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Theoretical/Philosophical Foundation in ELT

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Title: Theoretical/Philosophical Foundation in ELT


1
Theoretical/Philosophical Foundation in ELT
  • Muchlas Yusak
  • Widyaiswara
  • DEPARTEMEN PENDIDIKAN NASIONAL
  • DIREKTORAT JENDERAL PENINGKATAN MUTU PENDIDIK DAN
    TENAGA KEPENDIDIKAN
  • LEMBANGA PENJAMIN MUTU PENDIDIKAN (LPMP) JAWA
    TENGAH
  • 2006

2
Levels of Literacy
Wells, 1987
Epistemic
Informational
Functional
Performative
3
PERFORMATIVE
  • the code as code an important part of becoming
    literate
  • simply a matter of acquiring
  • those skills that allow a written message to be
    decoded into speech in order to ascertain its
    meaning
  • those skills that allow a spoken message to be
    encoded in writing, according to the conventions
    of letter formation, spelling and punctuation.
  • breaking the code of knowing the relationship
    between spoken and written symbols.

4
FUNCTIONAL
  • emphasises the uses that are made of literacy in
    interpersonal communication
  • is able to as a member of that particular society
    to cope with the demands of everyday life that
    involve written language.
  • reading a popular newspaper,
  • writing a job application,
  • following procedural instructions
  • the dividing line between literacy and illiteracy

5
INFORMATIONAL
  • focuses on the role that literacy plays in the
    communication of knowledge, particularly
    discipline-based knowledge
  • the curricular emphasis on reading and writing
    but particularly reading
  • the students use for accessing the accumulated
    knowledge in order to construct a meaning which
    reciprocate the intention of the writer
  • being a text participant (able to comprehend
    the text)

6
EPISTEMIC
  • to have available ways of acting upon and
    transforming knowledge and experience that are in
    general unavailable to those who have never
    learned to read and write
  • the aesthetic aspect of language as art
    (literature, poetry)

7
Derewianka, 1995
CULTURE
GENRE
(PURPOSE)
REGISTER
SITUATION
Who is involved?
(Tenor)
The subject matter
The channel
(Mode)
(Field)
TEXT
8
The Context of Culture
  • The attitudes, values and shared experiences of
    any group of people living in the one culture.
  • Culturally evolved expectations of ways of
    behaving
  • Culturally evolved ways of getting things done or
    of achieving common goals (genre)
  • buying and selling goods
  • directing someone to the bank
  • recounting recent events
  • arguing a point of view

9
Register
  • Field the social activity taking place.
  • (football, cooking, stamp collecting, studying
    history, economics)
  • Tenor the relationship between participants.
  • Power (equal or unequal status)
  • Contact (how often you have contact with the
    person to whom you are speaking or writing)
  • Affect (attitudes and feelings towards topics and
    participants)

10
Register continued
  • Mode the channel of linguistic communication.
  • Distance in space and distance in time between
    speaker/listener and reader/writer
  • Distance between text and the events being
    referred to, such as listening to cooking
    demonstration on TV relating the TV
    demonstration to a friend reading a recipe.

11
Communicative Competence
Socio-cultural Competence
Discourse Competence
Actional Competence
Linguistic Competence
Strategic Competence
Celce-Murcia et al, 1995
12
DISCOURSE COMPETENCE
  • It concerns the selection, sequencing, and
    arrangement of words, structures and utterances
    to achieve a unified spoken or written text.
  • The intersection of the lexicogrammar with the
    signals of the communicative intent and
    sociocultural context to express attitudes and
    messages, and to create texts.
  • Sub-areas that contribute to discourse
    competence cohesion, deixis, coherence, genre
    structure, and the conversational structure
    inherent to the turn-taking system in
    conversation.

13
Components of Discourse Competence
  • COHESION
  • Reference (anaphora, cataphora)
  • Substitution/ellipsis
  • Conjunction
  • Lexical chains (related to content schemata),
    parallel structure
  • DEIXIS
  • Personal (pronouns)
  • Spatial (here, there this, that)
  • Temporal (now, then before, after)
  • Textual (the following chart the example above)

14
Components of Discourse Competence cont.
  • COHERENCE
  • Organized expression and interpretation of
    content and purpose (content schemata)
  • Thematization and staging (theme-rheme
    development)
  • Management of old and new information
  • Propositional structures and their organizational
    sequences
  • temporal, spatial, cause-effect,
    condition-result, etc.
  • Temporal continuity/shift (sequence of tenses)
  • GENRE/GENERIC STRUCTURE (formal schemata)
  • Narrative, interview, service encounter, research
    report, sermon, etc.

15
Components of Discourse Competence cont.
  • CONVERSTAIONAL STRUCTURE (inherent to the
    turn-taking system in conversation but may extend
    to a variety of oral genres)
  • How to perform openings reopenings
  • Topic establishment change
  • How to hold relinquish the floor
  • How to interrupt
  • How to collaborate backchannel
  • How to do preclosings closings
  • Adjacency pairs (related to actional competence)
  • First and second pair parts (knowing preferred
    and dispreferred responses)

16
LINGUISTIC COMPETENCE
  • comprises the basic elements of communication
  • sentence patterns and types,
  • the constituent structure,
  • the morphological inflection, and
  • the lexical resources, as well as
  • the phonological and orthographic systems needed
    to realize communication as speech or writing.

17
Components of Linguistic Competence
  • SYNTAX
  • Constituent/phrase structure
  • Word order (cannonical and marked)
  • Sentence types
  • statements, negatives, questions, imperatives,
    exclamations
  • Special constructions
  • existentials (there BE )
  • clefts (Its X that/who What sub. verb
    BE)
  • question tags, etc.
  • Modifiers/intensifiers
  • quantifiers, comparing and equating
  • Coordination (and, or, etc.) and correlation
    (both X and Y either X or Y)
  • Subordinations (e.g. adverbial clauses,
    conditionals)
  • Embedding
  • noun clauses, relative clauses (e.g. restrictive
    and non-restrictive)
  • reported speech

18
Components of Linguistic Competence cont.
  • MORPHOLOGY
  • Parts of speech
  • Inflections (e.g. agreement and concord)
  • Derivational processes (productive ones)
  • compounding, affixation, conversion/incorporation
  • LEXICON
  • Words
  • content words (Ns, Vs, ADJs)
  • function words (pronouns, prepositions, verbal
    auxiliaries, etc)
  • Routines
  • word-like fixed phrases (e.g. of course, all of a
    sudden)
  • formulaic and semi-formulaic chunks (e.g. how do
    you do?)
  • Collocations
  • V-Obj (e.g. spend money), Adv.Adj (e.g. mutually
    intelligible), Adj.N (e.g. tall building)
  • Idioms (e.g. kick the bucket)

19
Components of Linguistic Competence cont.
  • PHONOLOGY (for pronunciation)
  • Segmentals
  • vowels, consonants, syllable types, sandhi
    variation (changes and reductions between
    adjacent sounds in the stream of speech)
  • Suprasegmentals
  • prominence, stress, intonation, rhythm
  • ORTHOGRAPHY (for spelling)
  • Letters (if writing system is alphabetic)
  • Phoneme-grapheme correspondences
  • Rules of spelling
  • Conventions for mechanics and punctuation

20
ACTIONAL COMPETENCE
  • competence in conveying and understanding
    communicative intent, that is, matching actional
    intent with linguistic form based on the
    knowledge of an inventory of verbal schemata that
    carry illocutionary force (speech acts and speech
    act sets).

21
Components of Actional Competence(for oral
language)
  • KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGE FUNCTIONS
  • INTERPERSONAL EXCHANGE
  • Greeting and leave taking
  • Making introductions, identifying oneself
  • Extending, accepting and declining invitations
    and offers
  • Making and breaking agreements
  • Complementing and congratulating
  • Reacting to interlocutors speech
  • Showing attention, interest, surprise, sympathy,
    happiness, disbelief, disappointment
  • INFORMATION
  • Asking for and giving information
  • Reporting (describing and narrating)
  • Remembering
  • Explaining and discussing

22
Components of Actional Competence cont.
  • OPINIONS
  • Expressing and finding out about opinions and
    attitudes
  • Agreeing and disagreeing
  • Approving and disapproving
  • Showing satisfaction and dissatisfaction
  • FEELINGS
  • Expressing and finding out about feelings
  • love, happiness, sadness, pleasure, anxiety,
    anger, embarrassment, pain, relief, fear
  • annoyance, surprise, etc.
  • SUASION
  • Suggesting, requesting and instructing
  • Giving orders, advising and warning
  • Persuading, encouraging and discouraging
  • Asking for, granting and withholding permission

23
Components of Actional Competence cont.
  • PROBLEMS
  • Complaining and criticizing
  • Blaming and accusing
  • Admitting and denying
  • Regretting
  • Apologizing and forgiving
  • FUTURE SCENARIOS
  • Expressing and finding out about wishes, hopes,
    and desires
  • Expressing and eliciting plans, goals, and
    intentions
  • Promising
  • Predicting and speculating
  • Discussing possibilities and capabilities of
    doing something
  • KNOWLEDGE OF SPEECH ACT SETS
  • (Note for written language rhetorical
    competence)

24
SOCIOCULTURAL COMPETENCE
  • the speakers knowledge of how to express
    messages appropriately within the overall social
    cultural context of communication, in
    accordance with the pragmatic factors related to
    variation in language use.

25
Components of Sociocultural Competence
  • SOCIAL CONTEXTUAL FACTORS
  • Participant variables
  • age, gender, office and status, social distance,
    relations (power and affective)
  • Situational variables
  • time, place, social situation
  • STYLISTIC APPROPRIATENESS FACTORS
  • Politeness conventions and strategies
  • Stylistic variation
  • degrees of formality
  • field-specific registers

26
Components of Sociocultural Competence cont.
  • CULTURAL FACTORS
  • Sociocultural background knowledge of the target
    language community
  • Living conditions (way of living, living
    standards) social and institutional structure
    social conventions and rituals major values,
    beliefs, and norms taboo topics historical
    background cultural aspects including literature
    and arts
  • Awareness of major dialect or regional
    differences
  • Cross-cultural awareness
  • differences similarities strategies for
    cross-cultural communication

27
Components of Sociocultural Competence cont.
  • NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATIVE FACTORS
  • Kinesic factors (body language)
  • discourse controlling behaviors (non-verbal
    turn-taking signals)
  • backchannel behaviors
  • Affective markers (facial expressions), gestures,
    eye contact
  • Proxemic factors (use of space)
  • Haptic factors (touching)
  • Paralinguistic factors
  • acoustical sounds, nonvocal noises
  • Silence

28
STRATEGIC COMPETENCE
  • It is knowledge of communication strategies and
    how to use them.
  • Communication strategies are
  • are verbal plans used by speakers to overcome
    problems in the planning and execution stages of
    reaching a communicative goal e.g. avoiding
    trouble spots or compensating for not knowing a
    vocabulary item. (Psycholinguistic
    perspective)
  • involve appeals for help as well as other
    cooperative problem-solving behaviors which occur
    after some problem has surfaced during the course
    of communication, that is, various types of
    negotiation of meaning and repair mechanisms.

    (Interactional perspective)
  • are means of keeping the communication channel
    open in the face of communication difficulties,
    and playing for time to think and to make
    (alternative) speech plans. (communication
    continuity/maintenance perspective)

29
Components of Strategic Competence
  • AVOIDANCE or REDUCTION STRATEGIES
  • Message replacement
  • Topic avoidance
  • Message abandonment
  • ACHIEVEMENT or COMPENSATORY STRATEGIES
  • Circumlocution (e.g., the thing you open bottles
    with for corkscrew)
  • Approximation (e.g., fish for carp)
  • All-purpose words (e.g., thingy, thingamajic)
  • Non-linguistic means (mime, pointing, gestures,
    drawing pictures)
  • Restructuring (e.g., The bus was very there
    were a lot of people on it)
  • Word-coinage (e.g., vegetarianist)
  • Literal translation from L1
  • Foreignizing (e.g., L1 word with L2
    pronunciation)
  • Code switching to L1 or L3
  • Retrieval (e.g. bro bron bronze)

30
Components of Strategic Competence cont.
  • STALLING or TIME GAINING STRATEGIES
  • Fillers, hesitation devices and gambits (e.g.,
    well, actually , where was I ?)
  • Self and other-repetition
  • SELF-MONITORING STRATEGIES
  • Self-initiated repair (e.g., I mean )
  • Self-rephrasing (over-elaboration) (e.g., This is
    for students pupils when youre at school )
  • INTERACTIONAL STRATEGIES
  • Appeals for help
  • direct (e.g., What do you call ?)
  • indirect (e.g., I dont know the word in English
    or puzzled expressions)
  • Meaning negotiation strategies
  • Indicators of non/mis-understanding
  • requests
  • repetition requests (e.g., Pardon? or Could you
    say that again please?)
  • clarification requests (e.g., What do you mean by
    ?)
  • confirmation requests (e.g., Did you say ?)

31
Components of Strategic Competence cont.
  • Expressions of non-understanding
  • Verbal (e.g., Sorry, Im not sure I understand )
  • Non-verbal (e.g., raised eyebrows, blank look)
  • Interpretative summary (e.g., You mean ?/So what
    youre saying is ?)
  • Responses
  • repetition, rephrasing, expansion, reduction,
    confirmation, rejection, repair
  • Comprehension checks
  • whether the interlocutor can follow you (e.g., Am
    I making sense?)
  • whether what you said was correct or grammatical
    (e.g., Can I/you say that?)
  • whether the interlocutor is listening (e.g., on
    the phone Are you still there?)
  • whether the interlocutor can hear you

32
Spoken and Written Language
  • Spoken and Written Continuum

Most spoken
Most written
Language accompanying action
Language as reflection
Spoken language
Written language
33
Most Spoken
  • The term most spoken refers to language
    interactions where language most closely
    accompanies action, and where there is the least
    physical distance between participants.
  • Examples of most spoken texts include the
    language that accompanies tennis matches,
    basketball games, shared games, construction of
    buildings, etc.

34
Most Written
  • The term most written refers to language texts
    where distance from action is greatest and where
    distance between participants is maximal.
  • Examples of most written texts include abstract
    reflections on causes and effects of distant
    events, such as history or economics, theoretical
    arguments and where an author writes for an
    unknown future audience.
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