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Articles
Language teaching
for the future Andrew Littlejohn The
prospect, it seems, of a new millennium has captured our imagination.
In Britain, as elsewhere, there have been great discussions about how we should
celebrate this historically significant event. Like the onset of a new year, however,
a new millennium also marks a moment when it is appropriate to think about what
we have done, where we are now and how we should plan for the future. By all accounts,
we are in a period of rapid change socially, politically, technologically,
environmentally and culturally. It is likely, for example, that people who are
now in their twenties, thirties or forties will experience significant changes
in their working lives in the years ahead. Younger people (who may for example
be around sixty in the middle of the next century), will grow up into a world
quite unlike the one we inhabit now. The significance of these changes has led
many educationalists to call for a futures curriculum that
is a curriculum which actively discusses the future and prepares students for
their lives ahead. In this short article, I want to consider what our role as
language teachers could be in this. That is, what it might mean to talk of language
teaching for the future. My aim is to stimulate discussion to be
provocative, in fact. To do this, I will discuss two related questions:
- What will the
future be like?
and from that, - What
should we be doing now to prepare our students for the future?
1.
What will the future be like? Predicting
the future is always a hazardous business. Natural occurrences, catastrophes,
and other sudden unexpected events all make it impossible to reliably describe
what the future will be like. But we can make reasonable predictions. The future
wont just suddenly happen; the nature of the future exists in our present.
It is here that history can help us. If we look back at our recent past, we can
identify trends which are likely to characterise the nature of future society.
Social scientists working in this area, have identified a number of aspects which
they suggest will typify future post-modern society, as they call
it. These characteristics refer principally to the West, but with the advent of
globalisation they will be increasingly relevant everywhere. Some
of the more significant of these are listed below. A
fragmented society A society divided into smaller communities
which may extend across national borders. The notion of a culture
(shared by all) will be replaced by cultures in which meanings,
customs, habits, and references will vary considerably, even within the same geographical
area. Decline
of national governments Globalisation as a dominant feature,
limiting the power and relevance of national governments. Supranational governments
and businesses will exercise greater influence. Rapid
(dis)appearance of jobs Technology will cause the disappearance of many
types of jobs, but also the emergence of new ones. In their lifetime, individuals
may expect to have ten or more different occupations. Making choices, decisions
and adapting will be essential. Spread
of the market The force of the market (advertising, consumer
products, cost/profit analysis, etc.) will be evident in all spheres of life:
education, health care, religion, the family, etc. Globalisation will also lead
to standardisation in the market the same products will be available everywhere. Influence
of electronic media Electronic media (television, computers, interactive
video) will dominate as the principal means by which people receive information
and spend their leisure time. Electronic media will far outweigh, for example,
the influence that the school may have (already, estimates suggest that by the
time the average student has finished high school in the USA, they have spent
11,000 hours in class, but over 22,000 in front of a television). Endlessly
eclectic An emerging characteristic of many societies now is the
manner in which elements from very different areas of life are combined. Images
from traditional life in Africa, for example, are used to advertise fashion clothes.
Individuals can decorate their homes to look like houses from hundreds of years
ago. Pop stars sing and politicians speak at the funerals of royalty. At the same
time, the limits on what is expected are breaking down with the result
that it is becoming increasingly difficult to be really shocked. Expect
anything is the best advice.
Each of these trends,
social scientists suggest, are likely to become more evident in the years ahead.
Whether they are good or bad depends, of course, upon your own individual point
of view. What is clear, however, is that there are dangers. The increasing dominance
of electronic media, globalisation and the dominance of multinational organisations,
all pose dangers for democracy and individual freedom. Similarly, the spread of
the market may also pose dangers for the integrity of social services
such as education, where economic efficiency may not always be compatible with
educational goals. What this suggests, then, is that we need to be aware of what
is happening so that we can make the future as we would like it to be, and not
simply drift forward. 2.
What should we be doing now to prepare our students for the future? Language
teaching practices today The
description of emerging characteristics of a future society may seem very remote
from the day to day moments of language teaching. In reality, however, language
teaching is a part of society as much as anything else. It is not difficult to
see, therefore, signs of a post- modern society already present in
contemporary practices in language teaching. A survey through published coursebooks
for school-aged students, for example, can identify some significant characteristics.
The following are based on my own observations which you may or may not agree
with. Language
learner as consumer The content of language exercises may be centred
around performing commercial transactions (e.g. ordering hamburgers and cola in
a restaurant) or expressing preferences about consumer items (e.g. fashion clothes,
pop music, pop stars, and videos). Fragmented,
eclectic content A unit of materials may be composed of seemingly
random content linked together perhaps by an underlying grammatical thread.
A newspaper article about a protest may be followed by a listening passage on
UFOs, which may in turn be followed by a role play to solve a murder all
intended to present examples of the Past tense. (Expect anything!
being also suitable advice to a language student.) Significance
Meaning has long since been important in language teaching, but beyond this
there is also the matter of significance. On the one hand, much of the content
of language teaching tasks appear to focus on what is essentially trivia. On the
other hand, the true significance of something may be disregarded in the pursuit
of a syllabus item. A text about the first tests of a nuclear bomb, for example
potentially one of the most significant events in modern history
may be made the focus of classwork simply for the form it exemplifies (What
were the journalists doing when the bomb exploded?). Standardised
lessons Although teaching practices and teaching materials have become
much more interesting for the learner in recent years, one element in this has
been the growth in standardisation of teaching practices. Superficially, part
of the cause of this has been the emergence of global coursebooks, which propose
similar content for classroom work in diverse situations and cultures. Additionally,
global teaching qualifications are potentially leading to a standardised view
of what good teaching is. I say, superficially, however, because it
is not the fact of globalisation that is important here, but what coursebooks
and teaching qualifications may actually propose. My own view is that there is
increasing tendency towards (and danger of) scripting lessons
standard lessons and lesson formats that are re-enacted all over the world. This
means, for example, that students and teachers on opposite sides of the planet,
in widely differing contexts, can end up working with exactly the same language,
through the same standard closed tasks, producing more or less the same standardised
outcomes. A
futures curriculum in language teaching I
said earlier that I think that it is important that we are aware of how society
is evolving so that we can try to make the future as we would like it to be. As
an educational activity, there is thus a particular responsibility for language
teaching. On the one hand, we need to think about how we can help to prepare our
students for the very different demands that the future will make the need
to be able to make rapid decisions and adapt, for instance. On the other hand,
we also need to look beyond the concerns of the language syllabus, and not simply
drift with the flow of post-modern development. A futures curriculum, then, needs
to take into account the content and significance of our materials, the values
and attitudes we project, the kinds of mental states we are fostering
how, indeed, we contribute to the way the people see themselves, and how
we shape the way we wish to live. This is of course a very subjective matter which
will vary from individual to individual, culture to culture, but to end this article
I would like to set out six principles that I think could underpin developments
in language teaching. As a set of desirable characteristics, they
may also function as a means of evaluating what we are doing now, so for each
one I have added a question which we can use to review our present practices. Some
characteristics of a futures curriculum Coherence
The use of themes, topics, projects to bind lessons together and provide coherence
and a deeper focus and understanding. Significant
content The selection of content that is worth learning and thinking about,
dealt with in appropriate ways, which does not, on the one hand trivialise significant
issues or, on the other hand, make trivial things seem important. A key topic
could itself be the future attempting to raise students
awareness of future developments and discuss their own hopes, aspirations, worries
and personal action. Decision-making
in the classroom A structured plan for actively involving students in
making decisions in the classroom, taking on more responsibility for what happens
in their lessons. Use
of students intelligence The use of types of exercises which require
thinking, beyond memory retrieval or repetition, for example, and involving students
in hypothesising, negotiating, planning, and evaluating, and open-ended tasks
which allow different students to contribute in different ways. Cultural
understanding Tasks and texts which require students to look through the
eyes of others, to learn the relative nature of values, to understand why people
in different contexts think and do different things. Critical
language awareness To view all language use critically that is,
to look beyond the surface meaning and ask oneself questions such as Why
are they saying that? What is not being said? and Who
benefits from what is being said? We might, for example, ask students to
think about deeper reasons for why the passive voice is used in a newspaper headline
or why particular adjectives are used to describe a consumer product.
Questions to evaluate
present practices - Is
there a coherent topic over a lesson or series of lessons?
- Is the content worth
knowing or thinking about? Is significant content treated appropriately?
- Are
students required to make decisions? How do they help to shape lessons, such that
each lesson is unique?
- Do classroom tasks require thought?
- Do texts and
tasks promote cultural understanding?
- Are students asked to think about why
language is used that way?
Andrew
Littlejohn teaches for the Institute of Education, University of London, and is
author and co-author of a number of coursebooks including Cambridge English
for Schools. Other articles by Andrew Littlejohn are available free of charge
from the following web site, where you will also find a complete on-line A-Z of
ELT methodology: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/A_Littlejohn
Other Cambridge
sites:
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