Task-Based Instruction (TBI) By Belén Ichina

What is it?

It is a methodology that can be regarded as developing from a focus on classroom processes

Language learning will be the result

Creating the right kinds of interactional processes in the classroom, and the best way to create these is to use specially designed instructional tasks.

Advocates of
TBI say

Grammar and other dimensions of communicative competence can be developed as a by-product of engaging learners in interactive tasks

TBI

It focuses mainly in the use of tasks and sees them as the primary unit to be used, both in planning teaching and in classroom teaching.

Characteristics of a task

It is something that learners do or carry out using their existing language resources.

It has an outcome which is not simply linked to learning language, though language acquisition may occur as the learner carries out the task.

It involves a focus on meaning.

In the case of tasks involving two or more learners, it calls upon the learners’ use of communication strategies and interactional skills.

Kinds of tasks

Pedagogical tasks

Those are specially designed classroom tasks that are intended to require the use of specific intreractional strategies and may also require the use of specific types of language (skills, grammar, vocabulary).

For example: A task in which two learners have to try to find the number of differences between two similar pictures.

Real-world tasks

Those are tasks that reflect real-world uses of language and which
might be considered a rehearsal for real-world tasks.

For example: A role play in which students practice a job interview

Willis (1996) proposes six types of tasks

Listing tasks

Students might have to make up a list of things they would pack if they were going on a beach vacation.

Sorting and ordering

Students work in pairs and make up a list of the most important characteristics of an ideal vacation.

Comparing

Students compare ads for two different
supermarkets.

Problem solving

Students read a letter to an advice columnist
and suggest a solution to the writer’s problems.

Sharing personal experiences

Students discuss their reactions to an ethical or moral dilemma.

Creative tasks

Students prepare plans for redecorating a house

Issues in Implementing TBI

Little evidence that it works any more effectively

Than the P-P-P approach it seeks to replace

Criteria for selecting and sequencing tasks

They are also problematic, as is the problem of language accuracy.

Task work

They serve to develop fluency at the expense of accuracy, as with some of the other activities suggested within a CLT framework

Content issues

Making it of little relevance to those concerned with CBI or mainstreaming.

Classroom processes

TBI addresses classroom processes rather than learning outcomes is also an issue.

In courses that have specific instructional outcomes to attain

TBI may seem too vague as a methodology to be widely adopted

P-P-P lesson format

Presentation

The new grammar structure is presented, often by means of a conversation or short text. The teacher explains the new structure and checks students’ comprehension of it.

Practice

Students practice using the new structure in a controlled context, through drills or substitution exercises.

Production

Students practice using the new structure in different contexts
often using their own content or information, in order to develop fluency with
the new pattern.

Advocates of TBI reject this model

They claim that students do not develop fluency or progress in their grammatical development through a P-P-P methodology.

How does TBI work in practice?

Pretask Activities
(Introduction to Topic and Task)

 T helps Ss to understand the theme.
 Ss may do a pre-task
 Ss can be given preparation time to think
 Ss can hear a recording of a parallel task being done
 If the task is based on a text, Ss read a part of it.

Task Cycle

Task

The task is done by Ss (in pairs or groups)
 T walks around and monitors, encouraging in a supportive way in the target language.
 T helps Ss to formulate what they want to say

Planning

 Ss draft and rehearse what they want to say or write.
 T goes around to advise students and helping them.
 T can encourage peer-editing and use of dictionaries.
 The emphasis is on clarity, organization, and accuracy,

Report

 T asks some pairs to report briefly to the whole class so everyone can compare findings, or begin a survey.
 T chairs, comments on the content of their reports, rephrases perhaps, but gives no overt public correction.

Language Focus

Analysis

 T sets some language-focused tasks, based on the texts students.
 T starts Ss off, then students continue, often in pairs.
 T goes around to help. Ss can ask individual questions.

Practice

T conducts practice activities as needed, based on the language analysis already on the board, or using examples from the text or transcript.
 Practice activities can include:
 Choral repetition of the phrases
 Sentence completion
 Matching the past-tense verbs
 Dictionary reference with words from text or transcript

Application of TBI

As the sole framework for course planning and delivery

According to Prabhu (1987) a grammar-based curriculum was replaced by a taskbased one in a state school system, albeit only for a short period.

As one component of a course

A task strand can also serve as one component of a course, where it would seek to develop general communication skills.

As a technique

Teachers who find the procedures outlined by Willis unrealistic and unmanageable over a long period could still use task work from time to time as one technique from their teaching repertoire.