25519388 communicative competence in second language teaching

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  • 8/13/2019 25519388 Communicative Competence in Second Language Teaching

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    COMMUNICATIVE COMPETENCE IN SECOND LANGUAGE TEACHING

    Rizka Safriyani

    A. Introduction

    Second language acquisition is the process by which people learn a second

    language in addition to their native language. Those who can communicate

    successfully can be considered as the one who has commnunicative competence.

    Communicative competence is the ability to interact well with others.

    Communication takes place in an infinitive variety of situations, and success in a

    particular role depends on ones understanding of the context and on prior experience

    of a similar kind. It requires making appropriate choices of register and style in terms

    of the situation and other participants.

    Hence, communicative competence deals with linguistic terms which refers to

    second languages learner ability. It does not only refer to a learners ability to apply

    and use grammatical rules, but also to form correct utterances, and know how to use

    these utterances appropriately and it implies to the communicative approach in

    language teaching.

    B. The Characteristics of Communicative Competence

    Savignon (1883: 8-9) mentions that there are five characteristics of communicative

    competence and those characteristics are:

    1. Communicative competence is dynamic rather than static concept. It depends onthe negotiation of meaning between two or more persons who share to some

    degree the same symbolic system.

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    2. Communicative competence applies to both written and spoken language, as wellas too many other symbolic systems.

    3. Communicative competence is context specific. Communication takes place in aninfinitive variety of situations, and success in a particular role depends on ones

    understanding of the context and on prior experience of a similar kind.

    4. Competence is defined as a presumed underlying ability, and performance as theovert manifestation of that ability. Competence is what one knows. Performance

    is what one does.

    5.

    Communicative competence is relative, not absolute, and depends on the

    cooperation of all the participants involved. It makes sense, then, to speak of

    degrees of communicative competence.

    C. Areas of Communicative Competence

    Communicative competence is a broad term that involves not only the structural

    features of language, but also its social, pragmatic and contextual characteristics.

    Therefore, it is necessary to understand communicative competence as the sum of a

    series of competences (Jaimes, 2006). There are four areas of communicative

    competence, they are:

    1. Grammatical competenceIt refers to the ability of speakers in using the different functioning rules

    of the system of their language or the linguistic code: the mastery of second

    language phonological and lexicogrammatical rules and the rules of sentence

    formation. It includes:

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    Phonetics : Pronunciation Morphology : Word function and inflection Syntax :Structure of language Lexis : Vocabulary and semantics

    The competence in grammar can be seen from the ability to express and

    interpret literal meaning of their utterances (for examples: vocabulary, word and

    sentence meaning, construction of grammatical sentences, correct spelling, etc.).

    2.

    Sociolinguistic competence

    It refers to the ability of speakers in producing sentences according to the

    communicative situation. Speakers (usually) know when, where, and whom to

    say things. Here, the mastery of socio-cultural rules of appropriate use of second

    language can be seen from how utterances are produced and understood in

    different sociolinguistic contexts (for example: understanding of speech act

    conventions, the use of a language to signal social relationships, etc.).

    3. Discourse competenceIt refers to the ability of speakers to use the different types of discourse.

    Usually language users know what is being referred to in different contexts, i.e.

    they distinguish between new and old information, and are able to determine the

    discourse topics. For instance, speakers know when a "he" refers to "John" or to

    "the child" according to the text context in the sentence: John went to the park,

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    and he found a child who was sick. The young boy was crying because he

    didnt know where his mother was.

    It also deals with the mastery of rules concerning cohesion and coherence

    of various kinds of discourse in second language (for example: use of

    appropriate pronouns, synonyms, conjunctions, substitution, repetition, etc.).

    4. Strategic competenceIt refers to the knowledge speakers have to maintain communication.

    Therefore, this competence accounts for the strategies language users have to be

    understood, and to understand others. Gestures, expressions, mimics and

    intonation are among others some of the most strategies used. The mastery of

    verbal and non-verbal communication strategies in second language used when

    attempting to compensate for deficiencies in the grammatical and sociolinguistic

    competence or to enhance the effectiveness of communication (for examples: how

    to address others when uncertain of their relative social status, slow speech for

    rhetorical effect, etc.).

    Furthermore, Bachman proposes a design in components of communicative

    language ability in communicative language use (1990: 85). It can be figured out below:

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    among many possible options on wording, phrasing, and other productive and receptive

    means for negotiating meaning. It can be seen in the following figure:

    Figure 2: Components Of Communicative Language Ability

    Brown (1994a: 245) views Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) as an

    approach (that is, a theoretical position about the nature of language and of language

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    teaching), rather than a specific method of teaching. He also describes four

    underlying characteristics in defining CLT in a second language classroom:

    1. Focus in a classroom should be on all of the components ofcommunicative competence of which grammatical or linguistic

    competence is just part.

    2. Classroom activities should be designed to engage students in thepragmatic, authentic, and functional use of language for meaningful

    purposes.

    3.

    Both fluency and accuracy should be considered equally important in

    second language learning classroom. And they are complementary.

    4. Students have to use their target language, productively and receptively, inunrehearsed contexts under proper guidance, but not under the control of a

    teacher.

    Moreover, students success in acquiring communicative competence in their

    target language is that easy. Here are some teaching learning activities which can be

    applied in the second language classroom so that the communicative competence still

    can be maintained:

    1. Use of Audiovisual Recordings,Second language learners can get benefit from viewing and reviewing

    audiovisual recordings such as videotapes and visual hypermedia software of their

    own communicative interactions and model interactions by native speakers. In

    learning how to make requests, for example, the students can not only participate in,

    say, pair work as part of their function-building exercise, but also film their actual

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    performance to collect data for analysis. The data ideally cover a wide range of

    situations in which they make or receive requests, in terms of social status and role of

    interlocutors, degree of imposition internal to the act of the request being made, and

    so on. Through close examination of their recordings and introspection, the students

    will have a chance to reflect on what they said to make requests (grammatical

    competence).

    To measure the success of the students performance, the teacher can, then, play

    a video clip that shows model performance by native speakers of the target language,

    in order for them to see how different or similar their communicative performance of

    requests is, when contrasted with how native speakers execute the same act. Here, the

    students can both review their grammatical precision in use and learn about the socio-

    cultural appropriateness of the communicative event. Moreover, the very nature of the

    audiovisual material enables the students to see and analyze their own and native

    speakers nonverbal communication as well. It is, thus, advisable that the students

    study their own communicative experience and the nature and characteristics of social

    interaction in their target language so as to develop their L2 sociolinguistic

    competence (Erickson, 1996).

    2. Role-playRole play is an effective way to develop students communicative competence,

    especially the sociolinguistic and strategic competence. It also helps the students

    acquire what Saville-Troike (1996) describes as interactional knowledge. Learning a

    language for a wide range of social and expressive functions requires more than just

    learning word- and sentence-formation, correct pronunciation, and orthography;

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    rather, one learns a system of use whose rules and norms are an integral part of

    culture (Schiffrin, 1996: 323).

    Usually, role-plays are properly framed, yet open-ended, bilateral, interactive,

    and above all, highly contextualized in nature. However, Clark (1987),

    acknowledging the value of role-plays in a foreign language classroom, cautions us

    that a form of role-play in which the students simply act out a predetermined script

    made by someone else would result in mere memorization of stereotypical

    expressions that may or may not have real-life application in actual communicative

    exchange. Instead, the teacher must structure his or her role-plays in a way that their

    students engage in role-making and role-negotiating as they interact.

    3. Speech ActThe speech act, or performative use of language, is an area that many

    Japanese students have trouble dealing with. It is because speech acts are generally

    difficult for second language learners to realize in terms of grammar and vocabulary,

    formulas and conventionalized expressions, and socio-cultural difference between

    their first and second language, and because in many cases Japanese students are not

    taught explicitly in the classroom how to signal their intent in performing an

    illocutionary act, beyond the semantic meanings of syntactic structures.

    Below is an example of communicative failure in an act of apology that I have

    come across:

    Student A : I need the notebook I lent you. do you have it now?

    Student B : Im sorry. Im sorry. I was bad. Im sorry. Can you excuse me?

    Student A : Well,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

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    All this indicates that the students do not necessarily pick up complex speech behavior

    and sociocultural strategies and sociolinguistic forms. Therefore, explicit teaching of

    speech act strategies will be needed for students to gain illocutionary competence

    (Cohen, 1996).

    4. Interactive Language InstructionInteractive language instruction involves the teacher and learners engaging in

    activities that create conditions that foster language use, which lead to further

    language development. First and foremost, the teacher is the initiator of interaction.

    That does not mean that the teacher is always in control of the discourse, such as in

    models where the teacher initiates, the students respond, and the teacher provides

    feedback. It means that the teacher is responsible for providing opportunities for

    interaction in which learners control the topics and discourse (Brown, 2001; Ellis,

    1999).

    Interactive language instruction may be new for some learners. Learners may

    have expectations of how instruction should proceed based on their experience with

    school-based education and previous language instruction. For these reasons,

    discussing with learners the benefits of and the rationale for having them interact with

    each other during class time, in meaningful discourse, is difficult but important.

    Teachers can begin the discussion by brainstorming with learners the things they do

    that help them learn English. Teachers can introduce the phrase use it or lose it! and

    learners can be asked to talk about what it means.

    The classroom setup can hinder or enhance interaction opportunities. If the desks

    are in neat rows with every one facing the chalk board and the teacher, learner-to-

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    learner interactions are more difficult to initiate. Round tables, desks arranged in

    small groups, or even a semicircle of desks help make interactive tasks easier.

    E.Conclusion

    Communicative competence have been defined and discussed in many different

    ways by language scholars of different fields. With the change of focus from

    grammar to communicative approach, second language teachers and researchers can

    see the notion of the communicative competence within language learning. Here,

    Communicative competence has come to play an important role in the field

    pedagogic.

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    References

    Brown, H. D. (1994a). Principles of Language Learning and Teaching. New Jersey:Prentice Hall Regents

    Brown, H. D. (1994b). Teaching by Principles. An Interactive Approach to LanguagePedagogy . New Jersey: Prentice Hall Regents.

    Savignon, Sandra J. 1983. Communicative Competence: Theory and Classroom Practice.Massachucets: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company

    Swain, M. (1985). Communicative competence: some roles of comprehensible input and

    comprehensible output in its development. In S. M. Gass and C. G. Madden, eds.Input in Second Language Acquisition . Rowley, MA: Newbury House.

    About the writer

    Rizka Safriyani is an English teacher of SMA YPPI-II Surabaya. She was born on

    September 14th

    1984. She has been teaching English for three years. She graduated from

    the undergraduate program (S1) of The State University of Surabaya (UNESA) majoringEnglish Literature on 2006. Next, she continued her study at graduate program (S2) of

    The State University of Surabaya (UNESA) majoring Education of Language and

    Literature and she graduated on 2009.

    Details:

    Full Name : Rizka SafriyaniAddress : Kencanasari Timur xx / 19 Surabaya

    Contact Number : +6285730122874 / 03177474818

    Email : [email protected] : SMA YPPI-II Surabaya

    The purpose of

    Paper : Implementing the communicative approach to the secondlanguage teaching