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ESCRITA.LA COMPETENCIA COMUNICATIVA EN INGLÉS.

ESCRITA.LA COMPETENCIA COMUNICATIVA EN INGLÉS.

INTRODUCTION

INTRODUCTION

1. THE SPOKEN WORD

1. THE SPOKEN WORD

1.1. Listening: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to "nde'st$nd $nd 'espond to spo(en

1.1. Listening: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to "nde'st$nd $nd 'espond to spo(en

l$ng"$ge

l$ng"$ge

1.1.1. Listening s(ills

1.1.1. Listening s(ills

1.1.). Pl$nning

1.1.). Pl$nning *onside'$tions

*onside'$tions

1.1.+. Listening $*tivities

1.1.+. Listening $*tivities

1.). Spe$(ing: the developent o!

1.). Spe$(ing: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to *o"ni*$te in spee*h

p"pils# $%ilit& to *o"ni*$te in spee*h

1.).1. O'$l lesson st$ges $nd $*tivities

1.).1. O'$l lesson st$ges $nd $*tivities

). WRITTEN WORD

). WRITTEN WORD

).1. Re$ding: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to 'e$d, "nde'st$nd $nd 'espond to

).1. Re$ding: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to 'e$d, "nde'st$nd $nd 'espond to

-'itten l$ng"$ge

-'itten l$ng"$ge

).1.1.  %$si* odel !o'

).1.1.  %$si* odel !o' the te$*hing o! the 'e*eptive s(ills

the te$*hing o! the 'e*eptive s(ills

).1.). Re$ding $*tivities

).1.). Re$ding $*tivities

).). W'iting: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to

).). W'iting: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to *o"ni*$te in -'iting

*o"ni*$te in -'iting

).).1. W'iting $*tivities

).).1. W'iting $*tivities

).).). W'iting s(ills

).).). W'iting s(ills

+. INTE/RTIN/ THE SKILLS

+. INTE/RTIN/ THE SKILLS

+.1. Re$son !o' integ'$ting the s(ills

+.1. Re$son !o' integ'$ting the s(ills

+.). Integ'$tion

+.). Integ'$tion $dv$nt$ges

$dv$nt$ges

0. COUNICTI2E COPETENCE

0. COUNICTI2E COPETENCE

3. 4I4LIO/RPH5

3. 4I4LIO/RPH5

INTRODUCTION

INTRODUCTION

In order to use a language efectively we need to have a number o diferent abilities. We can In order to use a language efectively we need to have a number o diferent abilities. We can identiy our major skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing.

identiy our major skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing.  These major skills

 These major skills may be classied may be classied in two in two main ways: in main ways: in relation to the medium relation to the medium and in and in relation torelation to the activity o the speaker. !peaking and listening are related to language e"pressed through the the activity o the speaker. !peaking and listening are related to language e"pressed through the aural medium and reading and

aural medium and reading and writing are related to language e"pressed through the visual medium.writing are related to language e"pressed through the visual medium. I we make use o the activity o the speaker speaking and writing are active or productive skills I we make use o the activity o the speaker speaking and writing are active or productive skills while listening and reading are passive or receptive skills.

while listening and reading are passive or receptive skills.

It is very important to integrate these skills in our lessons so we will see when and how to do it. We It is very important to integrate these skills in our lessons so we will see when and how to do it. We also are going to study how enable our young pupils to learn them or efective communication and also are going to study how enable our young pupils to learn them or efective communication and nally we are going to see

nally we are going to see a study o communicative competence in our educational system.a study o communicative competence in our educational system.

1.THE SPOKEN WORD

1.THE SPOKEN WORD

1.1.

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#istening is a hard work or our pupils so it is very important to bear in mind that the activities #istening is a hard work or our pupils so it is very important to bear in mind that the activities mus

must t be be purpurposposeueul l and and intintererestesting ing to to thethem. m. WWe e musmust t alsalso o conconsidsider er our our puppupilsils$ $ psypsychochologlogicaicall characteristics.

characteristics.

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 The our major skills can be

 The our major skills can be subdivided into microskills. Tsubdivided into microskills. The most important listening skills ahe most important listening skills are:re: %& predicting

%& predicting

'& e"tracting specic

'& e"tracting specic inormationinormation (& getting the general picture (& getting the general picture )& inerring opinion and attitude )& inerring opinion and attitude

*& +educing meaning rom the conte"t *& +educing meaning rom the conte"t & recogni-ing discourse

& recogni-ing discourse patternspatterns

ur job is to train our pupils in a number o microskills they will need or the understanding o  ur job is to train our pupils in a number o microskills they will need or the understanding o  listening te"ts. This microskills can be divided in two

listening te"ts. This microskills can be divided in two types ollowing /armer 0%12(&:types ollowing /armer 0%12(&: 3Type % skills, 0general understanding& which see the te"t as a whole

3Type % skills, 0general understanding& which see the te"t as a whole

3Type '0specic understanding& are used or detailed comprehension o the te"t. 3Type '0specic understanding& are used or detailed comprehension o the te"t.

1.

(2)

4eore listening we have to consider a number o steps to take: %& 5hoose the listening

'& 5heck that activities are suitable

(& 6djust the level o di7culty o the activities i you need )& 5onsider the time and the space available

*& Think about visual aids & +ecide the material needed

8& 9now the procedure you will adopt or the listening 2& ractise reading i you are going to read it aloud

1.1.+. Listening $*tivities

#istening activities ollow three stages: 3re3listening

3While3listening 3ost3listening

;<3#I!T<=I=> 65TI?ITI<!

 The main aim o this stage is to prepare the students to achieve the most rom the passage and to arouse their interest in what they are going to listen. This can be done through the ollowing kinds o  e"ercises:

%. P'edi*tion e,e'*ises- which increase the amount o language recognised at rst hearing: 3!tudents are told the topic o the listening and are asked to guess some o the words they think they might appear.

3The teacher plays the rst sentences o the tape and ask pupils what they think is going to happen. !tudents call out their ideas, which are discussed.

3!tudents are encouraged to guess what the story is about and develop their ideas.

). o*$%"l$'& e,e'*ises

3!tudents are given words which might occur in the passage and are asked to listen or which ones occur and which do not.

3They can do a picture and word matching e"ercise.

3The teacher give students lists o words and they have to classiy them under diferent subject headings. The passage they will hear will be about only one o these topics, but they will not know which until they hear it.

+. /'$$' e,e'*ises

36 diagram to ocus on the syntactic structures that are important to understand in the passage.

3>ap3lling e"ercise , involving grammatical structures or vocabulary rom the passage they are going to hear. !tudents will check the answers rom the te"t.

W/I#<3#I!T<=I=> 65TI?ITI<!

 They break the ice and help pupils establish some basic acts. @or second listening our pupils may e"tract much more detailed inormation rom the te"t. These activities may include:

1. Di$g'$ *opletion: a diagram gives the main headings and sections o what speaker is saying, which is useul or guiding student$s notes on stages in a story.

Ch$'ts- are used with passages in which the speaker is comparing or contrasting two things. Aore columns may be added according to the number o things that are being discussed.

). 0$t*hing o! 'e*ognising in!o'$tion in $ te,t

3!tudents can listen to a description and try to draw the picture that the speaker is describing. 3!tudents listen to a story or instruction which reer to a number o pictures and they have to put them in the correct order or recognise the process described according to the passage.

+. W'itten "estions

3We can make Buestions about the passage which should be read and understood by students in the pre3listening stage. 06n average o * should be considered the ma"imum&

2. 3ollo4ing inst'"*tions

3#isten and do e"ercises in which students must obey instructions. They can be great un, or instance: tracing a route on a map according to spoken instructions, draw a picture rom a description students hear.

ther activities may be: 3#abelling

3TrueCalse 3gap lling

3multiple choice Buestions 3spotting mistakes

0D& !T3#I!T<=I=> 65TI?ITI<!

ost3listening activities can be thought as a ollow3up work. !ome o this kind o activities may be: 3chart completion

3e"tending list 3seBuencing

3matching with a reading te"t 3summarising

3identiying relationships between speakers

3role playCsimulation 3dictation

3composition 3ral summary

(3)

30D&

 The aim o this stage should be the reEection on the language passage.

1.).

Spe$(ing: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to *o"ni*$te in

spee*h

ne o the main aims o rimary <ducation in @oreign #anguages consits in motivating our pupils towards english learning.

It is useul to begin an <nglish programme by teaching children vocabulary or basic concepts, aspects such as greetings, classroom vocabulary, colours, conversational routines... and we can also use <nglish words in !panish to show them how they already know a lot.

4y hearing this language over and over again, our pupils will be able to make utterances in <nglish.  To make this happen we have to prepare our oral lessons careully.

1.).1. O'$l lesson st$ges $nd $*tivities

6n oral lesson which aims to teach new items is oten divided into three stages, commonly known as the presentation satage, the practice stage and the production stage. This may be rounded up with some warming3up, introductory activities and with a nal review.

 The warm3up take the orm o an inormal chat aimed at building up and maintaining rapport with our pupils. It could include writing the date on the blackboard, taking the register... it may also include several Buestions to consolidate the lessons aim.

 The p'esent$tion st$ge main aim is to present the meaning and orm o the new language in such a waythat pupils will realise the revelance and usseulnesso the new language items. In order to do so we must try to provide a clear, motivating, natural and relevant conte"t or the item. ur main role is inormant and we must bear in mind what inormation to give, when and how.

6ter new language has been presented in a meangul conte"t, and some imitation and repetition been carried out, our pupils must be given ample opportunity to practise these items or themselves, they need:

15 P'$*ti*e: they must be allowed to used the newly acBuired items. There is no substitute or this, so in large classes, group or pair work will be essential to enable every single pupil to practise.

)5 O'$l p'$*ti*e: as ar as possible they should not be reering to a written te"t.

+5 /"ided o'$l p'$*ti*e: we must encourage our pupils that they have something to say.

25 0e$ng!"l o'$l p'$*ti*e: drills must not always be mechanical.

65 E,tensive o'$l p'$*ti*e: the more, te better

 These points can be achived trough diferent activities: 3reading aloud

3guessing drills

3inormation gaps procedures

3mechanical drills

3open3ended responses 6 typical p'$*ti*e st$ge might thereore ollow this pattern:

3one or two brie drills to allow practice with the orm o language.

3one or two controlled communicative activities to consolidate the meaning.

6t the p'od"*tion s$t$ge our pupils use the language in a reer, more creative ways and check how much they have learned. We will generally not interere with our pupils$ production so it is important that they should have clear instructions or purposeul tasks. The most common activities include:

3games

3discourse chain

3inormation and opinion gaps

3role plays

3discussions 0...&  The aim o all this is to develop our pupils$ ability to speak in <nglish.

).WRITTEN WORD

).1. Re$ding: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to 'e$d- "nde'st$nd $nd

'espond to 4'itten l$ng"$ge

 There are diferent purposes or reading, we could classiy them in the ollowing categories:

%& Re$ding !o' $*tion: it means to enable us to perorm an activity better: public signs, product labels and intructions, bills, guides, menus...

'& Re$ding !o' in!o'$tion: through the act o reading we acBuired culture: newspapers, maga-ines, non3ction books, te"t books...

(& Re$ding !o' ente't$ient: reading in this case give us pleasure or rela"ation: comics, ction books, poetry and drama, ms subtitles...

ur curriculum does not place too many reading demands on our pupils: everything they might read must be related to their needs and interests. #ittle by little, we must present our pupils with longer te"ts based on words they orally know. ;eading strategies are similar to listening strategies as they both are receptive skills.

=ow we are going to see a basic model or the teaching o the receptive skills.

).1.1. 7 %$si* odel !o' the te$*hing o! the 'e*eptive s(ills

+iferent activities can be used to develop these skills. They are commonly divided into three categories 06lburBuerBue, %11F&:

(4)

3pre3reading 3while3reading 3post3reading

 The rst stage will have the main purpose o generating the interest to read the chosen te"t, the second will be the proper reading and the third will have the aim o putting some inormation provided by the te"t into the wider conte"t o students$ knowledge.

).1.). Re$ding $*tivities

 The most common activities that we may use with our pupils are: 3playing games 0bingo, dominoes, spot the diference&

3arrange jumble sentences or paragraphs 3matching pictures to speech bubbles 3seBuencing

3skimming or gist: suggesting a title, matching titles and te"ts... 3scanning or especic inormation: underlying, team work...

).). W'iting: the developent o! p"pils# $%ilit& to *o"ni*$te in 4'iting

).).1. W'iting $*tivities

In the early stage o learning <nglish, the pupils will generally write very litle. They are most likely to be engaged in some orm o guided copying to produce words or sentences.

Initial guided writing activities may be oriented at both wor and sentence level. 6t word3level we may ng 04rewster, %11'&:

3making lists

3working out anagrams

3matching pictures or diagrams

3making personal dictionaries 3completing crosswords

3casiying words under headings 6t sentence level:

3writing captions or pictures

3writing sentences based on surveys or Buestionaries

3matching sentences and copying

3correcting mistakes in written sentences 3writing speech bubbles or cartoons 3seBuencing sentences and copying 3answering Buestions

6ter this we should encourage our pupils to produce writing, it should take the orm o letters, invitations or cards, which are easily related to our pupils$ e"periences and needs.

).).). W'iting s(ills

6 summary o writing skills should have ve headings 0Aathews, %11%&: 3graphic skills

3stylistic skills

3organisational skills 3grammatical skills 3rethorical skills

15 /'$phi* s(ills: include writing graphemes, spelling, punctual and capitali-ation and ormat.

)5 St&listi* s(ills: reer to our pupils$ ability to e"press precise meaning in a variety o styles or registers.

+5 O'g$nis$tion$l s(ills: involve the seBuencing o ideas as well as the ability to reject irrelevant inormation and summari-e relevant points.

25 /'$$ti*$l s(ills: reer to our pupils$ ability to use successully a variety o sentence patterns and constructions.

65 Retho'i*$l s(ills: reer to pupilsGability to use cohesion devices in order to link parts o the te"t into logically related sentences.

6ll these skills may be reached at by means o the activities metiones beore.

!kills are not isolated entities, in act they are interconnected and should normally treated as such in the classroom. That is the topic we estudy ne"t: the integration o skills.

+. INTE/R7TIN/ THE SKILLS

Integration o skills can be dened as the process by means o which a series o activities o tasks use any combination o the our linguistic skills.

+.1. Re$son !o' integ'$ting the s(ills

5arol ;ead 0%11%& nds two main reasons or integrating skills:

3to practice and e"tend the pupils$ use o a particular language item.

3to develop the pupils$ ability in two or more skills within a constant conte"t.

 Though many combinations o the our skills are theoretically possible some acts must be highlighted:

3listening will normally precede speaking and reading writing. 3writing is normally nal in the seBuence.

+.). Integ'$tion $dv$nt$ges

 There are a number o important advantages in skill integration:

15*ontin"it&: It leads to continuity because activities are not perormed in isolation but rather in a closely related way.

(5)

)5inp"t %e!o'e o"tp"t: one activity$s input will provide with the language and, hopeully, motivation or ne"t activity output.

+5'e$lis: 6 realistic, communicative ramework cannot be based in isolated skill work.

25$pp'op'i$teness: #anguage which is used in diferent opportunities and modes is normally more appropriate.

65v$'iet&: 6ctivities involving the our skills are more varied and thus oster motivation.

85'e*&*ling: Integration clearly allows or recycling and revision o language.

95*onden*e: it gives condence to the pupil because he can compensate his weaknesses in one skill with his strengths in other.

!umming it up we can say that skill integration will naturally lead to the acBuisition o  communicative competence.

2.CO00UNIC7TIE CO0PETENCE

5homsky dened language as Ha set o sentences, each nite in length and constructed out o a nite set o elements. /owever, /ymes thought that 5homsky had missed out some very important inormation: the rules o use.

/ymes distinguished our aspects o this competence: 3!ystematic potential

36ppropriacy 3ccurrence 3@easibility

%& S&ste$ti* potenti$l: means that a native speaker possesses a system than has potential or creating a lot o language.

'& 7pp'op'i$*&: means that the native speaker knows what language is appropriate in a given situation. 6ll the ollowing have been considered important elements o appropiacy:

%&articipants '&!ocial relationships (&!etting )&!cene *&@orm &Topic 8&urpose 2&9ey 1&>enre %F&5hannel %%&5ode %'&Interaction norms %(&Interpretation norms

(& O**"''en*e: means that the native speaker knows how oten something is said in the language and act accordingly.

)& 3e$si%ilit&: means that the native speaker knows whether something is possible in the language.

 These our categories have been adapted or teaching purposes. Thus, the act %FFC%11%, o %)  June 04< '* June&, which establishes the teaching reBuirements or rimary <ducation nationwide,

sees communicative competence or oreign language learners as comprising ve subcompetences: %& /'$$' *opeten*e: the ability to put into practice the linguistic units according to the

rules o use established in the linguistic system.

'& Dis*o"'se *opeten*e: the ability to use diferent types o discourse and organi-e them according to the communicative situation and the speakers involved in it.

(& So*ioling"isti* *opeten*e: the ability to adeBuate the speech to the specic conte"t o  determined linguistic community.

)& St'$tegi* *opeten*e: the ability to dene, correct or in general, make adjustments in the course o the communicative situation.

*& So*io*"lt"'$l *opeten*e: this competence has to be understood as a certain awareness o the social and cultural conte"t in which the oreign language is used.

References

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