Is Communicative Language Teaching A Thing of The Past?
Is Communicative Language Teaching A Thing of The Past?
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Preamble
This article reviews the success of communicative language teaching (CLT) in the
context of language acquisition theory and research findings. It is argued that a fairly
limited use of communicative principles has been evident in popular treatments of
lesson structure, content, and syllabus design. In contrast, other content- and task-
based models are potentially more communicative in shape. Research has also
encouraged a growing emphasis on the teaching of strategies and form-focused
exercises, which challenges communicative approaches to address both the experiential
and intellectual levels of language learning. Despite the familiarity of communicative
approaches, a growing eclecticism in language pedagogy has encouraged a continuing
search for broader guiding principles.
An Influential Approach
Communicative language teaching (CLT) has been an influential approach for at least
two decades now. The very term 'communicative' carries an obvious ring of truth: we
'learn to communicate by communicating' (Larsen-Freeman 1986: 131). Of course the
fundamental intuition behind this approach is far from new. In the 4th Century B.C.
Aristotle wrote: 'What we have to learn to do, we learn by doing' (Nicomachean Ethics,
Bk. II). Most teachers now claim to use a communicative approach in some way or
other (Karavas-Doukas 1996), and it is hardly surprising that no-one wishes to be
called a non-communicative teacher.
The concept of communicative competence was originally developed thirty years ago by
the sociolinguist Hymes (1972), as a response to perceived limitations in Chomsky's
competence/performance model of language. It was then further developed in the early
1980s by Canale and Swain. According to Canale (1983: 5), communicative
competence refers to 'the underlying systems of knowledge and skill required for
communication'. The four components of communicative competence can be
summarized as follows:
Grammatical competence
producing a structured comprehensible utterance (including grammar,
vocabulary, pronunciation and spelling).
Sociocultural competence
using socially-determined cultural codes in meaningful ways, often termed
'appropriacy' (e.g. formal or informal ways of greeting).
Discourse competence
shaping language and communicating purposefully in different genres (text
types), using cohesion (structural linking) and coherence (meaningful
relationships in language).
Strategic competence
enhancing the effectiveness of communication (e.g. deliberate speech), and
compensating for breakdowns in communication (e.g. comprehension checks,
paraphrase, conversation fillers).
One example of such an approach to CLT is what is known as the PPP lesson (for
presentation, practice, and production). Language forms are first presented under the
guidance of the teacher, then practiced in a series of exercises, again under the
teacher's supervision. The chosen forms are finally produced by the learners
themselves in the context of communicative activities that can be more or less related
to the learners' real lives and interests.
Regardless of how learner-centred and genuinely communicative the teacher makes it,
the PPP structure clearly treats language as a product constructed from teachable
parts; these parts being the linguistic forms and structures behind the pragmatic
functional use of language. But, as Grenfell (1994: 58) has put it:
In strong versions of CLT the teacher is required to take a 'less dominant role' and the
learners are encouraged to be 'more responsible managers of their own learning'
(Larsen-Freeman 1986: 131). Rather than a presentation and practice approach to
language forms, the teacher begins with communicative classroom activities that allow
learners to actively learn for themselves how the language works as a formal system.
In light of such findings the very possibility of teaching a second language has been
questioned. But surely there is a clear difference between controlling a process and
nurturing it. As an example we might consider the analogy of caring for a plant. Given
a large pot, good soil, sufficient light and water, it will grow according to innate
developmental processes. This analogy reminds us that even natural processes need
optimum conditions to unfold. We must ask ourselves what the optimum conditions for
second language learning are.
These principles are all related in some way to the theories of language learning that
were discussed above. To summarize these: language acquisition is an unpredictable
developmental process requiring a communicatively interactive and cooperative
negotiation of meaning on the part of learners; the subsequent integration of
comprehensible input and output influences the learner's developing language system
(or interlanguage).
...means that accuracy and acquisition of the formal features of the [second
language] are less a measure of successful language learning than are fluency
and an ability to get something across comprehensibly to a native speaker
(Sanders 1987: 222).
Although communicative games are intended to have 'a non-linguistic goal or aim'
(Hadfield 1990: v) this is usually only from the learners' perspective. Most often they
are designed around a key language structure (for example, comparatives, present
perfect tense, question forms) or a family of vocabulary items. If we consider the
communicative principle of genuinely meaningful language use (see point 3 above),
then such activities are not always rich in unpredictability or risk-taking for the learner.
Other criticisms levelled at nominally communicative activities have concerned lack of
'relevance and interest' (Swan 1985b: 84), and restrictions on the range of learner
response (Savignon 1991: 272; Thompson 1996: 13).
It is not only in the area of classroom activities and overall syllabus that the application
of a communicative approach has been problematic; for teaching to be accountable it
requires the monitoring and assessment of learning. In this area communicative
approaches have encouraged us to see language development as an ongoing process
rather than a static product (Prabhu 1990). A qualitative assessment of communicative
competence would seem to provide a more realistic view of a learner's progress than a
quantitative measurement of errors or mistakes. But unfortunately, as Savignon (1991:
266) has pointed out, 'qualitative evaluation of written and oral expression is time-
consuming and not so straightforward'.
Content-based programs involve the teaching of subject matter content in the target
language. This approach has been used with some degree of success in many parts of
the world, most notably in Canada (Stern 1992: 192). According to Stern (1992: 187),
it is closer to 'the communicative reality of the target language milieu' than classroom
activities that are only 'designed to have certain characteristics of natural discourse'. It
also has the potential to be more motivating for learners, given they have a degree of
interest in the subject matter. Content-based teaching has obvious applications in the
area of English for Specific Purposes, where learners are focusing on English relevant to
a particular field of work or study.
An emphasis on extended tasks that can engage the learner in meaningful activity is in
some ways simply an extension of the content-based approach. In fact Stern (1992), in
his thoughtful account of 'the communicative activities syllabus', clearly saw both
content and task focus as aspects of a general approach based on 'substantive topics'.
This helps us to remember that labels such as TBL are actually evolving and disputed
terms. In his review of 'communicative tasks', Nunan (1991: 282) described what is
basically a PPP lesson structure, in which 'learners are given a model of the target
language behaviour, as well as specific practice in manipulating key language items'. In
a later presentation of TBL by Willis (1994), the PPP structure is explicitly rejected as
being a highly rigid model with very little opportunity for learner involvement.
The alternative framework that Willis describes leads learners through a 'four stage
task cycle' consisting of: 1) introduction to topic and task, 2) task, 3) planning, and 4)
report. This allows learners to explore ideas and communicate informally about the task
in the first two stages; then only in the last two stages is there an 'emphasis on clarity,
organisation, accuracy as appropriate for a public presentation' (Willis 1994: 18). The
addition of a language 'input phase' and a 'language focus task' at the end of the cycle
gives some credence to the view that this is an up-side down version of PPP.
Perhaps part of our challenge is to empower learners as learners. This need not mean
lessons on everyday communication skills that as Swan (1985a: 11) warns, 'treat the
learner as a sort of linguistically gifted idiot'. Instead, it can mean encouraging learners
to recognise and internalise the options and strategies available to them, as equal
partners in language.
Conclusion
Current theory and research has encouraged a trend towards an eclectic mixing of
teaching methods. This has been called 'the postmethod condition' (Kumaravadivelu
1994). It implies a renewed focus on the teacher's role as an informed decision-maker
in the classroom, after what seems like a long period of neglect in the professional
literature. Although communicative principles are still significant signposts, there is
currently a search for broader guiding principles to the complex choices teachers must
make in their work.
The nature of such guiding principles is still far from clear. Prabhu (1990) has argued
that a teacher's own evolving 'sense of plausibility' is the truest guide to decision
making. On the other hand, others influenced by post-modernist critical theories, such
as Seedhouse (1996), assert that the constraints of institutional discourse are
unavoidable in any account of teaching practice. Between these two extremes lie
various balanced models, such as Brown's (1994: 74) 'enlightened eclecticism'
responding to the needs of 'multiple worldwide contexts', and Kumaravadivelu's (1994)
'principled pragmatism' based on a set of method-neutral teaching strategies.
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