Curriculum, Approaches and Methods
Curriculum
Curriculum
Richards, Platt and Platt (1993)
Can be defined, as an educational program wich states
The educational purpose of the program
The content teaching procedures and learning experience which will be necessary to achieve this purpose
Some means for assessing whether or not the educational ends have been achieved
Allen quoted in Nunan (2000)
Involves philosophical, social and administrative factors
White (1993)
Components: purposes, content, methodology and evaluation
Course
Hutchinson and Waters (1996)
Is an integrated series of teaching-learning experiences, whose ultimate aim is to lead the learners to a particular state of knowledge
Syllabuses
Lee (1980)
Is a statement of what should be taught, year by year.
It contains points about the method of teaching and the time to be taken
Dubin & Olshtain (1997)
Is a more detailed and operational statement of teaching and learning elements
Approaches
Classical approach
Grammar translation approach
Direct approach
Audio lingual
Communicativa approach
Teachers´beliefs
Graves (2000)
Your view of what language is or what being proficient in a language means affects what you teach and how you teach it
Beliefs underlie the decisions you make
Your view of language
Your view of the social context of language
Your view of learning and learners
Your view of teaching
Context
Factors to consider in defining context
People
Physical setting
Nature of course and institutions
Teaching resources
Time
Aims, Goals and Needs Analysis
Aims
Richards (2001)
Provide a reason for the program
Provide guidelines for teachers and learners
Provide focus for learning
Describe important and realizable changes in learning
Goals
Objectives are more specific than aims
Describe learning in terms of observable behaviour or performance
Describe learning outcomes in terms of what a learner will be able to do
Richards (2001)
Consistent with the curriculum aim
Precise
Feasible
Needs Analysis
Hutchinson and Waters (1996), Jordan (1997), Robinson (1990)
Target needs
Present situation
Language
Data obtained = posibility to formulate general aims and more specific objectives as intended outcomes
Syllabus
Types of Syllabuses
Structural
Grammatical and phonological structures
Situational
Situations form
Topical
Topics or themes
Functional
Functions
Notional
Conceptual categories called notions
Skills
Such as listening for main ideas, scanning a reading passage for specific information
Task
Activity based categories
Shape of Syllabus
Dubin and Olshtain (1997)
The basic dilemma which course planners must reconcile is that language is infinite, but a syllabus must be finite
The Linear Format
Teachers cannot change the order of units or skip some
The Modular Format
Academicallt oriented units are integrated
The Cyclical Format
Teachers and learners work with the same topic more than once
The Matrix Format
Maximum flexibility to select topics from a table of contents in a random order
The Story Line Format
Narrative
It could be used in conjunction with any of them
Organizing the course
Determining the organizing principle
Identifying the course units based on nthe organizing principle
Determining unit content
Organizing unit content
Sequencing the units
Language Testing
Brown (1995)
Tests can be used to drive a programme by shaping the expectations of the students and their teachers
Types of tests
Norm-referenced
Compare the relative performance of students to each other
Criterion-referenced
Texts intended to measure the amount of course material that each student has learned
Materials
Make decisions based on what you want your students to learn according to your goals and objectives and your syllabus focus
Evaluation
Scrivener (1997, quoted by Beretta, 1992)
Types
Formative evaluation
Improving ongoing programmes
Summative evaluation
Effects of a programme that has come to an end
Purposes of evaluation
To decide whether a programme has had the intended effect
To identify what effect a programme has had
To justify future courses of action
To identify areas for improvement in an ongoing programme
Edward Anthony (1963)
Approach
Describes the nature of the subject matter to be taught
Assumptions and beliefs about language and language learning are specified
It refers to the philosophy or belief system, that a method reflects
Method
The method is a general plan to present the material based on the approach we have
It is procedural
Here theory is put into practice and we choose about the particular skills and content to be taught
Technique
It is a particular trick, stratagem, or contrivance used to accomplish an immediate objective
Is implementational
Classroom procedures are described
Theory of language
Cognitive model
Atkinson (2011)
Mind as a computer
Operations are processed
Representationalism
The mind stores internal representations of external levels
Learning as a abstract knowledge acquisition
Abstracting the rules of the competence that underlies linguistic performance
Chomsky (1980)
Our minds contain a mental grammar that consists of universal principles that are common to all languages, and parameters that vary according to different languages
Grammar - Translation Method
Knowledge of the principles of language is acquired through the abstraction of the rules when studying grammar and carrying out translation activities
Structural model
Language is a system of structurally related elements for the coding of meaning
Its target is seen to be the mastery of elements of this system
Phonological units: phonemes
Grammatical units: clauses, phrases, sentences
Grammatical operations: adding, shifting, joining, or transforming elements
Lexical items: function words and structure words
Functional model
Language is a vehicle for the expression of functional meanings and for performing real-world activities
Seeks to know how language is used to achieve different types of communicative purposes
Functional approaches emphasize the semantic and communicative dimension
Lead to a specification and organization of language teaching content by categories of meaning and function
Interactional model
Language is seen as a tool for the creation and maintenance of social relations
Areas of inquiry: second language acquisition, interaction analysis, conversation analysis and ethnomethodology
It focus on the patterns of moves, acts, negotiation, and interaction found in conversational and other kinds of exchanges and which are central to an understanding of discourse
Sociocultural model
Language is a communicative activity in which the social context is central
Konwledge is constructed through social interaction with others
It reflects culture, customs and beliefs
Genre model
Feez (1998)
Language is a resource for making meaning
The resource iof language consists of a set of interrelated systems
Language users draw on this resource each time they use language
Language users create texts to create meaning
Texts are shaped by the social context wich they are used
The social context is shaped by the people using language
Lexical model
Prioritizes the role of lexis and lexical, chunks or phrases in language and highlights the interrelatedness of grammar and vocabulary
It suggest that grammatical competences arises out of phrase - and lexically - based learning and argue for a greater role for vocabulary
Theory of Learning
Behaviorism
Learning is a process in which specific behaviors are acquired in response to specifici stimuli
Language was taught through extensive drilling and repetition exercise and through making use of activities that minimized the chances of producing mistakes
Cognitive - code learning
Language learning was a cognitive process depending on both deductive and inductive learning as well as meaningful practice
Creative - construction hypothesis
Learning is a creative process that has common features regardless of the learner´s language background
Errors are seen as evidence of learning rather than signs of faulty learning
It is implicit in Task - Based Language Teaching
Skill learning
Skills are integrated set of behaviours that are learned through practice
Learning involves development from controlled (consciously managed of skills) to automatic (skills not require conscious attention) processing
Interactional theory
Learning is an interactive process and depends on learners working together to achieve mutual understanding
Constructivism
Learning is seen as something that results from the learner´s internal construction of meaning (Williams and Burden, 1997)
Knowledge does not exist independently of the meaning constructed from experience by the learner
Learners are actively involved in their own process of learning
The organizer reorganizes new knowledge on the basis of existing knowledge, and social dimensions, as the learner interacts with others and solves problems through dialogue
Sociocultural learning theory
Language learning is resulting from dialogue between a learner and a more knowledgeable other person
Learning takes place in a particular social setting, in which there is interaction between people, objects and events
Individual factors
Learning styles preferences
Affective factors
Motivation
Learning strategies
Design
analysis
Objectives
The degree to which a method has process - oriented or product - oriented objectives may be revealed in how much emphasis is placed on vocabulary acquisition and grammatical proficiency and in how grammatical or pronunciation errors are treated in the method
Syllabus
Is the form in which linguistic material is specified in a course or method
Types of learning and teaching activities
Teaching activities focus on grammatical accuracy and on communicative skills
Activities are design to activate specific second language acquisition processes and grammar.
Learner roles
Activities learners carry out
Degree of control learners have over the content of learning
Patterns of learner groupings adopted
Degree to which learners influence the learning of others
The view of the learner as processor, performer, initiator, problem-solver, or other
Teacher roles
According to
The types of functions teachers are expected to fulfill, whether that of practice director, counselor, or model
The control of the teacher has over how learning takes place
The degree to which the teacher is responsible for determining the content of what is taught
The interactional patterns that develop between teachers and learners
The role of instructional materials
Reflect decisions concerning:
Primary goal of materials
Form of materials
Relation of materials to other sources of input
The abilities of teacher
Procedure
It concern how tasks and activities are integrate into lessons and use as the basis for teaching and learning
The use of teaching activities to present new language and to clarify and demonstrate formal, communicative, or other aspects of the target language
Drills, dialogues, information gap activities, etc
The ways in which particular teaching activities are used for practicing language
The procedures and techniques used in giving feedback to learners concerning the form or content of their ulterances or sentences