Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Series Editors' Preface
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Task-based language teaching in a nutshell
- Chapter 2 From needs to tasks: Language learning needs in a task-based approach
- Chapter 3 Tasks for absolute beginners and beyond: Developing and sequencing tasks at basic proficiency levels
- Chapter 4 Developing language tasks for primary and secondary education
- Chapter 5 Task-based language teaching in science education and vocational training
- Chapter 6 Task-based language teaching and ICT: Developing and assessing interactive multimedia for task-based language teaching
- Chapter 7 Developing and introducing task-based language tests
- Chapter 8 The role of the teacher in task-based language teaching
- Chapter 9 A box full of feelings: Promoting infants' second language acquisition all day long
- Chapter 10 Training teachers: Task-based as well?
- References
- Subject Index
- Name Index
Chapter 1 - Introduction: Task-based language teaching in a nutshell
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Series Editors' Preface
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Task-based language teaching in a nutshell
- Chapter 2 From needs to tasks: Language learning needs in a task-based approach
- Chapter 3 Tasks for absolute beginners and beyond: Developing and sequencing tasks at basic proficiency levels
- Chapter 4 Developing language tasks for primary and secondary education
- Chapter 5 Task-based language teaching in science education and vocational training
- Chapter 6 Task-based language teaching and ICT: Developing and assessing interactive multimedia for task-based language teaching
- Chapter 7 Developing and introducing task-based language tests
- Chapter 8 The role of the teacher in task-based language teaching
- Chapter 9 A box full of feelings: Promoting infants' second language acquisition all day long
- Chapter 10 Training teachers: Task-based as well?
- References
- Subject Index
- Name Index
Summary
Introduction
For the past 20 years, task-based language teaching (TBLT) has attracted the attention of second language acquisition (SLA) researchers, curriculum developers, educationalists, teacher trainers and language teachers worldwide. To a great extent, the introduction of TBLT into the world of language education has been a ‘top-down’ process. The term was coined, and the concept developed, by SLA researchers and language educators, largely in reaction to empirical accounts of teacher-dominated, form-oriented second language classroom practice (Long & Norris, 2000). In their seminal writings, Long (1985) and Prabhu (1987), among others, supported an approach to language education in which students are given functional tasks that invite them to focus primarily on meaning exchange and to use language for real-world, non-linguistic purposes. Twenty years later, we have reached the stage where volumes that synthesize what we know about how TBLT can promote language learning are being published (Bygate et al., 2001; Ellis, 2003; Lee, 2000; Nunan, 2005).
However, much of the research concerning TBLT has been conducted under laboratory conditions or in tightly controlled settings. Furthermore, most of the research has been psycholinguistic in nature, inspired by a desire to elaborate our knowledge of how people acquire a second language. In SLA research, tasks have been widely used as vehicles to elicit language production, interaction, negotiation of meaning, processing of input and focus on form, all of which are believed to foster second language acquisition.
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- Task-Based Language EducationFrom Theory to Practice, pp. 1 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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