Abstract
In its lifetime, the profession of language
teaching has undergone many changes. Early
attempts at language teaching almost entirely
lacked a theoretical base. In the 20th century,
however, two sets of language teaching methods
emerged; the first set borrowed theories from
psychology, linguistics, and sociolinguistics
whereas the second set was based on individual
philosophies of method developers. Late in
the twentieth century, an attempt on the part
of some pedagogists to evaluate the different
methods of language teaching resulted in the
validity of language teaching methods being
called into question. As a result, the question
of how the profession of language pedagogy
should be approached called into attention
such notions as teacher plausibility, autonomy,
and reflectivity as well as learner plausibility
and autonomy. The result of such an expanded
perspective was the introduction of effective
and reflective teaching ideologies of the
seventies and eighties. In 1994, an attempt
at finding an alternative to methods instead
of an alternative method culminated in the
introduction of the post method era. The present
paper tries to provide the reader with a brief
account of these trends.
Keywords: method; reflective teaching;
effective teaching; post-method condition;
language teaching; methodology; language pedagogy
1. Introduction
A long time ago, before the birth of Jesus
Christ, a number of outstanding people started
to teach different sciences including language.
Perhaps the famous Chinese philosopher, Confucius
(551? -479? BC) can be called the father of
teaching. From the time of Confucius up to
the early years of the twentieth century,
language teaching lingered on uninformed by
any scientifically established learning theory.
With the upsurge of interest in psychology,
however, learning theories proposed by psychologists
began to inform any teaching practice. As
a result, language-teaching practices were
ever more increasingly based on psychological
learning theories.
The first steps towards making language teaching
scientific were taken in the twentieth century.
In the first half of the twentieth century,
the proposal of the notion of method shed
new light on the processes of language teaching
(called methods). Structural syllabuses were
designed and implemented in this profession.
Later in the twentieth century, however, new
psychological and linguistic findings resulted
in an upsurge of interest in notional syllabuses;
a move away from the notion of method led
to considerations beyond language teaching
methods. These considerations gave birth to
three issues: effective teaching, reflective
teaching, and the post-method condition.
2.
The Method Era
As one of the key figures in the field of
language pedagogy, Mackey (1950) wrote an
article entitled "The meaning of method."
In this article, he draws on the most important
problem in the field of language teaching,
and asserts that after centuries of language
teaching, no systematic reference to this
body of knowledge exists. The problem, he
argues is that much of the field of language
method has become a matter of opinion rather
than of fact.
In an attempt to look at method sensibly,
Mackey sets out to specify a number of features
for any method. According to Mackey (1950),
all teaching, whether good or bad, should
include some sort of selection, some gradation,
and presentation. Selection is vital for the
fact that it is impossible to teach the whole
of a field of knowledge; gradation should
be undertaken because it is impossible to
teach all the selected materials at once;
presentation makes it possible to communicate
concepts interpersonally.
Before deciding what to select, grade, and
present, one should necessarily know something
about the material. This has to do with the
source from which we select. In the case of
language teaching, the source of selection,
according to Mackey, is nothing but the linguistic
system. As such, an analysis of this system
seems inevitable. However, as soon as we begin
to analyze a language, we realize that it
is not a single system but a multitude of
systems. Mackey summarizes these systems into
four categories: the system of sounds (or
phonology), the system of forms (or morphology),
the system of structures (or syntax), and
the system of meaning (or semantics). These
four systems, when taken together, comprise
the materials from which we should select.
An analysis of these systems - a linguistic
analysis - results in an understanding of:
1) the sounds of the language;
2) the significant sounds;
3) the sound combinations and change;
4) the significant forms;
5) the form combinations;
6) the order of forms; and
7) how forms and their order pattern our experience
through units of meaning.
The analysis of the system of language will
take us nowhere unless the result is a synthesis
of all systems of language into meaningful
utterances. Therefore, language learning should
not only include selection, gradation, and
presentation, but also habit formation. Selection
tells us what is to be taught, how much of
it is to be taught, and how all the linguistic
items are selected on the basis of such criteria
as frequency, usefulness and teachability.
Grading, on the other hand, is a two-fold
process. It, first of all, tells us what comes
before what. Gradation also tells us how much
of what comes before what. Presentation, as
the third important step in methods development,
tells us about the linguistic aspect of methods
as well as the techniques required for the
presentation of the selected materials. With
a careful consideration of these three points,
the language teacher should guarantee habit
formation (i.e. the method should make language
a habit).
Mackey, therefore, believes that any method
should include some sort of selection, gradation,
presentation, and, last but not least, habit
formation. This reveals the fact that Mackey's
approach towards language is a structural
one, and that the content of the syllabus
is determined by a detailed linguistic analysis
of the language in question.
Richards (1984) is primarily concerned with
three important points in relation to methods:
the role of language theory, the role of instructional
theory, and the implementational factors in
methods. According to Richards, all methods
could be categorized under one of the two
headings: language-centered methods, and learner-centered
methods. The former is composed of those methods
which are based on a theory of (the nature
of human) language. The latter, however, includes
methods based on a theory of the learning
process.
A further argument is made by Richards on
the route of the development of methods. Richards
notes that methods are deeply rooted in either
a syllabus (i.e. the language content of courses)
or an instructional procedure (i.e. classroom
techniques). Richards underscores what he
means by the use of the term "method"
when he says that he uses the term to refer
to a language teaching philosophy which contains
a standardized set of procedures or principles
for teaching a language that are based on
a given set of theoretical premises about
the nature of language and/or language learning
(Richards and Rodgers, 2001).
Methods, as Richards sees them, are attempts
at creating opportunities for learners to
acquire language. It should, however, be noted
that different methods define language differently.
A critical survey of the language teaching
methods from the turn of the 20th century
up to now reveals that, during the 20s and
30s, methods were based on the consensus among
methodologists and teachers to move towards
the control of vocabulary. People like Ogden
(1930), Faucett, West, Palmer, and Thorndike
(1936), and West (1953) have all nurtured
the so-called structural syllabuses. Palmer's
view about grammar is, however, different
than the notion of grammar as defined by the
traditional Grammar-Translation Method (GTM)
in that his view includes the system underlying
the patterns of speech. Building up on the
basis of this pedestal, Palmer and Blandford
(1939) designed the textbook which they called
A grammar of spoken English. Their
work inspired such scholars as Hornby (1950)
and others to develop grammatical syllabuses
in 1954. Such a syllabus affords a graded
sequence of patterns and structures for courses
and course materials. Later, this structural
syllabus was associated with a situational
approach to contextualizing and practicing
syllabus items, thus resulting in what was
later called the structural-situational approach.
In the US, even though after several decades,
the Applied Linguistic Foundation of Language
Teaching led to similar results. This time,
Charles Fries and his colleagues (1961) at
the University of Michigan produced word lists
and substitution tables which served as "frames"
for pattern practice. The method resulting
from their work was called the Aural-Oral
Method (1961).
Even though, in the 60s, Chomsky (1959) made
an attack on the structural view of language,
it was not until very late in the 70s and
80s that the most serious challenges to the
structural syllabuses emerged in the form
of notional syllabuses on the one hand (Wilkins,
1976), and ESP movement on the other (Robinson,
1980). Lexico-structural syllabuses argued
that, once the basic vocabulary and grammar
of the target language had been mastered,
the learner would be able to communicate in
situations where English was needed for general,
unspecified purposes. Wilkins simply redefines
the language content of the structural syllabuses,
and introduces the following items to them:
(a) the notions or concepts the learners need
to talk about,
(b) the functional purposes for which language
is used,
(c) the situations in which language would
be used, and
(d) the roles the learners might possibly
play.
This redefined lexico-structural syllabus
is what Wilkins refers to as the "notional
syllabus." Following from Wilkins, the
Council of Europe elaborated a now well-known
version of the notional syllabus which was
called the Threshold Level (Van Ek, and Alexander,
1980). Unlike notional syllabuses, ESP starts
not with an analysis of the linguistic code
but with a determination of the learner's
communicative needs. In other words, an understanding
of the learners communicative needs will outline
their linguistic needs in an ESP context.
It is interesting to note that all these approaches
(i.e. structural-situational, aural-oral,
audiolingual, notional-functional, and ESP)
are content-oriented. It is, however, possible
to find another developmental route for a
number of methods - namely, the instructional
theory route. An instructional theory has
two aspects: a theory of language learning,
and a rationale for teaching procedures and
techniques. Methods based on an instructional
theory are two-dimensional: (a) the psycholinguistic
dimension embodies a theory of learning that
describes strategies and processes and specifies
the conditions necessary for these processes
to be effectively implemented for, and utilized
by, the learners; (b) the teaching dimension
contains an account both of the teaching and
learning procedures and of the teacher and/or
learner roles in the instructional process.
As such, the concept of a notional syllabus
is independent of any instructional theory.
This account of instructional theory reveals
what Asher (1977), Curran (1976), and Gattegno
(1976) have done. They were prompted not by
reactions to linguistic and sociolinguistic
theories but rather by their personal philosophies
of how an individual's learning potential
can be maximized. Unlike the syllabus-oriented
methods of the past which began with an a
priori specification of course objectives
and syllabus content, in the more recent methods
of language teaching, syllabus is an outcome
of the instructional procedures - a posteriori
syllabuses.
3.
The Beyond Method Era
In a paper published in 1984, Richards claims
that language-teaching methods have a secret
life. According to Richards (1984), the secrecy
of methods has to do with the fact that methods
have a life beyond the classroom; the rise
and fall of methods depends upon a large variety
of factors extrinsic to the method itself.
These factors often reflect (1) the fads and
fashions of profit-seekers and promoters,
and (2) the forces of the intellectual market
place.
Besides their descriptive (i.e. orientational)
and implementational aspects, methods need
to meet the criterion of accountability. Accountability
(or evaluation) has an established role in
the process of curriculum development. This
is the missing element in the development
of methods. Besides the selection of a teaching
method, curriculum development calls for the
realization of other important steps:
1) Situation Analysis, in which parameters
of language development are determined;
2) Needs Analysis, in which the language needs
of the learners are assessed;
3) Task Analysis, which determines the required
linguistic task to be performed by learners
together with the communicative and linguistic
demands of the task;
4) Goal Setting, which determines the required
linguistic objectives based on the learner's
entry level, communicative needs, and program
constraints;
5) Selection of Learning Experience, which
determines the procedures for the attainment
of objectives; and
6) Evaluation, which could be both formative
versus summative and product-oriented versus
process-oriented.
Such a curriculum-based approach to language
teaching is known as the Language Program
Design. The important issues, then, are not
which method to select, but how to develop
procedures and instructional activities which
will enable program objectives to be attained.
This is not a question of choosing a method
but of developing methodology. Long (1983)
argues that the effectiveness of methods can
be evidenced in either of the two ways: absolute
effectiveness, and relative effectiveness.
The former can be assessed with a survey of
the internal structure of the method itself.
The latter, however, calls for a comparative
survey across different methods. No matter
which type of method effectiveness is in focus,
a number of issues must be addressed in any
evaluation process:
1) The goals and objectives of the program
need to be described, and criterion measures
specified;
2) Once an instructional theory takes the
form of a method, with theoretical bases in
language and learning theory and operationlized
practices in syllabus design and teaching
procedures, claims made at each level of method
organization must be regarded as hypotheses
awaiting verification or falsification;
3) The validity of the items contained in
the syllabus must be guaranteed.
A point of caution, however, is that most
methods, to date, are based on shaky empirical
pedestals. It should be underlined that if
the methodology of language teaching is to
move beyond the domain of speculation and
dogma, its practitioners must become more
seriously concerned with the issues of accountability
and evaluation. This, in turn, means shifting
our attention (from methods) towards the relevant
facts and procedures of curriculum development.
Such a shift of attention has received a unique
name - the "beyond method" era.
The beyond method era was the outcome of the
tradition prevailing in the method era: the
construction of a new method at the expense
of the total negation of past methods (c.f.,
Pennycook, 1989). The characteristics of the
beyond method period are three-fold: (a) evaluation
of the scope and nature of methods, (b) redistribution
of theorizing power among practitioners and
theorizers, and (c) learner autonomy and language
learning strategies. Beyond method is based
on the claim that the notion of good or bad
method per se is misguided, and that the search
for an inherently best method should be replaced
by a search for the ways for the interaction
of teachers' and specialists' pedagogic perceptions.
All of these claims boil down to what is called
teacher plausibility.
The beyond method era was realized in two
different forms: (a) effective teaching, and
(b) reflective teaching. They are distinguished
according to who should be held responsible
for theorizing. The proponents of effective
teaching suggest that applied linguists should
theorize, and that teachers should practice
those theories. That is, effective language
teaching is the outcome of the cooperation
of theorizers and practitioners. The proponents
of reflective teaching, on the other hand,
suggest that theorizing or, at least, mediation
responsibility should be placed upon the shoulder
of teachers, rather than applied linguists
(Widdowson, 1990; Freeman, 1991). For instance,
Widdowson conceives of teaching as a self-conscious
research activity which should be done by
teachers in order to have effective operational
evidence. Further, only teachers can be entitled
to act as mediators between theory and practice.
Freeman (1991) questions the dependent position
of teachers in the conventional concept of
method, arguing that the fund of teachers'
experience and tacit knowledge about teaching
arising from their lives as students should
not be overlooked. Teachers' untapped potentiality
is also a matter of concern for Richards (1990)
and Wallace (1991). They argue for the promotion
of teachers' ability to analyze and evaluate
their teaching practice and to initiate changes
in their classrooms. The two camps within
the beyond method era will be discussed in
more detail here.
3.1.
Effective Teaching
Language teaching has taken on two general
forms up to now: (a) principled conformity
(i.e. method stick-to-it-ive-ness), and (b)
the exploratory teaching process. Whereas
in the former approach methods function as
the basis for instructional processes in a
second language program, in the latter methodology
moves beyond methods and focuses partly on
exploring the nature of effective classroom
teaching and learning.
Method, as defined traditionally, is based
on a particular theory of the nature of language
and second language learning. They make assumptions
about the nature of teaching that are not
based on any study of the process of teaching
(or what Mackey (1965) calls teaching analysis).
The problem with this traditional notion of
methods is that, by routinizing the teaching
process, they covertly express a static view
of teaching. As such, they entail a set of
specifications for how teaching should be
accomplished. This is where the whole problem
of teacher plausibility begins. Ethically
speaking, the traditional idea of method reduces
teachers to the state of mindless robots programmed
to carry out the methodological suggestions.
This pack of methodological suggestions includes
a set of prescriptions on what teachers and
learners should do in the language classroom.
Prescriptions for the teacher include what
materials should be presented, and when and
how they should be taught; prescriptions for
the learners include what approach they should
take toward learning.
There are, however, many observations that
reveal that teachers seldom conform to methods
which they are supposed to be following; they
refuse to be the slaves of methods. In other
words, teachers in actual practice often fail
to reflect the underlying philosophies of
methods which they claim to be following (be
it a holistic rationalist process-oriented
approach, or an atomistic empiricist approach).
In this connection, Dunkin and Biddle (1974),
and Swaffar et al. (1982) claim that teaching
is a dynamic, interactional process in which
the teacher's 'method' results from the process
of interaction between the teacher, the learners,
and the instructional tasks and activities
over time. Such an interaction reveals itself
as a quite different approach to teaching,
one in which teachers are involved in observing
and reflecting upon their teaching as well
as the learning behaviors of their students;
hence, effective teaching and learning. Good
(1979) has tried to operationally define the
term "effective teaching" by describing
it as teaching that produces higher-than-predicted
gains on standardized achievement tests. Blum
(1984) lists twelve effective classroom practices.
Doyle (1977) and Good (1979) list several
dimensions of teaching that account for differences
between effective and ineffective instruction.
They specifically mention such factors as
classroom management, structuring, tasks,
and grouping.
Effective teaching is claimed to be determined
to some extent by the idea of structuring.
A lesson reflects the idea of structuring
when the teacher's intentions are clear, and
when instructional activities are sequenced
according to a logic that students can perceive.
Teachers also assign activities to attain
particular learning objectives. These are
called tasks or activity structures. In a
discussion of effective teaching, Tikunoff
(1985) classifies classroom tasks on the basis
of the type of demands they make on the students
into three categories: (1) response mode demands
(i.e. knowledge, comprehension, application,
analysis or synthesis, or evaluation); (2)
interactional mode demands (i.e. rules that
govern how classroom tasks are accomplished);
and (3) task complexity demands (i.e. how
difficult the learner perceives the task to
be). Teachers must not only decide on the
kind of task but also on the order, pacing,
products, learning strategies, and related
materials of the task. To this end, they should
take 'learner plausibility' and 'language
learning strategies' into account (Oxford,
1990). Members of the effective teaching camp
argue that learners show autonomy when they
undergo instruction and that they react individually
despite the centrality of teaching style.
As a result, learners' uptake is highly idiosyncratic
despite the general assumption that the effect
of instruction is somehow uniform for most
learners of the class. This idiosyncrasy may
be partly attributed to the various strategies
learners adopt in the process of language
learning. As Richards (1989) argues, what
the teacher does is only half of the picture.
The other half has to do with what learners
do to achieve successful learning strategies.
Learner autonomy, coupled with the use of
strategies, implies that learners may succeed
despite the teacher's method rather than because
of it.
It should be noted that an unfortunate outcome
of the educational system in most third-world
countries is that usually teachers do not
urge students to go beyond the response mode
of knowledge. Students in these countries
are usually held responsible for simply memorizing
the subject matter of their courses. As such,
they stop at the level of knowledge and take
the materials they are exposed to for granted.
This results in the students' lack of critical
thinking. In other words, such a kind of orientation
extinguishes the potential for plausibility
in the learners. Anyhow, good teaching appears
to be highly task-oriented.
Tikunoff (1983), in relating effective teaching
to bilingual classrooms, suggests that three
kinds of competencies are needed for Limited
English Proficiency (LEP) learners: (a) Participative
competence (needed to respond appropriately
to class demands); (b) interactional competence
(needed for appropriate classroom discourse);
and, (c) academic competence (needed for the
acquisition of new skills, assimilation of
new information, and construction of new concepts).
These competencies help the learners to perform
three major functions: (1) to decode and understand
task expectations as well as new information;
(2) to engage appropriately in completing
tasks, with high accuracy; and (3) to obtain
accurate feedback with relation to completing
tasks accurately (c.f., Tikunoff, 1983: Significant
Bilingual Instructional Features (SBIF)).
The results of SBIF studies reveal that effective
teachers are able to describe clearly what
instruction would entail, to operationalize
these specifications, and to produce the desired
results in terms of student performance. No
doubt, effective teaching derives its methodological
principles from studying the classroom practices
and processes employed by effective teachers.
Effective teachers are plausible enough to
control and manage the process of teaching,
learning, and classroom interaction actively.
This plausibility results from their understanding
of the teaching and learning processes.
It seems reasonable enough to agree with the
proponents of effective teaching on the fact
that the other side of the coin of effective
teaching is what learners do to achieve effective
learning, or learner strategies. Learner strategies
include the particular cognitive operations,
processes, procedures, and heuristics that
learners apply to the task of learning a second
language. Effective learners seem to be successful
because they have a better understanding of
and control over their learning than less
successful learners.
In an attempt to describe effective learning,
Cohen (cited in Oxford, 1985) lists six strategies
used by successful learners:
1) Attention enhancing strategies;
2) Use of a variety of background sources;
3) Oral production tricks;
4) Vocabulary learning techniques;
5) Reading or text-processing strategies;
6) Writing techniques.
Willing (1987) defines strategies as essentially
methods employed by the person for processing
input language information in such a way as
to gain control of it, thus enabling the assimilation
of that information by the self. This clearly
reflects what is called learner plausibility.
The question here is whether learner plausibility
is teachable. Wenden (1985) would say "yes."
Wenden (1985, p. 7) argues that "ineffective
learners are inactive learners. Their apparent
inability to learn is, in fact, due to their
not having an appropriate repertoire of learning
strategies."
Another point that deserves attention is that
effective teaching does not absolutely contradict
the traditional notion of method. In fact,
it is not the method that works or fails to
work. An effective teacher may find some of
the traditional methods, or some parts of
methods, useful enough to be incorporated
into his classroom practices. What most of
the proponents of the effective teaching orthodoxy
suggest is that teachers should refrain from
being dogmatic in their understanding of language
teaching methodology.
3.2.
Reflective Teaching
In a discussion of reflective teaching, I
should draw the readers' attention to the
fact that the eighties might be called the
revolutionary era in the field of language
teaching. Since the early eighties new approaches
to teacher development have been proposed
and implemented in classrooms. From among
these approaches, the most prominent ones
are (a) teacher-as-researcher, (b) clinical
supervision, (c) critical pedagogy perspective,
and (d) reflective teaching. Reflective teaching,
however, has a special place among these approaches.
Cruickshank (1984) defines reflective teaching
as the teacher's thinking about what happens
in classroom lessons, and thinking about alternative
means of achieving goals or aims. As such,
reflective teaching is a good means of providing
the students with "an opportunity to
consider the teaching event thoughtfully,
analytically, and objectively" (Cruickshank
and Applegate, 1981, p. 4). In other words,
the major purpose of reflective teaching is
to engender good habits of thought.
A second and quite different perspective of
reflective teaching has been proposed by Zeichner
and Liston (1985). They argue that a reflective
teacher is one who assesses the origins, purposes,
and consequences of his works at all levels.
Van Manen (1977) outlines three levels of
reflectivity of which the first is similar
to Cruickshank's conception of reflective
teaching. The other two levels have been called
the practical and critical levels of reflectivity
or orientation to inquiry into teaching. Reflective
teaching is said to be patterned in such a
way as to enable teachers to develop the pedagogical
habits and skills necessary for self-directed
growth and towards preparing them to actively
participate, individually or collectively,
in their making of educational decisions.
In an attempt to identify what reflective
teaching really means, Bartlett (1990) distinguishes
between actions and behaviors. He draws on
the example of an athlete raising his fist
in triumph and a Nazi saluting, and argues
that, even though these two persons appear
to have behaved in much the same way, their
intentions are totally different. Therefore,
actions are informed by the intentions they
try to fulfill. Reflective teaching, viewed
in this context, does not involve some modification
of behavior by externally imposed directions
or requirements, but requires deliberation
and analysis of our ideas about teaching as
a form of action based on our own dynamic
understanding. In other words, reflective
teaching links what we think (or intend) to
what we do (or act).
Teaching is interaction in the sense that
it involves individuals and groups acting
upon each other, reciprocally in actions and
responses in an infinite variety of relationships
(both verbal and non-verbal, conscious and
unconscious, or enduring and casual). Interaction
is in fact communication in its inclusive
sense in that it functions as a continually
emerging process. Therefore, reflective teaching
will result in a shared understanding among
teachers and learners. The learners will value
their practical knowledge and give it priority
over scientific knowledge produced by researchers
(of teaching). They will also appreciate the
strong collegiality inherent in, and stimulated
by, reflective teaching. Reflective teaching
unfolds in the form of "pedagogy"
in the sense that it engages each student
wholly - mind, sense of self, range of interests
and interactions with other people - in events
inside and outside the classroom. Pedagogy
addresses both every day experiences and the
societal events that influence them.
Reflection can be viewed to have two different
meanings; on the one hand, reflection involves
the relationship between an individual's thought
and action. On the other hand, it involves
a relationship between an individual teacher
and his membership in a larger collectivity
called society. Because of its dual meaning,
reflection has been described as "critical
critical."
A reflective teacher (also called a researcher
of teaching) is a person who transcends the
technicalities of teaching and thinks beyond
the need to improve his instructional techniques.
Being reflective draws on the need for asking
"what" and "why" questions.
In reflecting on what and why questions, we
begin to exercise control and open up the
possibility of transforming our everyday classroom
life. The process of control is called critical
reflective teaching. By being critical, a
teacher will have the ability to see his actions
in relation to the historical, social, and
cultural context in which his teaching is
actually embedded. Such a teacher will develop
himself both individually and collectively
(in relation to society). The what and why
questions asked by reflective teachers should
be systematized into a set of procedures to
help others to become critically reflective
teachers.
Dewey (1933), in his book How we think
suggests: (1) that the pupil will have
a genuine situation of experience; (2) that
a genuine problem develop with this situation
as a stimulus to thought; (3) that he possess
the information and make the observations
needed to deal with it; (4) that suggested
solutions occur to him which he shall be responsible
for developing in an orderly way; (5) that
he have opportunity and occasion to test his
ideas by application to make the meaning clear
and to discover for himself their validity
(p. 174).
The statement made by Dewey reinforces the
need to consider a number of principles that
guide and inform the process by which teachers
can become reflective. These principles include
the following:
Teachers must reflect upon issues in the social
context where teaching occurs;
1) Teachers must be interested in the problem
to be resolved;
2) Issues must be derived from the teacher's
own experience;
3) Reflection on the issues involves problem-solving;
4) Ownership of the identified issue and its
solution is vested in the teacher;
5) Systematic procedures are necessary;
6) Teacher's experience of teaching should
provide information about the issue;
7) Teacher's ideas must be tested through
the practice of teaching;
8) Tested ideas about teaching must lead to
some course of action;
9) New understandings and redefined practice
in teaching should result.
These ten principles unfold reflective teaching
in the form of a cycle of activity. Such a
cycle would contain the five elements of mapping,
informing, contesting, appraising, and acting.
Mapping involves asking questions about what
we do as teachers. It involves observation
and the collection of evidence about our teaching.
What is very important in the mapping phase
is that observation must be done by individual
teachers (and through the use of personal
diaries, learning logs, portfolios, and journals).
The teachers approach to the mapping phase
should be a descriptive one. The description
should delineate teachers' routine and conscious
actions in the classroom. Teachers should,
for instance, focus on their specific teaching
problems which can be improved. In fact, the
aim of the mapping phase is to raise teachers'
consciousness through writing.
The next step in the cycle of reflective teaching
is informing. In this stage the teacher will
ask such questions as (1) "What is the
meaning of my teaching?" and (2) "What
did I intend?" of himself. In other words,
he turns to look for meanings behind the maps.
That is, the teacher revisits his first records
- his maps - adds to them, and makes sense
of them. As such, the informing phase provides
the teacher with an understanding of the difference
between teaching routine and conscious teaching
action, and the ability to unmask the principles
behind them. The teacher will, therefore,
strive for the best possible solution rather
than the correct or most certain solution
(on the basis of an informed choice).
The contesting phase begins with a consideration
of such questions as "How did I come
to be this way?" and "How was it
possible for my present view of teaching (with
reasons) to have emerged?" This phase
involves contesting our ideas and the structures
that hold them in place. To this end, we,
as teachers, can share our understandings
of, and reasons for, teaching in particular
ways with our colleagues. This is meant to
uncover our assumptive worlds. As we become
experienced teachers, we develop our theories
of teaching, philosophies of the teaching
and learning process, and our histories which
contain assumptions about the best ways of
teaching. In this phase of contestation, we
confront and perhaps begin to dislodge the
complex system of reasons (or theory) for
our teaching actions - we theorize.
Contestation will unfold to us whether our
view of teaching is fraught with contradictions
and inconsistencies. If we believe that a
given instance of behavior will have positive
consequences for some and negative outcomes
for others, then we hold an interdependent
and dialectical view of behavior or action.
Only after a fully-fledged contestation phase
shall we proceed to the next phase - appraisal.
In the appraisal phase, we set a value for
what we do as teachers by asking such questions
as "How might I teach differently?"
Appraisal is a quest for alternative courses
of action. It guarantees our teaching by linking
the thinking dimension of reflection with
the search for teaching in ways consistent
with our new understanding. According to Bartlett
(1990), when we search for more participatory
styles of goal-based or domestic assessment
procedures, we are appraising possible courses
of action.
The last phase in the cycle of reflective
teaching process is "acting." The
question the teacher raises in this phase
is "What and how shall I teach now?"
In this connection, Paulo Freire (1970) distinguishes
between activism and verbalism. Reflection
without action is verbalism; action without
reflection is activism. Freire claims that
verbalism and activism should go hand-in-hand
to guarantee the best possible outcome. After
mapping, we rearrange our teaching practice,
unearth the reasons and assumptions for these
actions, subject these reasons to critical
scrutiny, appraise alternative courses of
action, and then act. As such, becoming reflective
forces us to adopt a critical attitude to
ourselves as individual second language teachers,
and to challenge our espoused personal beliefs
about teaching.
4.
The Post-Method Era
The period of insecurity manifested by both
the methods of the method era and the ideologies
of the beyond method era formally culminated
in the post method era - or post method condition.
In an attempt to distinguish between the post
method era and the foregoing heterodoxies,
Kumaravadivelu (1994, 2001, 2003) suggests
that the post method paradigm is an attempt
at finding an alternative to method rather
than finding an alternative method (my
italics). He draws on the distinction made
by Mackey (1965) between method analysis and
teaching analysis, and goes on even further
to claim that language teaching practitioners
have more recently come up with "an awareness
that as long as we are caught up in the web
of method, we will continue to get entangled
in an unending search for an unavailable solution,
... that nothing short of breaking the cycle
can salvage the solution" (Kumaravadivelu,
1994, p. 28). In this connection, Kumaravadivelu
distinguishes between knowledge-oriented theories
of pedagogy (based on the traditional notion
of method) and classroom-oriented theories
of practice (based on the post-method condition).
He outlines the characteristics of the post-method
condition in such a way as to signify (1)
a search for an alternative to method rather
than an alternative method, (2) teacher autonomy,
and (3) principled pragmatism.
Kumaravadivelu argues that a need to look
beyond the notion of method has emerged out
of the inherent contradictions between method
as conceptualized by theorists and method
as actualized by practitioners. This claim
is again far from being scientific. He argues
in such a way as to pinpoint the existence
of a taken-for-granted sort of hostility between
theorizers and practitioners. It seems to
be more reasonable to try to encourage both
theorizers and practitioners to compromise
in more favorable ways. Given the chance of
reasonable discussion on points of major controversy,
this compromise does not seem to be out of
reach.
Teacher autonomy is another pedestal upon
which the post method era stands. The crucial
problem with the traditional notion of method,
according to the proponents of post-method
condition, is an ethical one in the sense
that method, as outlined by theorizers, keeps
practitioners away from the practice of their
potentials. "The post-method condition,
however, recognizes the teacher's potentials:
teachers know not only how to teach but also
know how to act autonomously within the academic
and administrative constraints imposed by
institutions, curricula, and textbooks"
(Kumaravadivelu, 1994, p. 30).
Principled pragmatism reveals itself in the
form of teacher's sense of plausibility (i.e.
teacher's subjective understanding of the
teaching he does). Teachers' plausibility
connotes the involvement of both teachers
and students in the learning activity. As
such, it is quite reasonable to emphasize
the importance of teacher plausibility in
language teaching pedagogy. Teacher plausibility
should not be interpreted in such a way as
to empower the teacher to change language
teaching or learning experience to a unidirectional
flow of information from the teacher to the
learner. It should, on the contrary, entail
the teacher's endeavor to assess learner needs,
and his attempt to involve learners in learning
activities. Principled pragmatism is based
on Widdowson's (1990) notion of 'pragmatics
of pedagogy' which construes the immediate
activity of teaching as the medium through
which the relationship between theory and
practice can be realized.
Kumaravadivelu (1994) takes the characteristics
outlined above as a point of departure to
propose a strategic framework for L2 teaching.
The framework, Kumaravadivelu claims, is offered
not as a dogma for uncritical acceptance but
as an option for "critical appraisal
in light of new and demanding experience and
experimentation in L2 learning and teaching"
(p. 32). The post method condition, as Kumaravadivelu
delineates it, is a descriptive, open-ended
set of options, and an interim plan to be
continually modified, expanded, and enriched
by classroom teachers. The post method framework
suggests that teachers should foster the following
ten macrostrategies:
1) Maximize learning opportunities.
2) Facilitate negotiated interaction.
3) Minimize perceptual mismatches.
4) Activate intuitive heuristics.
5) Foster language awareness.
6) Contextualize linguistic input.
7) Integrate language skills.
8) Promote learner autonomy.
9) Raise cultural consciousness.
10) Ensure social relevance.
The paradigm of the postmethod condition was
later enriched by Kumaravadivelu's (2003)
attempt to characterize language teaching
in a postmethod era and to provide the fundamentals
of the postmethod pedagogy as a three-dimensional
system consisting of the pedagogic parameters
of particularity, practicality, and possibility
(Tajeddin, 2005). The parameter of particularity
facilitates the context-sensitive language
teaching with a true understanding of local
linguistic, sociocultural, and political particularities.
Practicality ends the conventional role relationship
between theorists and practitioners through
empowering teachers to construct their own
theory of practice. Possibility is the parameter
which allows learners, teachers, and teacher
educators to be sociopolitically conscious
and to search for identity formation and social
transformation.
5.
Conclusion
To conclude this paper, I wish to borrow some
terms from geology. The geologic time scale
used today breaks the age of the earth into
distinct intervals of varying lengths. The
longest intervals are eons. Each eon is subdivided
into eras. Each era is made up of periods,
which are further divided into epochs.
By way of analogy, the age of the field of
language pedagogy can be broken into eons,
eras, periods, and perhaps epochs. There are
two eons: (a) the non-scientific eon, beginning
with Confucius and ending with the emergence
of the language teaching methods based on
structural psychology and linguistics; and
(b) the scientific eon, starting with the
emergence of the language teaching methods
based on structural psychology and linguistics
and continuing to the present time. The second
eon can be subdivided into three eras: the
method era, the beyond method era, and the
post method era.
The non-scientific eon is distinguished from
the scientific eon on the grounds that the
former lacks a systematic theory base while
the latter claims to be systematically based
on various theories and ideologies. Within
the second eon, the eras are distinguished
on the basis of linguistic, sociolinguistic,
and psychological theories as well as ideologies
and philosophies that inform each era. The
method era has witnessed two periods: (a)
the period of methods informed by linguistic,
psychological, and sociolinguistic theories,
and (b) the period of methods informed by
the personal philosophies of method developers.
Along the same lines, the beyond method era
is further subdivided into two periods: (a)
the effective teaching period, and (b) the
reflective teaching period. In the former,
teachers practice what applied linguists suggest;
in the latter, teachers theorize and then
practice their own theories. The last era
within the scientific eon has three distinct
features: (1) a search for an alternative
to method rather than an alternative method,
(2) an emphasis on teacher autonomy, and (3)
an attempt at principled pragmatism. Revised
in 2003, the postmethod pedagogy is now a
three-dimensional system consisting of the
pedagogic parameters of particularity, practicality,
and possibility.
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