Task-based teaching



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Task-based teaching course work

Principle 5: Encourage students to take risks
When students perform tasks they need to stretchtheir interlanguage resources. This requires students are prepared to experiment with language. Methodological choices that encourage the use of private speech when performing a task, that create opportunities for pushed output and that help to create an appropriate level of challenge in an affective climate that is supporting of risk-taking will assist this.
Principle 6: Ensure that students are primarily focussed on meaning when they perform a task
The main purpose of a task is to provide a context for processing language communicatively(i. e. by treating language as a tool not as an object). Thus, when students perform a task they must be primarily concerned with achieving an outcome, not with displaying language. This can only be achieved if learners are motivated to do the task. One way in which this can be achieved is by varying task-based lessons in terms of design options.
Principle 7: Provide opportunities for focussing on form
Both Willis and Skehan emphasize the need to attend to form in a task-based lesson. In this chapter, various options at the pre-task, during-task and post-task phases of a lesson have been proposed for achieving such a focus. In particular, it has been emphasized that attention to form is both possible and beneficial in the during-task phase and need not conflict with Principle 6.
Principle 8: Require students to evaluate their performance and progress
As Skehan points out, students need to be made accountable for how they perform a task and for their overall progress. A task-based lesson needs to engage and help to foster metacognitive awareness in the students.
These principles are intended as a general guide to the teaching of task-based lessons, not as a set of commandments; that is, I have sought to codify and describe the various methodological possibilities relating to the design of task-based lessons, drawing on a wide range of sources. I do not believe it is possible to prescribe methodological choices, given the lack of knowledge about which options are the most effective. The options constitute what Stenhouse(1975)has called
provisional specifications’. It is up to teachers to make their own methodological decisions based
on their understanding of what will work best with their own students.
Notes
1. Allwrights(1984)use of uptake differs from that of researchers who have investigated corrective sequences in classroom discourse. Allwright uses the term to refer to what learners are able to explicitly report having learned as a result of participating in a lesson.
References

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