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Pedagogical Options in Grammar Teaching

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Applying Cognitive Grammar in the Foreign Language Classroom

Part of the book series: Second Language Learning and Teaching ((SLLT))

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Abstract

The ultimate focus of the present volume are the effects of teaching selected elements of the English tense/aspect system described at length in the previous chapter. Being morphological and, to a certain degree, syntactic in nature, the targeted linguistic features thus belong unequivocally to the area of grammar. Therefore, the present chapter focuses on the theoretical positions concerning grammar teaching that have originated in the field of second language acquisition (SLA) and on instructional options which are at the disposal of foreign language teachers, including both methodological options and some choices in terms of pedagogical rules to be employed in instruction. At the outset, a brief clarification of the term grammar as employed here seems to be in order, given the plethora of possible perspectives from which it may be approached and a great number of conceptualizations of this notion related to these perspectives (cf. the relevant remarks and discussion by Pawlak 2006: Chap. 1; and Larsen-Freeman 2009). One of the many views of the grammatical component of language was in fact considered in detail in Chap. 2, which presented and discussed the CG conception of grammar as encompassing not only morphology and syntax, traditionally understood to constitute the core of grammar, but also the phonological level. What is more, it should be recalled that in CG grammar also comprises at least certain parts of the lexicon and the discourse/pragmatic component, because grammar is said to shade into them in a non-discrete fashion. Despite the adoption in CG of this almost all-encompassing view of grammar, in the present chapter, whose function is to consider the pedagogical options in grammar teaching and to review important theoretical issues surrounding this field, the notion of grammar is understood in a relatively narrow sense, which is close to its traditional view. Specifically, grammar is taken to refer to the formal elements of the morphological and syntactic language subsystems, together with their semantic interpretations and use. Sometimes the semantics and, especially, the use of grammatical elements might require reference to certain pragmatic factors, so pragmatics may also be included in some limited sense in this understanding of grammar. Such a restricted view of grammar is dictated by the focus of the quasi-experiment reported in Chap. 5, which investigated the teaching of primarily morphological, and, to a lesser extent, also syntactic units of English. It is also warranted by considerations of space, as the inclusion in our understanding of grammar of a wider range of linguistic units would certainly inflate the present chapter to an unfeasible size. Therefore, while for many purposes it is not unjustified to subsume a much broader array of entities under the heading of grammar, in the subsequent discussion of grammar teaching only instruction directed at morphological and syntactic features and their meanings/use is considered. Thus, since the term form is often taken in SLA and language teaching literature to be a synonym of grammar, the term form-focused instruction is used here as an equivalent of grammar teaching.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    No distinction is generally maintained in this book between foreign and second languages. Therefore, unless the contrast between them is explicitly invoked, the two terms are used interchangeably. The same applies to the possible difference between learning and acquisition.

  2. 2.

    As is the case with the concept of grammar, the present authors are aware of the terminological and conceptual confusion surrounding the area of form-focused instruction and the fact that it may often cover the teaching of formal aspects of language beyond its morphosyntax (see the discussion by Pawlak 2006: Chap. 1).

  3. 3.

    A process syllabus can include a focus on form, and this feature was not adopted by the Communicational Teaching Project.

  4. 4.

    It should be noted that consciousness raising originated even before the formulation of the Noticing Hypothesis, but it nevertheless received additional support from the hypothesis.

  5. 5.

    Nunan’s (1994, pp. 266–267) gestation period seems to be an equivalent term.

  6. 6.

    This focus on general learning mechanisms in language constitutes an affinity of connectionism with Skill-Learning Theory, another cognitive perspective on language acquisition which has already been discussed in the present section.

  7. 7.

    Factors such as contingency, salience, overshadowing and blocking are meant here. They are listed and explained thoroughly by N. Ellis (2008).

  8. 8.

    “Grammar rules provide a (largely illusory) sense of security, standing out as signposts in the complicated landscape of language learning” (Swan 2006, p. 10).

  9. 9.

    Incidental learning is the opposite of intentional learning. According to Hulstijn (2005), while intentional learning occurs when learners understand that they will be tested on the knowledge they are acquiring, in incidental learning there is no such learner awareness.

  10. 10.

    As explained in Sect. 4.2, although in general implicit instruction targets implicit learning and implicit knowledge, and explicit instruction targets explicit learning and explicit knowledge, at least in the short run, the relationship between the two kinds of instruction and the corresponding types of learning and knowledge may be far more complex.

  11. 11.

    See note 10 above.

  12. 12.

    Again, see note 10 above.

  13. 13.

    The discussion here pertains mainly to grammar as product (Batstone 1994a, 1994b), but it should be borne in mind that the grammatical product is supposed to reflect grammar as process, which is a more realistic view of grammar (the numerous references to the dynamic nature of grammar in Chap. 2 may be recalled), and by its very nature more difficult to pin down.

  14. 14.

    Niemeier and Reif (2008, p. 326) note that in the majority of English textbooks used in Germany there is a lot of emphasis on grammatical form and use (pragmatics), while the conceptual meaning is neglected. This may also be true of some pedagogical grammars, which, despite some emphasis on pragmatic factors in grammatical description, fail to relate them to conceptual ones, which are simply missing.

  15. 15.

    Król-Markefka (2010b, p. 166) also reports research by Augustyn (2006), who found that there was no statistically significant difference between the effects of CG and traditional teaching of Italian articles.

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Bielak, J., Pawlak, M. (2013). Pedagogical Options in Grammar Teaching. In: Applying Cognitive Grammar in the Foreign Language Classroom. Second Language Learning and Teaching. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27455-8_4

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27455-8_4

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