The definition of post- method era
‘A language teaching
method is a single set of procedures which teachers are to follow in the
classroom. Methods asually based on aset of beliefs about the nature of language and learning.’
(Nunan,2003,p.5).At around the same time,
Kumaravadivelu (1994) identified what he call the ‘post method
condition’, a result of ‘the widespread dissatisfaction with the conventional
concept of method’ (p.43). Rather than subcribe to single set of procedures,
postmethod teachers adapt their approach in accordance with a local, contextual
factor,while at the same time being guided by a number of ’macrostrategies’.
Two such macrostrategies are ‘maximise learning opportunities’ and ‘promote
learner autonomy’.
Postmethodologist have used againts methods to
show how they inflate the influence of methods to better knock them down. The
roots of postmethodology in the larger area of
postmodernism, arguing that postmethod, rather than being evidence of
the maturation of teaching practices, is a further manifestation of the search
for method and so is subject to the same criticisms. Postmethod, despites its
disparagement of innovations called methods, can be seen as an attempt to unify
these disparate element in to a more holistic, redifined communicative language
teaching (CLT) thruogh a dialectical process of building and deconsructing
forces.
Definitions of method
Richards and Rodgers
(2001) write about methods as an umbrella term comprising approach,design, and
procedures. This prespective has influential through the use of thei text.
Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching (1986, 2001). According to Richards
and Rodgers, “a method is theoritically
related to an approach, is organizationally determined by a design, and is
practically realized in procedure” (2001, p. 20). Approach is the underlying
theory of language and language learning.Design is how those theories determine
the objectives, syllabus, teaching and learning activities, teacher and learner
roles and the role of the instructional materials. Procedures are the
techniques derives from the particular approach and design. However, Richards and Rodgers confound this
definition in the discussion of CLT, which is the best considered an approach
rather than a method, (p.172) in the same of definition.
Methods with lowercase
m mean a grab bag of classroom practices. According to Oller in the second
addition of Method That Work (1993), methods include: program, curricula,
procedures, demonstrations, modes of presentation, research findings, test,
manner of interaction, materials, texts, films, videos, computers and more,
(p.3).
Methods with an
uppercase M seem to mean fixed set of classroom practices that serve as a
prescription and therefore do not allow variation.Richards and Rodgers add that
methods are relatively fixed in time, leave little scope for individual
interpretation and are learned through training. This definition is refers
mainly to small set of 1970s designer methods, such as suggestopedia, community
language learning and the silent way. Devining methods like this leaves little
alternatives but to abandon the term altogether; hence the notion og going
beyond methods to the post method condition.
The postmethod killing of methods
The arguments used to
defeat method can also be seen as evidence that teachers, at least, were never really
in the thrall of methods, Bell in’ TESOL Quarterly,’ (2003) First,
postmethodologists argue that the methods (prescription for practice) were
really very limited in that they deal only with the first lessons of mainly
lower level courses. Contrast these limited methods with CLT, which though
never claiming universality, has arguably been the most widely applied of any
method since grammar translation. Indeed the degree of application may be
better guide to the so-called distinction between method and approach. If the
method has liimited realization, then one would expect little variation in its
procedures, but if, like CLT, the method has such wide- scale application,
variation in its realization would be normal.
Second, post
methodologists argue that the methods can never be realized in their purest
form in the classroom according to the principles of their originator because
methods are not derives from classroom practice. Richards (1990) calls the
designer methods ideals types.
At the same time, L2
teaching professioals know that what is realized as methods in the classroom
emerges overtime as result of the interaction among the teacher, the students,
and the materials and activities (Richards, 1990). This notion of the social
construction of methods in milion of different classroom sugest that what is
called methods is often an a posteriori rationalization of many similar
teaching practices rather than an apriori set of prescriptions emanating from
one source.
A further dismissive
argument against prescriptive methods is that litle of interest remain in them, but the argument
ignores the huge influence that the core philosophies of community language
learning, silent way, and suggestopedia have had on language teaching. Indeed,
the development of CLT has in part been driven by the co-option of the
humanistic, student-centered principles of designer methods. The emergence of
post methods pedagogy may have more to do with larger social forces than with
pedagogical maturity.
Post-method and Communicative Language Teaching
(CLT)
Nunan (1991) argues
that “the way to overcome the pendulum effect in language teaching is to derive
appropriate classroom practice from empirical evidence on the nature of
language learning and use and from insights into what make learners tick”
(p.1). so within the broader framework of principled pracmatism,
postmethodology theorist outline universal principles or strategies.
Posmethodology, therefore,rather than going beyond method, may be understood as
synthesis of various method under the umbrella of CLT.
Brown (2007) in Teaching by Principles offer
the seven interconnected characteristics as a description of CLT: (a) Overal
goals. CLT suggest a focus on all of the components (gramatical, discourse,
functional, sociolinguistic, and srategic) of comunicative competence. (b)
Relationship of form and function. Language techniques are design to engage
learner in the pracmatic, authentic, functional use of language for meaningfull
purposes. (c) Fluency and Accuracy focus on the “flow” of comprehension and
production... and formal accuracy of production...underlying communacative
techniques. (d) Focus on real-world context. Students in a communicative class
ultimately have to use the language, productively and receptively in
unrehearsed context outside the classroom. (e) Autonomy and strategic
involvement. Students are givent apportunities to focus on their own learning
process through raising their ‘awareness of their own styles of learning
(strengths, weaknesses, preferences) and through the development of appropriate strategies for
production and comprehension. (f) Teacher roles. The role of the teacher is
that of facilitator and guide, not an all-knowing font of knowladge. The
teacher is an empathetic “coach” who values the students’ linguistic
development. (g) Student role. Students are active participants in their own
learning process, learner centered, coopreative, collaborative learning is
emphasized. These seven characteristics underscore some major departures from
earlier methods and approaches.
I have found this piece very interesting! Thank you for posting it.
BalasHapusInformative, indeed.
BalasHapusWhy the references cited are not listed?
BalasHapus