Journal of Applied Linguistics and Language Research, 2017, 4(5)
151
Throughout English teaching history, several times it
has been claimed that only
one method works for teaching English. The examples are numerous including
Audiolingualism, Direct method,
Grammar translation, Suggestopiedia, Community
language
learning, Task-based language learning, to name but a few.
The first traditional method was Grammar Translation method. There was no provision
for the oral use of the languages under study; after all, both Latin and Greek were not
being taught for oral communication but for the sake of their speakers' becoming
"scholarly?" or creating an illusion of ‘erudition.’
The outbreak of World War II heightened the need for
Americans to become orally
proficient in the languages of their allies and enemies alike. The Audio-lingual Method
was based on linguistic and psychological theory and one of its main premises was the
scientific descriptive analysis of a wide assortment of languages. On the other hand,
conditioning and habit formation models of learning put forward by behaviorist
psychologists were married with the pattern practices of the Audio-lingual Method. The
following points sum up the characteristics of the method:
Dependence on mimicry and memorization of set phrases.
Teaching structural patterns by means
of repetitive drills
No grammatical explanation
Learning vocabulary in context
Use of tapes
and visual aids
Focus on pronunciation
Immediate reinforcement of correct responses
At this point of time, two crucial changes occurred: first language teaching focus shifted
from memorizing grammars and vocabularies to enabling students to be
use the langue
in the real context. Then, the Chomsky’s model rejected behaviorists theory and language
was learning was not considered only a matter of habit-formation.
At this juncture, we should say that Communicative Language Teaching is not a method;
it is an approach, which transcends the boundaries
of concrete methods and,
concomitantly, techniques. It is a theoretical position about the nature of language and
language learning and teaching.
This was a short analytical history mostly based on Brown, H. D. (2000). The most
obvious problem of previous methods is that principles
and theories behind these
methods and approaches are not derived from classroom activities. Theorists prescribe
them in isolation for teachers to follow, regardless of the specific context that learning
and teaching is taken place.
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