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DESCRIBING, PRESENTATION, AND THE MOVIE OF COMPETENCY BASED LANGUAGE TEACHING
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Competency Based
Language Teaching
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ompetency-Based Language Teaching (CBLT) focuses on what “learners are expected to do with the language” .This approach emerged in the United States
in the 1970s and can be described as “defining educational goals in terms of
precise measurable descriptions of the knowledge, skills, and behaviors
students should possess at the end of a course of study”
Background
“Competency-Based Language Teaching
(CBLT) is an application of the principles of Competency-Based Education to
language teaching”. In Competency-Based Education (CBE) the focus is on the
“outcomes or outputs of learning”. By the end of the 1970s Competency-Based
Language Teaching was mostly used in “work-related and survival-oriented
language teaching programs for adults” Since the 1990s, CBLT has been seen as
“the state-of-the-art approach to adult ESL”, so that any refugee in the United
States who wished to receive federal assistance had to attend a
competency-based program in which they learned a set of language skills “that
are necessary for individuals to function proficiently in the society in which
they live”
Learning Activities
The learning activities used in CBLT can be
described as systematically designed activities to achieve a certain
competence. These activities are real-world tasks which “may be related to any
domain of life” but especially to survival-oriented and work-related situations
in a new environment. Typical areas, for which such competency-based activities
have been developed, are for example Job Application, Job Interview, or Work
Schedules . All these areas “can be described as a collection of units of
competencies” which consist of “specific knowledge, thinking processes,
attitudes, and perceptual and physical skills”
Eight Key Features
There are eight key features which are
essential for Competency-Based Language Teaching:
1. A focus on successful functioning in society which
means that language is taught in order to prepare the students for the
different demands of the world
2. A focus on life skills to determine that language is
always taught as a medium of communication in concrete tasks in which specific
language forms/skills are required.
3. Task- or performance-centered orientation. The focus
is on what the students can do with the language and certain behaviors instead
of knowledge of the language.
4. Modularized instruction emphasizes that the
competencies which are taught have to be systematically separated into
manageable parts so that both the teacher and students can handle the content and
realize their progress.
5. Outcomes that are made explicit a priori. “Outcomes
are public knowledge, known and agreed upon by both learner and teacher”
(Richards & Rodgers, 2001, p.146). Therefore, the students clearly know
what behaviors and skills are expected of them.
6. Continuous and ongoing assessment which means that the
students are tested before the course to determine which skills they lack and
after they have had instructions in that skill they are tested again to
ascertain whether they have achieved the necessary skills or not.
7. Demonstrated mastery of performance objectives. The
assessment is based on the students’ performance of specific behaviors instead
of traditional paper-and-pencil-tests.
8. Individualized, student-centered instruction. The
instructions given by the teacher are not time-based but the focus is on the
progress the individual students make at their own rate. Therefore, the teacher
has to concentrate on each individual students in order to support them in
those areas in which they lack competence
.
Role of Teacher
The role of the teacher in a competency-based
framework is not defined by specific terms. The teacher has to provide positive
and constructive feedback in order to help the students to improve their
skills. She/he needs to be aware of the learners’ needs so that everybody feels
welcome in class. The different competencies dealt with in class require
specific instructions for the various learning activities. Thus the teacher has
to give clear orders and explanations to make sure that every student
understands the task they are going to deal with. But the teacher does not push
the students because the instructions are not time-based; instead the student’s
progress is most important . Another task of the teacher in CBLT is to select
learning activities and to design a syllabus according to the competency the
students are going to acquire.
Role of Learner
The role of the learner in a competency-based
framework is to decide whether the competencies are useful and relevant for
him/her. This shows that the learner has an active role in the classroom which
is underlined by the fact that the students are expected to perform the skills
learned. The competencies the students will learn are clearly defined and
present in the public so that “the learner knows exactly what needs to be
learned” and for which purpose he/she has to use the competencies. In this
regard it is vital that every competency is mastered one at a time because this
makes sure that the learners know what they have already learned and what the
next steps will look. Moreover, the students have to stay in the actual program
until they improve. After they mastered their skills, they move into a more
proficient group of students. The main goal of the learner in Competency-Based
Language Teaching is to be able to adapt and transfer knowledge from one
setting to another.
Here, i have a video about presentation of competency based language teaching, and you will find the CBLT the movie inside at video line or find in youtube: ( CBLT THE MOVIE by muhammad yusuf).
Here, i have a video about presentation of competency based language teaching, and you will find the CBLT the movie inside at video line or find in youtube: ( CBLT THE MOVIE by muhammad yusuf).
1 komentar:
kereeen sangatt...
smga kdpan ny lebih baik lg.
spirit!!!!
:)
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