized.
u Communication that is personally meaning-
ful to the learner is given priority.
lJ Instruction involves much work in pairs and
small groups.
u The class atmosphere is viewed as more
important than materials or methods.
Chapter I 1
1:1
[:1
Cl
Cl
Peer support and interaction are viewed as
necessary for learning.
Learning a second or foreign language is
viewed as a self-realization process.
The teacher is a counselor or facilitator rather
than the ultimate source of knowledge.
The teacher should be proficient in the
target language and in the students' native
language since translation may be used heav-
ily in the initial stages to help students feel at
ease; later, it is gradually phased out.
The comprehension-based approach. This is an
outgrmvth of research in first language (L1) acqui-
sition that led some language methodologists to
assume that second language (L2) learning is
very similar to L1 acquisition and that extended
exposure and comprehension (i.e., listening with
understanding) must precede production (i.e.,
speaking (Asher, 1996; Krashen & Terrell, 1983;
Postavsky, 1974; Winitz, 1981). The best-known of
the comprehension-based approaches is Krashen
and Terrell's Natural Approach (1983). The char-
acteristics of the comprehension-based approach
are:
Cl Listening comprehension is very important
and is viewed as the basic skill that will allow
speaking, reading, and writing to develop
spontaneously over time, given the right con-
ditions.
Cl Learners should begin with a silent period
by listening to meaningful speech and by
responding nonverbally in meaningful ways
before they produce language themselves.
El Learners should not speak until they feel
ready to do so; such delayed oral production
results in better pronunciation than if the
learner is expected to speak immediately.
El Learners progress by being exposed to mean-
ingful input that is just one step beyond their
level of proficiency.
D Rule learning may help learners monitor (or
become aware of) what they do, but it will not
aid their acquisition or spontaneous use of
the target language.
EJ Error correction is seen as unnecessary and
perhaps even counterproductive; what is
important is that the learners can understand
and can make themselves understood.
8 Unit I
II If the teacher is not a native (or near-native)
speaker, appropriate audiovisual mate1ials must
be available online and in the classroom or lab to
provide the appropriate input for the learners.
The communicative approach. This approach
is an outgrowth of the work of anthropological
linguists in the United States (e.g., Hymes, 1971)
and Firthian linguists in Britain (e.g., Firth, 1957;
Halliday, 1973, 1978), all of whom view language
as a meaning-based system for communication.
(See Duff, this volume, for an extended discus-
sion.) Now serving as an umbrella term for anum-
ber of designs and procedures (to use Richards
and Rodgers's terminology) the communicative
approach includes task-based language teaching
and project work, content-based and immersion
instruction, and Cooperative Learning (Kagan, 1994),
among other instructional frameworks. (See also
chapters by Nunan and Snow, this volume.) Some
of the salient features and manifestations of the
communicative approach are:
II It is assumed that the goal of language teach-
ing is the learners' ability to communicate in
the target language.
II It is assumed that the content of a language
course will include semantic notions and
social functions and that they are as impor-
tant as linguistic structures.
II In some cases, the content is academic or job-
related material, which becomes the course
focus with language learning as a simultane-
ous concern.
1111 Students regularly work in groups or pairs to
transfer and negotiate meaning in situations
in which one person has information that the
other(s) lack.
1111 Students often engage in role play or dra-
matization to adjust their use of the target
language to different social contexts.
1111 Classroom materials and activities often con-
sist of authentic tasks and projects presented
and practiced using segments of preexisting
meaningful discourse, not mate1ials primarily
constructed for pedagogical purposes.
II Skills are integrated from the beginning; a
given activity might involve reading, speaking,
listening, and also writing (this assumes the
learners are educated and literate).
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Table I. Central Principles of Four Current Approaches to
Language Teaching
Approach· Central Principle
Cognitive approach
Affective-humanistic approach
Comprehension approach
Language learning is rule-governed cognitive behavior (not
habit formation).
Learning a foreign language is a process of self-realization and
of relating to other people.
Language acquisition occurs if and only if the learner receives
and comprehends
sufficient meaningful input.
Communicative approach The purpose of language (and thus the
goal of language teaching and learning) is
communication.
~ The teacher's role is primarily to facilitate com-
munication and secondarily to correct errors.
u The teacher should be able to use the target
language fluently and appropriately.
To sum up, we can see that certain features
of several of the pre-twentieth-century approaches
arose in reaction to perceived inadequacies
or impracticalities in an earlier approach or
approaches. The more recent approaches devel-
oped in the twentieth century and expanded in
the early twenty-first century also do this to some
extent; however, each one is based on a slightly
different theory or view of how people learn or
use second languages, and each has a central
principle around which everything else revolves,
as summarized in Table I.
Designer methods. In addition to the four
approaches already discussed, several other meth-
ods proliferated in the 1970s and 1980s; these have
been labeled designer methods by Nunan ( 1989b).
These methods were rather specific in terms of
the procedures and materials that the teacher,
who typically required special training, was sup-
posed to use. They were almost always developed
and defined by one person. This person, in turn,
trained practitioners who accepted the method as
gospel and helped to spread the word. Several of
these methods and their originators follow with
brief descriptions:
Silent Way. (Cattegno, 1976) Using an array of
visuals (e.g., rods of different shapes and colors,
and charts with words or color-coded sounds), the
teacher gets students to practice and learn a new
language while saying very little in the process. The
method is inductive, and only the target language
is used.
Community Language Learning. (Curran, 197 6)
Sitting in a circle, and with the session being
recorded, students decide what they want to say.
The teacher as counselor-facilitator then translates
and gets learners to practice in the target language
the material that was elicited. Later at the board,
the teacher goes over the words and structures the
class is learning and provides explanations in the
L1 as needed.
Total Physical Response. (Asher, 1996) The
teacher gives commands, "Stand up!" "Sit down!"
and so on and shows learners how to demonstrate
comprehension by doing the appropriate physical
action as a response. New structures and vocabu-
lary are introduced this way for an extended time.
vVhen learners are ready to speak, they begin
to give each other commands. Only the target
language is used.
Suggestology, Suggestopedia, or Accelerated Learning.
(Lozanov, 1978) In a setting more like a living
room than a classroom, learners sit in easy chairs
and assume a new identity; the teacher, using only
the target language, presents a script two times
over two days, accompanied by music. This is fol-
lowed by group or choral reading of the script on
the first day, along with songs and games. On the
second day, the students elaborate on the script to
tell an anecdote or story. The learners have copies
of the script along with an Ll translation juxta-
posed on the same page. The process continues
with new scripts.
The lockstep rigidity found in such designer
methods led some applied linguists (e.g., Richards,
1984) to seriously question their usefulness. This
aroused a healthy skepticism among language
educators, who argued that there is no such thing
Chapter I 9
' ......._ .-!
as a "best" method; Strevens ( 1977) was among the
earliest to articulate skepticism about the various
proliferating methods:
the complex circumstances of teaching and
learning languages-with different kinds
of pupils, teachers, aims, and objectives,
approaches, methods, and matetials, classroom
techniques and standards of achievement-
make it inconceivable that any single method
could achieve optimum success in all circum-
stances. (p. 5)
Adamson (2004) also critiques language teach-
ing methods and suggests that attention now be
turned "to the teacher and the learner, and the
ways in which they can operate effectively in their
educational context, instead of offering general-
ized, pre-packaged solutions in the shape of teach-
ing materials and strategies" (p. 619).
The post-methods era
Building on the professional consensus that no
method could claim supremacy, Prabhu ( 1990) asks
wh)' there is no best method. He suggests that there
are three possible explanations: (1) different meth-
ods are best for different teaching/learning circum-
stances; (2) all methods have some truth or validity;
and (3) the whole notion of what is a good or a bad
method is irrelevant. Prabhu argues for the third
possibility and concludes that we need to rethink
what is "best" such that classroom teachers and
applied linguists can develop shared pedagogical
perceptions of what real-world classroom teaching is.
Coming from the perspective of critical
theory (Foucault, 1980), Pennycook (1989) also
challenges the concept of method:
Method is a prescriptive concept that artiett-
lates a positivist, progressivist and patriar-
chal understanding of teaching and plays
an important role in maintaining inequities
between, on the one hand, predominantly
male academics and, on the other, female
teachers and language classrooms on the
international power periphery. (p. 589)
Many applied linguists, while not holding
as radical a view as that of Pennycook, nonethe-
less agree that we are in a post-methods era.
Beyond what Strevens, Prabhu, and Pennycook
10 Unit I
have noted, H. D. Brown (2002), in his cnttque
of methods, adds the following two observations:
( 1) so-called designer methods seem distinctive
at the initial stage of learning but soon come to
look like any other learner-centered approach; and
(2) it has proven impossible to empirically (i.e.,
quantitatively) demonstrate the superiority of one
method over another. Brown (2002) concludes that
classroom teachers do best when they ground their
pedagogy in "well-established ptinciples of language
teaching and learning" (p. 17).
So what are these well-established principles
that teachers should apply in the post-methods
era? One of the early concrete proposals comes
from Kumaravadivelu ( 1994), who offers a frame-
work consisting of the 10 following macro strate-
gies, which I summarize briefly:
1. Maximize learning opportunities. The teacher's
job is not to transmit knowledge but to create
and manage as many learning opportunities as
possible.
2. Facilitate negotiated interaction. Learners should
initiate classroom talk (not just respond to the
teacher's prompts) by asking for clatification,
by confinning, by reacting, and so on, as part of
teacher-student and student-student interaction.
3. lvlinimize jJeJ-cejJtual mismatches. Reduce or avoid
mismatches between what the teacher and
the learner believe is being taught or should
be taught as well as how learner performance
should be evaluated.
4. Activate intuitive heuristics. Teachers should
provide enough data for learners to infer
underlying grammatical rules, since it is impos-
sible to explicitly teach all rules of the L2.
5. Foster language awareness. Teachers should get
learners to attend to and learn the formal
properties of the L2 and then to compare and
contrast these formal properties with those of
the Ll.
6. Contextualize linguistic input. Meaningful
discourse-based activities are needed to help
learners see the interaction of grammar, lexi-
con, and pragmatics in natural language use.
7. Integrate language skills. The separation of listen-
ing, reading, speaking, and writing is artificial.
As in the real world, learners should integrate
skills: conversation (listening and speaking),
note-taking (listening and writing), self-study
(reading and writing), and so on.
_____J
'que
ons:
:ti·e
: to
and
I.e.,
)!1e
hat
teu·
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,les
Jds
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as
ld
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8. Promote learner autonomy. Teachers should help
learners to learn on their own by raising
awareness of effective learning strategies and
providing problems and tasks that encourage
learners to use strategies such as planning and
self-monitoring.
9. Raise cultural consciousness. Teachers should
allow learners to become sources of cultural
information so that knowledge about the
culture of the L2 and of other cultures ( espe-
cially those represented by the students)
becomes part of classroom communication.
10. Ensure social relevance: Acknowledge that
language learning has social, political, eco-
nomic, and educational dimensions that shape
the motivation to learn the L2, determine the
uses to which the L2 will be put, and define the
skills and proficiency level needed in the L2.
Based on these 10 guiding macrostrategies,
Kumaravadivelu (1994) suggests that teachers
should have the independence to design situation-
specific micro strategies, or materials and proce-
dures, to achieve their desired learning objectives.
(See Brinton, this volume, for specific instruc-
tional strategies.)
Kumaravadivelu (2001, 2006) further elabo-
rates on his 1994 paper, acknowledging that this
post-methods era is a transitional period and that
post-method pedagogy is a work in progress. He
argues that language teachers need to become
principled pragmatists, shaping their students'
classroom learning through informed teaching
and critical reflection. The post-methods teacher
is characterized as reflective, autonomous and self-
directed (Nunan & Lamb, 1996), and able to elicit
authentic pedagogical interaction (van Lier, 1996).
Ideally, such teachers will engage in research
to refine their practices. (See also chapters by
Murphy and Bailey, this volume.)
The post-methods teacher educator moves
away from transmitting an established body of knowl-
edge to prospective teachers and, instead, takes into
account their beliefs, voices, and visions to develop
their critical thinking skills. The goal is to help them
develop their own effective peclagogies that ~ll cre-
ate meaningful collaboration among learners, teach-
ers, and teacher educators (Kumaravadivelu, 200 l).
Not all applied linguists are fully convinced
that the idealistic proposals that have emerged
to elate in the post-methods era will work in all
settings. Adamson (2004), for example, reviews
Kumaravadivelu's 10 macro strategies and notes
that this framework might not be applicable where
the syllabus and teaching materials are fixed and
external examinations are prescribed. In such
cases, he feels that teachers may not have sufficient
autonomy to implement a post-methods approach.
He adds that teachers may also lack access to the
professional knowledge that will allow them to
develop an approach truly responsive to their
learners and their context.
CLASSROOM APPLICATIONS
Recall the TESOL-program applicant described in
the opening Experience section, who wanted to
discover or develop the one best method to the
consternation of the professors on the graduate
admissions committee. What is the solution for deal-
ing with this prospective ESL/EFL teacher? The best
way for him or her to learn to make ~se decisions
is to gain knowledge about the various approaches,
methods, and frameworks currently available and to
identify practices that may prove successful with the
learners in the context in which he or she is, or ''~II
be, teaching (Larsen-Freeman & Anderson, 2011).
This chapter's oven~ew just scratches the surface.
Further information is available in the remainder
of this volume and in many other books, in journal
articles, in presentations and workshops at profes-
sional conferences, and on the Internet.
There are at least five things that our appli-
cant to the MA TESOL program should learn to
do to make good pragmatic decisions concerning
the judicious application of an approach, a design,
or a method (including teaching materials) and its
techniques or procedures:
1. Assess student needs: vVhy are they learning
English? For what purpose?
2. Examine the instructional constraints: time
(hours per week, clays per week, and weeks per
term), class size (nature of enrollment), mate-
rials (set syllabus and text, or completely open
to teacher?), and physical factors (classroom
size, available audiovisual and technological
support). Then decide what and how much
can reasonably be taught and how.
3. Determine the attitudes, learning styles, and
cultural backgrounds of indi,~clual students
Chapter I I I
to the extent that this is possible, and develop
activities and materials consistent with the
findings.
4. Identif)' the discourse genres, speech activities,
and text types that the students need to learn
so that they can be incorporated into materials
and learning activities.
5. Determine how the students' language learning
will be assessed, and incorporate learning activ-
ities that simulate assessment practices into
classroom instruction.
In the course of doing all these, the appli-
cant (having completed his or her training) will
be in a position to select the most useful tech-
niques and procedures and to design a pro-
ductive course of study by drawing on existing
research findings and assessing the suitability of
available approaches, syllabus/ curriculum types,
and teaching materials. Clifford Prator, a profes-
sor and former colleague of mine, summed up
the professional ESL/EFL teacher's responsibility
aptly (personal communication):
Adapt; don't adopt.
Our MA program applicant will certainly be in a
better position upon graduation to follow Prator's
advice if he or she is familiar with the history and
the state of the art of our profession as well as with
all the options available to the teacher and his or
her learners.
FUTURE TRENDS
Finding ways to integrate all that we now know
is the challenge for current and future language
teachers and for the profession at large. We must
build on our past and present knowledge of what
works to refine and improve existing language
teaching practices and, it is hoped, develop other
practices that will be even better and more encom-
passing. We cannot be satisfied with the current, in-
progress state of affairs but must seek out new ways
to provide learners with the most effective and
efficient language learning experiences possible,
taking into account the learners' goals, interests,
and learning contexts. Language teachers must
also become familiar with the research in the field
of instructed second language acquisition. (See
Ellis, this volume.) This research offers insights into
the teaching and learning of grammar, vocabulary,
12 Unit I
and pronunciation, as well as the language skills
(listening, speaking, reading, and writing).
Canagarajah (2006) suggests that research
into the following six areas could result in new
methodological paradigms:
1. Motivation: How does the nature and extent
of the learner's motivation affect language
learning? (See Dornyei, this volume.)
2. Learner variability: How can teachers best
accommodate students with different strengths
and weaknesses in the same class?
3. Discourse analysis: How does the discourse of
the classroom and of the materials used by
the teacher and generated by the learners
contribute to language learning? (See Celce-
Murcia & Olshtain, this volume.)
4. Corpus-based research: To what extent can corpus-
based data be used by teachers and learners to
enhance the learning process? (See McCarthy
& O'Keeffe, this volume.)
5. Cognition: How do the learners' cognitive
styles and cognitive strategies influence their
language learning and language use? (See
Purpura, this volume.)
6. Social participation: To what extent can group
work, pair work, Cooperative Learning, and
well-structured tasks enhance student partici-
pation and learning? (See chapters by Brinton
and by Nunan, this volume.)
To this list, we add a seventh area-new technolo-
gies-since we are only beginning to understand
how wide access to and use of the Internet and
social media can advance language pedagogy and
accelerate language learning. (See Sokolik, this
volume.)
CONCLUSION
This is an exotmg time to be teaching English
as a second or foreign language. The spread of
English around the world has created a grow-
ing need for qualified teachers-native and non-
native speakers. In many countries, children are
starting to learn English at an ever-younger age.
There is more need than ever for teachers who
can deal with English in the workplace. The ever-
growing use of English as a lingua franca and the
proliferation of varieties of English require careful
linguistic description and appropriate pedagogies.
____,j
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;earch
1 new
:xtent
suage
best
ngths
se of
d bv
' rners
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and
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............
Continual advances in digital technology are
opening new channels for teaching and learning.
Language teachers must be ready to continually
adapt to new and changing circumstances since
there is no fixed body of knowledge that one can
master and say, "Now I know everything!"
SUMMARY
> Many different approaches and methods for
L2 instruction have been proposed and devel-
oped over the centuries.
> New approaches and methods are often devel-
oped in direct response to perceived problems
with or inadequacies in an existing popular
approach or method and/ or to the learning
theory prevalent at that time.
> There has never been and will never be one
approach or method that works best in all
possible teaching/learning contexts.
> Ideally, L2 teachers will develop (with full
knowledge of available options and in
collaboration with their students) the goals,
methods, materials, and activities that work
best in their particular contexts.
> Some applied linguists claim that we are in a
transitional post-methods era in which teach-
ers have opportunities to creatively apply new
findings and fine-tune effective past prac-
tices to develop, reflect on, and continuously
improve their classroom teaching.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. ·which of the approaches discussed in the
chapter have you personally experienced as
a language learner? VVhat were your impres-
sions, and what is your assessment of the effec-
tiveness of the approach ( es)?
2. What is the position regarding the teaching
of: (a) pronunciation; (b) grammar; and (c)
vocabulary in the many approaches discussed
in this chapter? Has there been a swinging of
the pendulum with respect to the teaching of
these areas? Why or why not?
3. vVhat changes have occurred regarding the rel-
ative emphasis on spoken language or written
language in the various approaches discussed
in this chapter? vVhy?
4. vVhat has been the role of the native language
and the target language in the various
approaches and methods?
5. Do you agree or disagree that we are currently
in a post-methods era? Explain.
SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES
1. Select an integrated-skills ESL/EFL text that
you have used or expect to use. Examine
its contents to determine which approach it
seems to follow most closely. Support your
decision with examples. Discuss any mixing of
approaches that you observe.
2. Observe an ESL or EFL class, and make a list of
all the procedures that the teacher uses. Based
on these observations, hypothesize the main
features of the approach and design that the
procedures imply.
3. Demonstration of teaching method: In groups,
use the Internet and other available sources
to research a teaching method/approach
from the list that follows. Then plan a lesson
illustrating the key features of this method. Be
prepared to: (a) present a brief demonstration
of the method to your classmates; and
(b) explain its key features using the Richards
and Rodgers framework. Suggested topics:
• Audiolingual approach
• Task-based learning
• Total Physical Response
Cooperative Learning
• Community Language
Learning
• Project work
• Natural Approach
• Content-based instruction
• SilentWay
• Oral/situational approach
• Direct method (Berliu
method)
• Suggestopedia
FURTHER READING
Howatt, A. P.R. (with Widdowson, H. G.). (2004).
A history of English lang;uage teaching (2nd ed.).
Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
This book covers the teaching of English from
1400 to the present day.
Chapter I 13
Kelly, L. G. (1969). Twenty-five centuries of language
teaching. New York, 1TY: Newbury House.
This volume goes back to the Greeks and Romans
and covers the teaching of all foreign languages
(not just English).
Larsen-Freeman, D., & Anderson, M. (2011)
Techniques and jJrinciples in language teaching
(3rd ed.). New York, 1TY: Oxford University Press.
This is a good source for a more detailed look at
many of the teaching methods mentioned in this
chapter.
Richards, J. C., & Rodgers, T. S. (200 1). AjJproaches
and methods in language teaching: il description and
analysis (2nd eel.). New York, 1TY: Cambridge
University Press.
This text presents a thorough description and
analysis of past and current second language
teaching approaches.
14 Unit I
ENDNOTES
1
Versions of the first pan of this chapter were published in
Prator with
Celce-;furcia ( 1979) and Celce-;lurcia C2001). This expanded
and updated ersion also draws on ;[adsen (1979) and Brinton
(20lla).
~ Exa1nples of such written texts are the Gutenberg Bible in
German
and the Chanson de Rolan de in French.
~~The term dirr>ct metlwrlis rnore widely used than direct
ajJjJroadz; hoH'·er,
the former is a misnomer, since this is really an approach. not a
method, if we follow .-mhunv's (1963) tenninulogv or that of
Richards and Rodgers (200 I).
·I firth ian linguistics is best codified in the work of firth's best-
known
student, :1. .-. K. Halliday (197:1), who refers to his approach
to language analysis as systeinic-functional gran1n1ar.
Halliday's
approach is ·ery different fron1 Chomsky's generath·e
grammar.
a highlr abstract extension of structuralism and an approach
to language that paid explicit attemion w the description of
linguistic features (Chomsh, 1965). In addition to form and
meaning, Hallida~· also takes social context into account in his
theurv and description. Hallidav's system extends bemnd the
sentence Ie,·el. whereas ChomskY's does not. Thus mam·
applied
linguists find Hallidav's framework better for their purposes
than Chomsb·'s.
5
The tenn humani;tic has two 1neanings. One refers to the
humanities
(i.e., literature, history, and philosoph,'). The other refers to
that branch of psvchology concerned with the role of the socio-
a!Tectie domain in human behavior. It is the latter sense that I
am referring to here. Howe,·e·~ see Stevick (1990) for an e·en
broader perspecth·e on humanism in language teaching.
-
Teaching English
as a Second or
Foreign Language
FOURTH EDITION
MARIANNE CELCE-MURCIA
DONNA M. BRINTON
MARGUERITE ANN SNOW
EDITORS
GEOGRAPHIC ~"" ~ HE IN L E D NATIONAL I ' LEARNING
I- CENGAGE Learning·
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• United Kingdom • United States
iii
GEOGRAPHIC ,.. # H E IN L E D NATIONAL I • LEARNING
•- CENGAGE Learning·
Teaching English as a Second or Foreign
language, Fourth Edition
Marianne Celce-Murcia,
Donna M. Brinton,
and Marguerite Ann Snow
Publisher: Sherrise Roehr
Acquisitions Editor: Tom Jefferies
Director of Global Marketing: ian Martin
Senior Product Manager:
Barbara Quincer Coulter
Director, Content and Media Production:
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Content Project Manager:
Andrea Bobotas
Print Buyer: Mary Beth Hennebury
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Cover Image: joel Sartore/National
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Printed in the United States of America
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Cengage Learning
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1 An Overview of Language Teaching Methods and Approaches .docx

  • 1. 1 An Overview of Language Teaching Methods and Approaches MARIANNE CELCE-MURCIA KEY QUESTIONS » What are the methods and approaches that language teachers have used over the years to teach foreign or second languages? » What are the current methodological trends and challenges? » Where does language teaching methodology appear to be heading? EXPERIENCE A committee of professors reviewing applications for their graduate program in TESOL come upon the statement of another applicant who declares in his statement of purpose that he wishes to be admitted to discover or (more ambitiously) to develop the one best method for teaching English as a second or foreign language. Several com- mittee members utter words of impatience and disappointment: "Oh, no! Not another one!" "Here we go again!" The reasons for the committee's reactions to this statement of purpose will become clear in the course of this chapter.
  • 2. WHAT IS A METHOD OR AN APPROACH TO LANGUAGE TEACHING? A.nthony ( 1963) was one of the first applied lin- guists to distinguish the terms approach, method, and technique as they apply to language teach- ing.1 For Anthony, an approach reflects a theo- retical model or research pa1·adigm. It provides a broad philosophical perspective on language teaching, such as found in the justifications for the direct method, the reading approach, or the communicative approach (all are discussed 2 in this chapter). A method, on the other hand, is a set of procedures for Anthony. It spells out rather precisely in a step-by-step manner how to teach a second or foreign language. Examples of methods are the Silent ''Vay, Community Language Learning, and Suggestopedia (all ofwhich are also described here). A method is more specific than an approach but less specific than a technique. Anthony's methods are typically compatible with one (or sometimes two) approaches. A technique in Anthony's system is a specific classroom activity; it thus represents the most specific and concrete of the three concepts that he discusses. Some tech- niques are widely used and found in many methods (e.g., dictation, listen and repeat drills, and read the passage and fill in the blanks); other tech- niques, however, are specific to or characteristic of a given method (e.g., using cuisenaire rods in the Silent Way) (Gattegno, 1976).
  • 3. A more recent framework for discussing lan- guage teaching methodology has been proposed by Richards and Rodgers (2001); it is presented in Figure l. Richards and Rodgers use method as the most general and overarching term. Under method, they have the terms aptJroach, design, and procedure. Their use of the term approach is similar to Anthony's use, but their concept is more com- prehensive and explicit. It includes theories of the nature of language (including units of language analysis) and the natlll·e of language learning with reference to psychological and pedagogical principles. The design portion of Richards and - j Approach a. A theory of the nature of language -an account of the nature of language proficiency -an account of the basic units of language structure b. A theory of the nature of language learning -an account of the psycholinguistic and cog- nitive processes involved in language learning - an account of the conditions that allow for
  • 4. successful use of these processes ~ Metd ~ Design a. The general and speci{lc objectives of the method b. A syllabus model - criteria for the selection and organization of linguis- tic and/or subject-matter content c. Types of learning and teaching activities - kinds of tasks and practice activities to be employed in the classroom and in materials d. Learner roles - rypes of learning tasks set for learners -degree of control learners have over the content of learning - patterns of learner groupings that are recommended or implied - degree to which learners influence the learning of others -the view of the learner as a processor, performer, in- itiator, problem solver, etc. e. Teacher roles -types of functions teachers fulfill - degree of teacher influence over learning - degree to which the teacher determines the content
  • 5. of learning - types of interaction between teachers and learners The role of instructional materials -primary function of materials -the form materials take (e.g .. textbook, audiovisual) - relation of materials to other input -assumptions made about teachers and learners I Procedure I a. Classroom techniques, practices, and behaviors observed when the method is used - resources in terms of time, space, and equip- ment used by the teacher - interactional patterns observed in lessons - tactics and strategies used by teachers and learners when the method is being used Figure I. Summary of elements and subelements that constitute a method (adapted from J. C. Richards & T. S. Rodgers, 200 I). Rodgers's framework entails the curriculum objec- tives and syllabus types (e.g., structural, notional- functional, or content-based). (See Graves, this volume.) It also includes learning and teaching activities and spells out the roles of teachers and learners. Finally, it includes instructional materials along with their form, function, and role in the teaching-learning process. The term procedure for Richards and Rodgers refers to techniques, prac- tices, behaviors, and equipment observable in the classroom. The interactional patterns and the strat-
  • 6. egies used by teachers and students are also part of their pt·ocedural component. (See Brinton, this volume.) CONCEPTUAL UNDERPINNINGS The field of second language (L2) teaching has undergone many fluctuations and shifts over the years. In contrast to disciplines like physics or chemistry, in which progress is more or less steady until a major discovery causes a radical theoretical revision (referred to as a paradigm shift by Kuhn, 1970), language teaching is a field in which fads and heroes have come and gone in a manner fairly consistent with the kinds of changes that occur when people jump from one bandwagon to the next (M. Clarke, 1982). One reason for the frequent swings of the pendulum is that very few language teachers have a sense of history about their profession and are thus unaware of the linguistic, psychological, and sociocultural under- pinnings of the many methodological options they have at their disposal. It is hoped that this overview will encourage language teachers to learn more about the origins of their profession. Such knowledge will ensure some perspective when teachers evaluate any so-called innovations or new approaches to methodology, developments that will surely arise in the future. Chapter I 3 Pre-twentieth-century trends: A survey of key approaches
  • 7. Prior to the twentieth century, language teach- ing methodology vacillated between two types of approaches: getting learners to use a language (i.e., to speak and understand it) and getting learners to analyze a language (i.e., to learn its grammatical rules). Both the classical Greek and medieval Latin periods were characterized by an emphasis on teaching people to use foreign languages. The classical languages, first Greek and then Latin, were used as lingua francas (i.e., languages used for communication among people speaking different first languages). Higher learn- ing was conducted primarily through these lan- guages all over Europe. Manuscripts and letters were written in these languages. They were used widely in philosophy, religion, politics, and busi- ness. Thus the educated elite became fluent speakers, readers, and writers of the classical language appropriate to their time and context (Prator, 1974). We can assume that during these earlier eras language teachers or tutors used informal and more or less direct approaches to convey the form and meaning of the language they were teaching and that they used aural-oral techniques with no language textbooks per se; instead, they probably had a small stock of hand-copied written manu- scripts of some sort, perhaps a few texts in the target language (the language being learned), or crude dictionaries that listed equivalent words in two or more languages side by side. During the Renaissance, the formal study of the grammars of Greek and Latin became popu- lar through the mass production of books made
  • 8. possible by Gutenberg's invention of moveable type and the printing press in 1440. In the case of Latin, it was discovered that the grammar of the classical texts was different from that of the Latin then being used as a lingua franca-the latter sub- sequently being labeled vulgate Latin (the Latin of the common people). Major differences had developed between the classical Latin described in the Renaissance grammars, which became the formal object of instruction in schools, and the Latin being used for everyday purposes. This occurred at about the same time that Latin was gradually beginning to be abandoned as a lingua franca. No one was speaking classical 4 Unit I Latin as a first language anymore, and various European vernaculars (languages with an oral tradition but vvith little or no written tradition) had begun to rise in respectability and popularity; these vernacular languages, such as French and German, had begun to develop their own written traditions (Prator, 1974).2 Since the European vernaculars had grown in prestige and utility, it is not surprising that people in one country or region began to find it necessary and useful to learn the language of another coun- try or region. Thus during the early seventeenth century the focus on language study shifted from an exclusive analysis of the classical languages back to a focus on utility. Perhaps the most famous lan- guage teacher and methodologist of this period is Johann (or Jan) Amos Comenius, a Czech scholar and teacher, who published books about
  • 9. his teaching techniques between 1631 and 1658. Some of the techniques that Comenius used and espoused were: ii'l Use imitation instead of rules to teach a lan- guage. :::J Have your students repeat after you. a Use a limited vocabulary initially. u Help your students practice reading and speaking. CJ Teach language through pictures to make it meaningful. Thus Comenius, perhaps for the first time, made explicit an essentially inductive approach to learn- ing a foreign language (i.e., an approach based on exposure to the target language in use rather than through rules), the goal of which was to teach the use rather than the analysis of the language being taught (Kelly, 1969). The next section of this chapter outlines the major approaches that still resonate and influence the practice of language teaching today-some to a greater and some to a lesser degree. The grammar-translation approach. Comenius's progressive views held sway for some time; however, by the beginning of the nineteenth century, the systematic study of the grammar of classical Latin and of classical texts had once again taken hold in schools and universities throughout Europe. The analytical grammar-translation approach became
  • 10. firmly entrenched as a way to teach not only Latin but also, by extension, the vernaculars that had IOUS oral on) rity; md ten 1in pie ary L111- Hh )ffi LCk m- od ch >lit iS. ld n- d
  • 11. it e 1- [} [l e :r ~ become modern languages as well. Grammar- translation was perhaps best codified in the work of Karl Ploetz (1819-1881), a German scholar who had a tremendous influence on the language teaching profession during his lifetime and after- ward. The following is a synthesis of the key ele- ments of the grammar-translation approach (Kelly, 1969): ~ Instruction is given in the native language of the students. iii There is little use of the target language for communication. iii The focus is on grammatical parsing, that is, the forms and inflections of words. D There is early reading of difficult texts. II A typical exercise is to translate sentences from the target language into the mother
  • 12. tongue (or vice versa). IDll The result of this approach is usually an inability on the part of the student to use the language for communication. ~ The teacher does not have to be able to speak the target language fluently. The direct method. The swinging of the pendulum continued. By the end of the nine- teenth century, the direct method, which once more stressed as its goal the ability to use rather than to analyze a language, had begun to func- tion as a viable alternative to grammar-translation. Fran<;:ois Gouin, a Frenchman, began to publish his work on the direct method in 1880. 3 He advocated exclusive use of the target language in the class- room, having been influenced by an older friend, the German philosopher-scientist Alexander von Humboldt, who had espoused the notion that a language cannot be taught, that one can only create conditions for learning to take place (Kelly, 1969). The direct method became very popular in France and Germany, and even today it has enthusiastic followers among language teachers in many countries (as does the grammar-translation approach). Key features of the direct method are: ~ No use of the mother tongue is permitted (i.e., the teacher does not need to know the students' native language). L] Lessons begin with dialogues and anecdotes in rnoden1 conversational style.
  • 13. IS Actions and pictures are used to make mean- ings clear. EJ !iii [] EJ Grammar is learned inductively (i.e., by repeated exposure to language in use, not through rules about forms). Literary texts are read for pleasure and are not analyzed grammatically. The target culture is also taught inductively. The teacher must be a native speaker or have native-like proficiency in the target language. The influence of the direct method grew; it crossed the Atlantic in the early twentieth century when Emile de Sauze, a disciple of Gouin, traveled to Cleveland, Ohio, to see to it that all foreign language instruction in the public schools there implemented the direct method. De Sauze's endeavor, however, was not completely successful (in Cleveland or elsewhere) since at the time there were too few foreign language teachers in the United States who were highly proficient speakers of the language they were teaching (Prator, 1974). The reform movement. In 1886, during the same period that the direct method first became popular in Europe, the International Phonetic Association was established by scholars such as Henry Sweet,
  • 14. Wilhelm Vietor, and Paul Passy. They developed the International Phonetic Alphabet-a transcrip- tion system designed to unambiguously represent the sounds of any language-and became part of the reform movement in language teaching in the 1890s. These phoneticians made some of the first truly scientific contributions to language teaching when they advocated principles such as the following (Howatt, 2004): EJ The spoken form of a language is primary and should be taught first. GJ The findings of phonetics should be applied to language teaching. u Language teachers must have solid training in phonetics. u Learners should be given basic phonetic training to establish good speech habits. The work of these influential phoneticians focused on the teaching of pronunciation and oral skills, which they felt had been ignored in grammar- translation. Thus, although the reform movement is not necessarily considered a full-blown peda- gogical approach to language teaching, its adher- ents did have a significant influence on certain subsequent approaches, as we will see. Chapter I 5 Early and mid-twentieth-century
  • 15. approaches The reading approach. In the early decades of the twentieth century, the Modern Language Association of America, based on the Coleman Report (Coleman, 1929), endorsed the reading approach to language teaching. The report's authors felt that, given the skills and limitations of most language teachers, all that one could reason- ably expect was for students to come away from the study of a foreign language being able to read the target language, with emphasis on some of the great works of literature and philosophy that had been produced in that language. As reflected in the work of Michael West (1941) and others, this approach held sway in North America until the late 1930s and early 1940s. Elements of the reading approach are: LJ Only the grammar useful for reading com- prehension is taught. D Vocabulary is controlled at first (based on fre- quency and usefulness) and then expanded. CJ Translation is once more a respectable class- room procedure. CJ Reading comprehension is the only language skill emphasized. CJ The teacher does not need to have good oral proficiency in the target language. D The first language is used to present reading material, discuss it, and check understanding.
  • 16. The audiolingual approach. Some historians of language teaching (e.g., Howatt, 2004) believe that the earlier reform movement played a role in the simultaneous development of both the audiolingual approach in the United States and the oral-situational approach in Britain (discussed next). vVhen World War II broke Out and made it imperative for the U.S. military to quickly and efficiently teach members of the armed forces how to speak foreign languages and to under- stand them when spoken by native speakers, the U.S. government hired linguists to help teach languages and develop materials: the audiolingual approach was born (Fries, 1945). It drew on both the reform movement and the direct method but added features from structural linguistics and behavioral psychology. Structural linguistics begins with describing minimally distinctive sound units 6 Unit I (phonemes), which then form lexical and gram- matical elements (morphemes), which then form higher structures such as phrases and clauses/sen- tences (Bloomfield, 1933). In behavioral psychol- ogy, learning is based on getting learners to repeat behaviors (verbal or nonverbal) until they become fully learned habits (Skinner, 1957). The audio- lingual approach became dominant in the United States during the late 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. Its features include: LJ Lessons begin with dialogues. CJ Mimicry and memorization are used, based
  • 17. on the assumption that language learning is habit formation. Q Grammatical structures are sequenced and rules are taught inductively (through planned exposure). CJ Skills are sequenced: first listening and speak- ing are taught; reading and writing are post- poned. LJ Accurate pronunciation is stressed from the beginning. Q Vocabulary is severely controlled and limited in the initial stages. Q A great effort is made to prevent learner errors. D Language is often manipulated without regard to meaning or context. CJ The teacher must be proficient only in the structures, vocabulary, and other aspects of the language that he or she is teaching, since learning activities and materials are carefully controlled. The oral-situational approach. In Britain the same historical pressures that prompted the development of the audiolingual approach gave rise to the oral or situational approach (Eckersley, 1955). It arose as a reaction to the reading approach and its lack of emphasis on listening and speaking skills (Howatt, 2004). This
  • 18. approach was dominant in Britain during the late 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s; it drew on the reform movement and the direct approach but added features from Firthian linguistics (Firth, 1957) 4 and the emerging professional field of language pedagogy. It also drew on the experience that Britain's language educators had accn1ed in oral approaches to foreign language teaching (e.g., Palmer, 1921/1964). Although inf1uenced by, ___j am- •rm en- 101- eat me lio- ed Its ed IS lei :d k- it- te
  • 19. cl T lt e f )' ..._ but less dogmatic than, its American counterpart (the audio lingual approach), the oral-situational approach advocated organizing structures around situations (e.g., "at the pharmacy" or "at the restaurant") that provided the learner with maxi- mum opportunity to practice the target language. However, practice often consisted of little more than pattern practice, choral repetition, or read- ing of texts and memorization of dialogues. Features of the oral-situational approach include: w The spoken language is primary. :l All language material is practiced orally before being presented in written form (read- ing and writing are taught only after an oral base in lexical and grammatical forms has been established). D Only the target language should be used in the classroom. D Efforts are made to ensure that the most gen-
  • 20. eral and useful lexical items are presented. D Grammatical structures are graded from sim- ple to complex. i.J New items (lexical and grammatical) are intro- duced and practiced situationally (e.g., "at the post office," "at the bank," "at the dinner table"). More recent approaches to language teaching In addition to the above approaches whose his- torical developments have been sketched here, there are four other discernible approaches to foreign language teaching that developed and were widely used during the final quarter of the twentieth century; some of them continue into the early twenty-first century. In this section, I briefly describe key features of the cognitive, affective- hurnanistic, comprehension-based, and communi- cative approaches. The cognitive approach. This approach was a reaction to the behaviorist features of the audiolin- gual approach, influenced by cognitive psychology and Chomskyan linguistics. Cognitive psychology (Neisser, 1967) holds that people do not learn com- plex systems like language or mathematics through habit formation but through the acquisition of patterns and rules that they can then extend and apply to new circumstances or problems. Likewise, in Chomskyan linguistics (Chomsky, 1959, 1965), language acquisition is viewed as the learning of a system of infinitely extendable rules based on meaningful exposure, with hypothesis testing and
  • 21. rule inferencing, not habit formation, driving the learning process. Features of the cognitive approach include: Cl Language learning is viewed as rule acquisi- tion, not habit formation. D Instruction is often individualized; learners are responsible for their own learning. :J Grammar must be taught, but it can be taught deductively (rules first, practice later) and/ or inductively (rules can either be stated after practice or left as implicit information for the learners to process on their own). :l Pronunciation is deemphasized; perfection is viewed as unrealistic and unattainable. WI Reading and writing are once again as impor- tant as listening and speaking. D Vocabulary learning is again stressed, espe- cially at intermediate and advanced levels. ::J Errors are viewed as inevitable, to be used constructively for enhancing the learning process (for feedback and correction). D The teacher is expected to have good general proficiency in the target language as well as an ability to analyze the target language. The affective-humanistic approach. This approach developed as a reaction to the general lack of affective considerations in both the audiolingual
  • 22. approach and the cognitive approach (e.g., Curran, 1976; Moskowitz, 1978) .5 It put emphasis on the social climate in the classroom and the develop- ment of positive relationships between the teacher and the learners and among the learners them- selves. It argues that learning a language is a social and personal process and that this has to be taken into account in the methods and materials used. Following are some of the defining characteristics of the affective-humanistic approach: :J Respect for each individual (students and teachers) and for their feelings is empha- sized. u Communication that is personally meaning- ful to the learner is given priority. lJ Instruction involves much work in pairs and small groups. u The class atmosphere is viewed as more important than materials or methods. Chapter I 1 1:1 [:1 Cl Cl
  • 23. Peer support and interaction are viewed as necessary for learning. Learning a second or foreign language is viewed as a self-realization process. The teacher is a counselor or facilitator rather than the ultimate source of knowledge. The teacher should be proficient in the target language and in the students' native language since translation may be used heav- ily in the initial stages to help students feel at ease; later, it is gradually phased out. The comprehension-based approach. This is an outgrmvth of research in first language (L1) acqui- sition that led some language methodologists to assume that second language (L2) learning is very similar to L1 acquisition and that extended exposure and comprehension (i.e., listening with understanding) must precede production (i.e., speaking (Asher, 1996; Krashen & Terrell, 1983; Postavsky, 1974; Winitz, 1981). The best-known of the comprehension-based approaches is Krashen and Terrell's Natural Approach (1983). The char- acteristics of the comprehension-based approach are: Cl Listening comprehension is very important and is viewed as the basic skill that will allow speaking, reading, and writing to develop spontaneously over time, given the right con- ditions. Cl Learners should begin with a silent period by listening to meaningful speech and by responding nonverbally in meaningful ways before they produce language themselves.
  • 24. El Learners should not speak until they feel ready to do so; such delayed oral production results in better pronunciation than if the learner is expected to speak immediately. El Learners progress by being exposed to mean- ingful input that is just one step beyond their level of proficiency. D Rule learning may help learners monitor (or become aware of) what they do, but it will not aid their acquisition or spontaneous use of the target language. EJ Error correction is seen as unnecessary and perhaps even counterproductive; what is important is that the learners can understand and can make themselves understood. 8 Unit I II If the teacher is not a native (or near-native) speaker, appropriate audiovisual mate1ials must be available online and in the classroom or lab to provide the appropriate input for the learners. The communicative approach. This approach is an outgrowth of the work of anthropological linguists in the United States (e.g., Hymes, 1971) and Firthian linguists in Britain (e.g., Firth, 1957; Halliday, 1973, 1978), all of whom view language as a meaning-based system for communication. (See Duff, this volume, for an extended discus- sion.) Now serving as an umbrella term for anum- ber of designs and procedures (to use Richards
  • 25. and Rodgers's terminology) the communicative approach includes task-based language teaching and project work, content-based and immersion instruction, and Cooperative Learning (Kagan, 1994), among other instructional frameworks. (See also chapters by Nunan and Snow, this volume.) Some of the salient features and manifestations of the communicative approach are: II It is assumed that the goal of language teach- ing is the learners' ability to communicate in the target language. II It is assumed that the content of a language course will include semantic notions and social functions and that they are as impor- tant as linguistic structures. II In some cases, the content is academic or job- related material, which becomes the course focus with language learning as a simultane- ous concern. 1111 Students regularly work in groups or pairs to transfer and negotiate meaning in situations in which one person has information that the other(s) lack. 1111 Students often engage in role play or dra- matization to adjust their use of the target language to different social contexts. 1111 Classroom materials and activities often con- sist of authentic tasks and projects presented and practiced using segments of preexisting meaningful discourse, not mate1ials primarily
  • 26. constructed for pedagogical purposes. II Skills are integrated from the beginning; a given activity might involve reading, speaking, listening, and also writing (this assumes the learners are educated and literate). ______.j 1ative) must lab to 1ens. oach 1gical 971) 1957; uage tion. scus- lum- ards Hive 1111g sion 94), also )me the tch- ~m
  • 27. 1ge md IOf- Jb- rse 1e- to '11S he -a- et n- ~d tg ly a J ,, e Table I. Central Principles of Four Current Approaches to Language Teaching Approach· Central Principle Cognitive approach
  • 28. Affective-humanistic approach Comprehension approach Language learning is rule-governed cognitive behavior (not habit formation). Learning a foreign language is a process of self-realization and of relating to other people. Language acquisition occurs if and only if the learner receives and comprehends sufficient meaningful input. Communicative approach The purpose of language (and thus the goal of language teaching and learning) is communication. ~ The teacher's role is primarily to facilitate com- munication and secondarily to correct errors. u The teacher should be able to use the target language fluently and appropriately. To sum up, we can see that certain features of several of the pre-twentieth-century approaches arose in reaction to perceived inadequacies or impracticalities in an earlier approach or approaches. The more recent approaches devel- oped in the twentieth century and expanded in the early twenty-first century also do this to some extent; however, each one is based on a slightly different theory or view of how people learn or use second languages, and each has a central principle around which everything else revolves, as summarized in Table I.
  • 29. Designer methods. In addition to the four approaches already discussed, several other meth- ods proliferated in the 1970s and 1980s; these have been labeled designer methods by Nunan ( 1989b). These methods were rather specific in terms of the procedures and materials that the teacher, who typically required special training, was sup- posed to use. They were almost always developed and defined by one person. This person, in turn, trained practitioners who accepted the method as gospel and helped to spread the word. Several of these methods and their originators follow with brief descriptions: Silent Way. (Cattegno, 1976) Using an array of visuals (e.g., rods of different shapes and colors, and charts with words or color-coded sounds), the teacher gets students to practice and learn a new language while saying very little in the process. The method is inductive, and only the target language is used. Community Language Learning. (Curran, 197 6) Sitting in a circle, and with the session being recorded, students decide what they want to say. The teacher as counselor-facilitator then translates and gets learners to practice in the target language the material that was elicited. Later at the board, the teacher goes over the words and structures the class is learning and provides explanations in the L1 as needed. Total Physical Response. (Asher, 1996) The teacher gives commands, "Stand up!" "Sit down!" and so on and shows learners how to demonstrate
  • 30. comprehension by doing the appropriate physical action as a response. New structures and vocabu- lary are introduced this way for an extended time. vVhen learners are ready to speak, they begin to give each other commands. Only the target language is used. Suggestology, Suggestopedia, or Accelerated Learning. (Lozanov, 1978) In a setting more like a living room than a classroom, learners sit in easy chairs and assume a new identity; the teacher, using only the target language, presents a script two times over two days, accompanied by music. This is fol- lowed by group or choral reading of the script on the first day, along with songs and games. On the second day, the students elaborate on the script to tell an anecdote or story. The learners have copies of the script along with an Ll translation juxta- posed on the same page. The process continues with new scripts. The lockstep rigidity found in such designer methods led some applied linguists (e.g., Richards, 1984) to seriously question their usefulness. This aroused a healthy skepticism among language educators, who argued that there is no such thing Chapter I 9 ' ......._ .-! as a "best" method; Strevens ( 1977) was among the earliest to articulate skepticism about the various proliferating methods:
  • 31. the complex circumstances of teaching and learning languages-with different kinds of pupils, teachers, aims, and objectives, approaches, methods, and matetials, classroom techniques and standards of achievement- make it inconceivable that any single method could achieve optimum success in all circum- stances. (p. 5) Adamson (2004) also critiques language teach- ing methods and suggests that attention now be turned "to the teacher and the learner, and the ways in which they can operate effectively in their educational context, instead of offering general- ized, pre-packaged solutions in the shape of teach- ing materials and strategies" (p. 619). The post-methods era Building on the professional consensus that no method could claim supremacy, Prabhu ( 1990) asks wh)' there is no best method. He suggests that there are three possible explanations: (1) different meth- ods are best for different teaching/learning circum- stances; (2) all methods have some truth or validity; and (3) the whole notion of what is a good or a bad method is irrelevant. Prabhu argues for the third possibility and concludes that we need to rethink what is "best" such that classroom teachers and applied linguists can develop shared pedagogical perceptions of what real-world classroom teaching is. Coming from the perspective of critical theory (Foucault, 1980), Pennycook (1989) also challenges the concept of method:
  • 32. Method is a prescriptive concept that artiett- lates a positivist, progressivist and patriar- chal understanding of teaching and plays an important role in maintaining inequities between, on the one hand, predominantly male academics and, on the other, female teachers and language classrooms on the international power periphery. (p. 589) Many applied linguists, while not holding as radical a view as that of Pennycook, nonethe- less agree that we are in a post-methods era. Beyond what Strevens, Prabhu, and Pennycook 10 Unit I have noted, H. D. Brown (2002), in his cnttque of methods, adds the following two observations: ( 1) so-called designer methods seem distinctive at the initial stage of learning but soon come to look like any other learner-centered approach; and (2) it has proven impossible to empirically (i.e., quantitatively) demonstrate the superiority of one method over another. Brown (2002) concludes that classroom teachers do best when they ground their pedagogy in "well-established ptinciples of language teaching and learning" (p. 17). So what are these well-established principles that teachers should apply in the post-methods era? One of the early concrete proposals comes from Kumaravadivelu ( 1994), who offers a frame- work consisting of the 10 following macro strate- gies, which I summarize briefly:
  • 33. 1. Maximize learning opportunities. The teacher's job is not to transmit knowledge but to create and manage as many learning opportunities as possible. 2. Facilitate negotiated interaction. Learners should initiate classroom talk (not just respond to the teacher's prompts) by asking for clatification, by confinning, by reacting, and so on, as part of teacher-student and student-student interaction. 3. lvlinimize jJeJ-cejJtual mismatches. Reduce or avoid mismatches between what the teacher and the learner believe is being taught or should be taught as well as how learner performance should be evaluated. 4. Activate intuitive heuristics. Teachers should provide enough data for learners to infer underlying grammatical rules, since it is impos- sible to explicitly teach all rules of the L2. 5. Foster language awareness. Teachers should get learners to attend to and learn the formal properties of the L2 and then to compare and contrast these formal properties with those of the Ll. 6. Contextualize linguistic input. Meaningful discourse-based activities are needed to help learners see the interaction of grammar, lexi- con, and pragmatics in natural language use. 7. Integrate language skills. The separation of listen- ing, reading, speaking, and writing is artificial. As in the real world, learners should integrate
  • 34. skills: conversation (listening and speaking), note-taking (listening and writing), self-study (reading and writing), and so on. _____J 'que ons: :ti·e : to and I.e., )!1e hat teu· 1ge ,les Jds 1es 1e- te- r's 'te as ld 1e
  • 35. 11, )f I. d d d e :1 r ;- ..._ 8. Promote learner autonomy. Teachers should help learners to learn on their own by raising awareness of effective learning strategies and providing problems and tasks that encourage learners to use strategies such as planning and self-monitoring. 9. Raise cultural consciousness. Teachers should allow learners to become sources of cultural information so that knowledge about the culture of the L2 and of other cultures ( espe- cially those represented by the students) becomes part of classroom communication. 10. Ensure social relevance: Acknowledge that language learning has social, political, eco- nomic, and educational dimensions that shape the motivation to learn the L2, determine the
  • 36. uses to which the L2 will be put, and define the skills and proficiency level needed in the L2. Based on these 10 guiding macrostrategies, Kumaravadivelu (1994) suggests that teachers should have the independence to design situation- specific micro strategies, or materials and proce- dures, to achieve their desired learning objectives. (See Brinton, this volume, for specific instruc- tional strategies.) Kumaravadivelu (2001, 2006) further elabo- rates on his 1994 paper, acknowledging that this post-methods era is a transitional period and that post-method pedagogy is a work in progress. He argues that language teachers need to become principled pragmatists, shaping their students' classroom learning through informed teaching and critical reflection. The post-methods teacher is characterized as reflective, autonomous and self- directed (Nunan & Lamb, 1996), and able to elicit authentic pedagogical interaction (van Lier, 1996). Ideally, such teachers will engage in research to refine their practices. (See also chapters by Murphy and Bailey, this volume.) The post-methods teacher educator moves away from transmitting an established body of knowl- edge to prospective teachers and, instead, takes into account their beliefs, voices, and visions to develop their critical thinking skills. The goal is to help them develop their own effective peclagogies that ~ll cre- ate meaningful collaboration among learners, teach- ers, and teacher educators (Kumaravadivelu, 200 l).
  • 37. Not all applied linguists are fully convinced that the idealistic proposals that have emerged to elate in the post-methods era will work in all settings. Adamson (2004), for example, reviews Kumaravadivelu's 10 macro strategies and notes that this framework might not be applicable where the syllabus and teaching materials are fixed and external examinations are prescribed. In such cases, he feels that teachers may not have sufficient autonomy to implement a post-methods approach. He adds that teachers may also lack access to the professional knowledge that will allow them to develop an approach truly responsive to their learners and their context. CLASSROOM APPLICATIONS Recall the TESOL-program applicant described in the opening Experience section, who wanted to discover or develop the one best method to the consternation of the professors on the graduate admissions committee. What is the solution for deal- ing with this prospective ESL/EFL teacher? The best way for him or her to learn to make ~se decisions is to gain knowledge about the various approaches, methods, and frameworks currently available and to identify practices that may prove successful with the learners in the context in which he or she is, or ''~II be, teaching (Larsen-Freeman & Anderson, 2011). This chapter's oven~ew just scratches the surface. Further information is available in the remainder of this volume and in many other books, in journal articles, in presentations and workshops at profes- sional conferences, and on the Internet. There are at least five things that our appli-
  • 38. cant to the MA TESOL program should learn to do to make good pragmatic decisions concerning the judicious application of an approach, a design, or a method (including teaching materials) and its techniques or procedures: 1. Assess student needs: vVhy are they learning English? For what purpose? 2. Examine the instructional constraints: time (hours per week, clays per week, and weeks per term), class size (nature of enrollment), mate- rials (set syllabus and text, or completely open to teacher?), and physical factors (classroom size, available audiovisual and technological support). Then decide what and how much can reasonably be taught and how. 3. Determine the attitudes, learning styles, and cultural backgrounds of indi,~clual students Chapter I I I to the extent that this is possible, and develop activities and materials consistent with the findings. 4. Identif)' the discourse genres, speech activities, and text types that the students need to learn so that they can be incorporated into materials and learning activities. 5. Determine how the students' language learning will be assessed, and incorporate learning activ-
  • 39. ities that simulate assessment practices into classroom instruction. In the course of doing all these, the appli- cant (having completed his or her training) will be in a position to select the most useful tech- niques and procedures and to design a pro- ductive course of study by drawing on existing research findings and assessing the suitability of available approaches, syllabus/ curriculum types, and teaching materials. Clifford Prator, a profes- sor and former colleague of mine, summed up the professional ESL/EFL teacher's responsibility aptly (personal communication): Adapt; don't adopt. Our MA program applicant will certainly be in a better position upon graduation to follow Prator's advice if he or she is familiar with the history and the state of the art of our profession as well as with all the options available to the teacher and his or her learners. FUTURE TRENDS Finding ways to integrate all that we now know is the challenge for current and future language teachers and for the profession at large. We must build on our past and present knowledge of what works to refine and improve existing language teaching practices and, it is hoped, develop other practices that will be even better and more encom- passing. We cannot be satisfied with the current, in- progress state of affairs but must seek out new ways to provide learners with the most effective and efficient language learning experiences possible,
  • 40. taking into account the learners' goals, interests, and learning contexts. Language teachers must also become familiar with the research in the field of instructed second language acquisition. (See Ellis, this volume.) This research offers insights into the teaching and learning of grammar, vocabulary, 12 Unit I and pronunciation, as well as the language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). Canagarajah (2006) suggests that research into the following six areas could result in new methodological paradigms: 1. Motivation: How does the nature and extent of the learner's motivation affect language learning? (See Dornyei, this volume.) 2. Learner variability: How can teachers best accommodate students with different strengths and weaknesses in the same class? 3. Discourse analysis: How does the discourse of the classroom and of the materials used by the teacher and generated by the learners contribute to language learning? (See Celce- Murcia & Olshtain, this volume.) 4. Corpus-based research: To what extent can corpus- based data be used by teachers and learners to enhance the learning process? (See McCarthy & O'Keeffe, this volume.) 5. Cognition: How do the learners' cognitive
  • 41. styles and cognitive strategies influence their language learning and language use? (See Purpura, this volume.) 6. Social participation: To what extent can group work, pair work, Cooperative Learning, and well-structured tasks enhance student partici- pation and learning? (See chapters by Brinton and by Nunan, this volume.) To this list, we add a seventh area-new technolo- gies-since we are only beginning to understand how wide access to and use of the Internet and social media can advance language pedagogy and accelerate language learning. (See Sokolik, this volume.) CONCLUSION This is an exotmg time to be teaching English as a second or foreign language. The spread of English around the world has created a grow- ing need for qualified teachers-native and non- native speakers. In many countries, children are starting to learn English at an ever-younger age. There is more need than ever for teachers who can deal with English in the workplace. The ever- growing use of English as a lingua franca and the proliferation of varieties of English require careful linguistic description and appropriate pedagogies. ____,j : skills
  • 42. ;earch 1 new :xtent suage best ngths se of d bv ' rners :elce- rpus- rs to Lrthy itive heir [See oup and tici- ton ))O- md md md .his
  • 43. ish of >W- tl1- re :e. lO :r- le Lil 'S. ............ Continual advances in digital technology are opening new channels for teaching and learning. Language teachers must be ready to continually adapt to new and changing circumstances since there is no fixed body of knowledge that one can master and say, "Now I know everything!" SUMMARY > Many different approaches and methods for L2 instruction have been proposed and devel- oped over the centuries. > New approaches and methods are often devel- oped in direct response to perceived problems with or inadequacies in an existing popular approach or method and/ or to the learning
  • 44. theory prevalent at that time. > There has never been and will never be one approach or method that works best in all possible teaching/learning contexts. > Ideally, L2 teachers will develop (with full knowledge of available options and in collaboration with their students) the goals, methods, materials, and activities that work best in their particular contexts. > Some applied linguists claim that we are in a transitional post-methods era in which teach- ers have opportunities to creatively apply new findings and fine-tune effective past prac- tices to develop, reflect on, and continuously improve their classroom teaching. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. ·which of the approaches discussed in the chapter have you personally experienced as a language learner? VVhat were your impres- sions, and what is your assessment of the effec- tiveness of the approach ( es)? 2. What is the position regarding the teaching of: (a) pronunciation; (b) grammar; and (c) vocabulary in the many approaches discussed in this chapter? Has there been a swinging of the pendulum with respect to the teaching of these areas? Why or why not? 3. vVhat changes have occurred regarding the rel- ative emphasis on spoken language or written
  • 45. language in the various approaches discussed in this chapter? vVhy? 4. vVhat has been the role of the native language and the target language in the various approaches and methods? 5. Do you agree or disagree that we are currently in a post-methods era? Explain. SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES 1. Select an integrated-skills ESL/EFL text that you have used or expect to use. Examine its contents to determine which approach it seems to follow most closely. Support your decision with examples. Discuss any mixing of approaches that you observe. 2. Observe an ESL or EFL class, and make a list of all the procedures that the teacher uses. Based on these observations, hypothesize the main features of the approach and design that the procedures imply. 3. Demonstration of teaching method: In groups, use the Internet and other available sources to research a teaching method/approach from the list that follows. Then plan a lesson illustrating the key features of this method. Be prepared to: (a) present a brief demonstration of the method to your classmates; and (b) explain its key features using the Richards and Rodgers framework. Suggested topics: • Audiolingual approach
  • 46. • Task-based learning • Total Physical Response Cooperative Learning • Community Language Learning • Project work • Natural Approach • Content-based instruction • SilentWay • Oral/situational approach • Direct method (Berliu method) • Suggestopedia FURTHER READING Howatt, A. P.R. (with Widdowson, H. G.). (2004). A history of English lang;uage teaching (2nd ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. This book covers the teaching of English from 1400 to the present day. Chapter I 13
  • 47. Kelly, L. G. (1969). Twenty-five centuries of language teaching. New York, 1TY: Newbury House. This volume goes back to the Greeks and Romans and covers the teaching of all foreign languages (not just English). Larsen-Freeman, D., & Anderson, M. (2011) Techniques and jJrinciples in language teaching (3rd ed.). New York, 1TY: Oxford University Press. This is a good source for a more detailed look at many of the teaching methods mentioned in this chapter. Richards, J. C., & Rodgers, T. S. (200 1). AjJproaches and methods in language teaching: il description and analysis (2nd eel.). New York, 1TY: Cambridge University Press. This text presents a thorough description and analysis of past and current second language teaching approaches. 14 Unit I ENDNOTES 1 Versions of the first pan of this chapter were published in Prator with Celce-;furcia ( 1979) and Celce-;lurcia C2001). This expanded and updated ersion also draws on ;[adsen (1979) and Brinton (20lla).
  • 48. ~ Exa1nples of such written texts are the Gutenberg Bible in German and the Chanson de Rolan de in French. ~~The term dirr>ct metlwrlis rnore widely used than direct ajJjJroadz; hoH'·er, the former is a misnomer, since this is really an approach. not a method, if we follow .-mhunv's (1963) tenninulogv or that of Richards and Rodgers (200 I). ·I firth ian linguistics is best codified in the work of firth's best- known student, :1. .-. K. Halliday (197:1), who refers to his approach to language analysis as systeinic-functional gran1n1ar. Halliday's approach is ·ery different fron1 Chomsky's generath·e grammar. a highlr abstract extension of structuralism and an approach to language that paid explicit attemion w the description of linguistic features (Chomsh, 1965). In addition to form and meaning, Hallida~· also takes social context into account in his theurv and description. Hallidav's system extends bemnd the sentence Ie,·el. whereas ChomskY's does not. Thus mam· applied linguists find Hallidav's framework better for their purposes than Chomsb·'s. 5 The tenn humani;tic has two 1neanings. One refers to the humanities (i.e., literature, history, and philosoph,'). The other refers to that branch of psvchology concerned with the role of the socio- a!Tectie domain in human behavior. It is the latter sense that I am referring to here. Howe,·e·~ see Stevick (1990) for an e·en
  • 49. broader perspecth·e on humanism in language teaching. - Teaching English as a Second or Foreign Language FOURTH EDITION MARIANNE CELCE-MURCIA DONNA M. BRINTON MARGUERITE ANN SNOW EDITORS GEOGRAPHIC ~"" ~ HE IN L E D NATIONAL I ' LEARNING I- CENGAGE Learning· Australia • Brazil • japan • Korea • Mexico • Singapore • Spain • United Kingdom • United States iii GEOGRAPHIC ,.. # H E IN L E D NATIONAL I • LEARNING •- CENGAGE Learning· Teaching English as a Second or Foreign language, Fourth Edition
  • 50. Marianne Celce-Murcia, Donna M. Brinton, and Marguerite Ann Snow Publisher: Sherrise Roehr Acquisitions Editor: Tom Jefferies Director of Global Marketing: ian Martin Senior Product Manager: Barbara Quincer Coulter Director, Content and Media Production: Michael Burggren Content Project Manager: Andrea Bobotas Print Buyer: Mary Beth Hennebury Cover Designer: Gina Petti Cover Image: joel Sartore/National Geographic Image Collection Compositor: MPS Limited Printed in the United States of America 345671817161514
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