Micro and Macro Skills
Micro and Macro Skills
Microskills
1. Discriminate among the distinctive sounds of English
2. Retain chunks of language of different lengths in short-term memory
3. Recognize English stress patterns, words In stressed and unstressed positions, rhythmic structure, intonation contours, and their role in signaling information
4. Recognize reduced forms of words
5. Distinguish word boundaries, recognize a core of words, and interpret word order patterns and their significance
6. Process speech at different rates of delivery
7. Process speech containing pauses, errors, corrections, and other performance variables
8. Recognize grammatical word classes (nouns, verbs, etc.), systems (e.g., tense, agreement, pluralization), patterns, rules, and elliptical forms
9. Detect sentence constituents and distinguish between major and minor constituents
10. Recognize that a particular meaning may be expressed in different grammatical forms
11. Recognize cohesive devices in spoken discourse
Macroskills
12. Recognize the communicative functions of utterances, according to situations, participants, goals
13. Infer situations, participants, goals using real-world knowledge
14. From events and ideas described, predict outcomes, infer links and connections between events, deduce causes and effects, and detect such information,
generalization, and exemplification
15. Distinguish between literal and implied meanings
16. Use facial, kinesic, body language, and other nonverbal clues to decipher meanings
17. Develop and use a battery of listening strategies, such as detecting key words, guessing the meaning of words from context, appealing for help, and
signaling comprehension thereof
(Brown and Abeywickrama, 2010)
MICRO– AND MACRO SKILLS OF SPEAKING
Microskills
Macroskills
12. Appropriately accomplish communicative functions according to situations, participants, and goals
13. Use appropriate styles, registers, implicature, redundancies, pragmatic conventions, conversation rules, floor-keeping and –yielding, interrupting, and other
sociolinguistic features in face-to-face conversations
14. Convey links and connections between event and communicate such relations as focal and peripheral ideas, events and feelings, new information and given
information, generalization and exemplification
15. Convey facial features, kinesics, body language, and other nonverbal cues along with verbal language
16. Develop and use a battery of speaking strategies, such as emphasizing key words, rephrasing, providing a context for interpreting the meaning of words,
appealing for help, and accurately assessing how well your interlocutor is understanding you
(Brown and Abeywickrama, 2010)
MICRO- AND MACRO SKILLS OF READING
Microskills
1. Discriminate among the distinctive graphemes (letters or letter combinations that produce a phoneme) and orthographic patterns of English
2. Retain chunks of language of different lengths in short-term memory
3. Process writing at an efficient rate of speed to suit the purpose
4. Recognize a core of words and interpret word order patterns and their significance
5. Recognize grammatical word classes (nouns, verbs, etc.), systems (e.g., tense, agreement, pluralization), patterns, rules, and elliptical forms
6. Recognize that a particular meaning may be expressed in different grammatical forms
7. Recognize cohesive devices in written discourse and their role in signaling the relationship between and among clauses
Macroskills
8. Recognize the rhetorical conventions of written discourse and their significance for interpretation
9. Recognize the communicative functions of written texts, according to form and purpose
10. Infer context that is not explicit by activating schemata (using background knowledge)
11. From described events, ideas, etc., infer links and connections between events, deduce causes and effects, and detect such relations as main idea,
supporting idea, new information, given information, generalization, and exemplification
12. Distinguish between literal and implied meanings
13. Detect culturally specific references and interpret them in a context of appropriate cultural schemata
14. Develop and use a battery of reading strategies, such as scanning and skimming, detecting discourse markers, guessing the meaning of words from context,
and activating schemata for the interpretation of texts
(Brown and Abeywickrama, 2010)
MICRO-AND MACRO SKILLS OF WRITING
Microskills
Macroskills
Note: Refer to the articles in our sessions on Good Practices in Assessing the Four Skills