Post on 16-Apr-2017
Constructivism
Piaget, Bruner, Vygotsky
Task-based Language Teaching
Instructivism vs Constructivism
Piaget
Abstract learning, constructionism
Vygotsky: Zone of proximal development
Bruner: scaffolding
Scaffolding in language learning
Task-based language teaching
A task is an activity where the target language is used by the learner for a communicative purpose (goal) in order to achieve an outcome. (Jane Willis, 1996:23)
R Ellis
A task has several features as follows:
1. A task is a work plan (a plan for learner activity).
2. A task involves a primary focus on meaning.
3. A task involves real-world processes of language use.
4. A task can involve any of the four language skills.
5. A task engages cognitive processes such as selecting, classifying, ordering, and evaluating information in order to carry out the task.
6. A task has a clear defined communicative outcome.
Skehan (1998)
1. Meaning is primary
2. Learners are not given other peoples meaning to regurgitate
3. There is some sort of relationship to comparable real-world activities
4. Task completion has some priority
5. The assessment of the task is in terms of outcome
In what sense is task-based language teaching a constructivist approach to teaching foreign languages?