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Towards integrating television materials into english teaching and learning at the National University of Rwanda: an exploratory case study of the second year english course

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par Pravda Mfurankunda
University of the Western Cape, Cape Town - Masters in Education 2005
  

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2.3.4. Communicative approach to language teaching (CLT)

With the preceding methods, learners were not given enough input or examples of how language structures are used in everyday conversation and they did not get enough opportunity for communicating in English (output) (Kilfoil and Van der Walt, 1997:12). In other words, the purpose of learning English as a language of wider communication should not be to learn to communicate, but to learn while communicating (1997:12)

The origins of CLT are to be found in the 1960s. The learner was at the centre of the communicative approach. In fact, CLT regarded the learners as communicatively competent when they have ability not only to apply the grammatical rules of a language in order to form grammatically correct sentences, but also know when and where to use these sentences and to whom. In other words, being able to communicate required more than linguistic competence, it also required communicative competence.

Having surveyed the context in which CLT was proposed, it is necessary to look at some of its attributes in the language teaching and learning process. First and foremost, almost everything is done with a communicative intent. Students use the language a great deal through communicative activities such as games, role-plays and problem-solving tasks carried out specifically in small groups. In CLT practices, interaction is the leading point and activities designed for this purpose promote language used in meaningful tasks.

In the treatment of the four language skills, CLT supports the integrated skills approach. Kilfoil and Van der Walt (1997:19) claim that in practical terms this means that in the real world (i.e. in class) learners will often have to read while they are listening (looking for a telephone number while a friend is giving the person's name), write while they are listening (taking notes), speak while they are writing (when demonstrating something in a class) and so on.

To sum up, the communicative approach that gave rise to CLT traditionally refers to a set of principles about language teaching and learning where the focus is on meaningful communication and on use, not usage. In this approach, students are given tasks to accomplish using language, instead of studying the language. In other words, the syllabus is based primarily on developing functional language such as asking permission, asking directions and not on the structure of the language like learning how to form the past tense, conditionals, etc. Authentic and meaningful language input becomes more important. The class becomes more student-centred as learners accomplish their tasks with their peers while the lecturer plays more of an observer role or a guide.

I now look at the development of audiovisual materials for the classroom.

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