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Black, Colin; Butzkamm, Wolfgang – Audio-Visual Language Journal, 1976
The objective of the procedure outlined in this article is to introduce new items, bring the learner to the point of being able to integrate these items in his approximative competence and so extend his ability to the production of extended discourse. Lesson transcripts document the use of the procedure. (Author/CFM)
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Elementary Secondary Education, German, Language Instruction
Peer reviewedBaslaw, Annette S. – Foreign Language Annals, 1975
This paper examines the role of foreign language teaching in answering the external needs of students, including equipping the student with vocational or professional skills, and the internal needs, including the broadening of perception of self, society and culture. Communication in general and participation in society benefit from foreign…
Descriptors: Career Opportunities, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Education, Interpersonal Competence
Peer reviewedBeheydt, L. – ITL Review of Applied Linguistics, 1974
This discussion is divided into three parts: (1) [native] language acquisition versus [second] language learning, (2) successful language learning, and (3) teaching strategies (grammar-translation, direct, cognitive and cognitive habit-formation). (KM)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Communicative Competence (Languages), Language Ability, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedCooper, Robert L. – TESOL Quarterly, 1970
Rejects the assumptions which underlie the audiolingual method and offers two alternative propositions: (1) successful use of language requires the acquisition of communicative as well as linguistic competence and (2) first and second language learning are analogous processes. (Author/FB)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Methods, Child Language, Communicative Competence (Languages), Language Instruction
Peer reviewedPowell, Patricia B. – Foreign Language Annals, 1975
Secondary students of French interviewed a researcher posing as a French speaker. Error patterns and structures used were analyzed. Many errors were apparently due to interference; many others were apparently the result of reduction processes. Results suggested that errors might be corrected in terms of comprehensibility to a native speaker.…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, French
Sajavaara, Kari; Lehtonen, Jaakko – Language Centre News, 1978
Language teaching typically reflects current research, and, until quite recently, grammatical competence (e.g., in the Chomskyan sense) was the major target of linguistic research. Emphasizing the spoken language, the term "fluency," as applied to the foreign language performance of a language learner, is correlated to foreign language…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Grammar, Language Fluency, Language Instruction
Neustupny, J. V. – 1974
Prior to the development of modern sociolinguistics the immediate contribution of linguistics to society as a whole was negligible. Without the further development of sociolinguistics, the situation will not change radically. In order to arrive at a more useful system of linguistics, linguists must realize that this situation does not result…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Communicative Competence (Languages), Cultural Awareness, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedNewman, Anthony S. – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1978
Assumptions and conclusions concerning language teaching at the advanced undergraduate level are presented, and suggestions of both general attitudes and practical activities to implement the conclusions are proposed. Although the practical experience and all examples are drawn from the teaching of French, the principles and methods should be…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Educational Objectives, French, Higher Education
Hallet, R. – Revue des Langues Vivantes, 1974
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Instruction, Linguistic Competence, Linguistic Theory
McCoy, Terry; And Others – 1975
Three papers intended as preliminary studies to bilingual professional curriculum development are included. "Speech Acts and Discourse Analysis," by Terry McCoy, represents an introduction to discourse analysis as a tool for the language teacher. The notion of a typology of speech acts is set forth, and models of discourse analysis by…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Bilingual Education, Class Activities, Communicative Competence (Languages)
Savignon, Sandra J. – Missouri Foreign Language Journal, 1975
The language teacher must provide a variety of activities in the classroom in which the student can use the second language in unrehearsed, novel situations requiring, on his part, inventiveness, resourcefulness and self-assurance. There should be less emphasis on linguistic accuracy and more on truly spontaneous and creative language. In the…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Creative Dramatics, Discussion (Teaching Technique), French
Allen, Edward D. – 1975
In the first part of this paper several theories on the subject of communicative competence are examined. Part 2 is devoted to a discussion of how a teacher can test for communicative competence, and the practicality of this type of testing, in terms of class time, equipment required and objective grading, is emphasized. Part 3 summarizes a number…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Educational Theories, Language Instruction, Language Skills
Peer reviewedOller, John W., Jr. – Foreign Language Annals, 1974
The native speaker's knowledge of his language is characterized as a grammar of expectancy that incorporates pragmatic knowledge of the world. Thus, in teaching a second language, the student must be allowed to take advantage of previously acquired expectations about situations while learning a new grammar of expectancy. (Author/LG)
Descriptors: Expectation, Grammar, Language Instruction, Linguistic Competence
Sajavaara, Kari – 1977
This paper reviews the history of contrastive analysis (CA) against the background of its objectives and its present problems and presents an outline of procedures which seem to be necessary to make the methods meet the objectives of applied CA. CA in the United States was closely connected with structuralism, which was an obvious cause for later…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Contrastive Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Error Analysis (Language)
Schulz, Renate A. – Forum, 1977
Besides lack of motivation and insufficient time allowed for foreign language study, one reason for the failure to develop communicative competence in second language students lies in the methodology. Until recently, most second language pedagogy has centered on linguistic competence, or knowledge of how to communicate in a language. Research in…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Communicative Competence (Languages), Educational Games, Language Instruction


