Traditional form-focussed pedagogy
|
Task-based pedagogy
|
Rigid discourse structure consisting of IRF
(initiate-respond-feedback)exchanges
|
Loose discourse structure consisting of adjacency pairs
|
Teacher controls topic development
|
Students able to control topic development
|
Turn-taking is regulated by the teacher.
|
Turn-taking is regulated by the same rules that govern everyday conversation(i. e. speakers can self select).
|
Display questions(i. e. questions that the questioner already knows the answer)
|
Use of referential questions(i. e. questions that the questioner does not know the answer to)
|
Students are placed in a responding role and consequently perform a limited range of language functions.
|
Students function in both initiating and responding roles and thus perform a wide range of language functions(e. g. asking and giving information, agreeing and disagreeing, instructing).
|
Little need or opportunity to negotiate meaning.
|
Opportunities to negotiate meaning when communication problems arise
|
Scaffolding directed primarily at enabling students to produce correct sentences.
|
Scaffolding directed primarily at enabling students to say what they want to say.
|
Form-focussed feedback(i. e. the teacher responds implicitly or explicitly to the correctness of students’ utterances)
|
Content-focussed feedback(i. e. the teacher responds to the message content of the students’ utterances).
|
Echoing(i. e. the teacher repeats what a student has said for the benefit of the whole class)
|
Repetition(i. e. a student elects to repeat something another student or the teacher has said as private speech or to establish intersubjectivity).
|