Content Based, Task-Based, and Participatory Approaches
Content Based, Task-Based, and Participatory Approaches
AND PARTICIPATORY
APPROACHES
CONTENTS
Introduction
Content-based instruction
Task-based instruction
Participatory approach
INTRODUCTION
CONTENT-BASED INSTRUCTION
CONTENT-BASED INSTRUCTION
CONTENT-BASED INSTRUCTION
PRINCIPLES
TASK-BASED INSTRUCTION
BACKGROUND
TASK-BASED INSTRUCTION
Prabhu (1987) identified three types of tasks in TBI:
Information-gap activity
Involves the exchange of information among participants in order to
complete a task
Opinion-gap activity
Requires students to give their personal preferences, feelings, or
attitudes in order to complete a task
Reasoning-gap activity
Requires Ss to derive some new information by inferring it from
information they have been given
TASK-BASED INSTRUCTION
PRINCIPLES
Purpose and the outcome of the class activites are clear
Pre-task help Ss to see the logic in what they are asked to do
Teacher uses whatever language is necessary
The main task is realised by Ss working in groups
Interaction is both teacher-student and student-student
Ss feel more comfortable working on their own
Language meaning is in focus rather than language forms
All four skills are employed
L2 is used throughout the class
Evaluation is based on the content
PARTICIPATORY APPROACH
BACKGROUND
PARTICIPATORY APPROACH
PRINCIPLES
What happens in the classroom should be connected with what
happens outside that is relevant to Ss
The curriculum is not predetermined
Education is most effective when it is experience-centered
When jointly constructed, knowledge becomes a tool to Ss to voice
their problems
Focus on linguistic forms occurs within the focus on content
Ss produce their own materials to become texts for other Ss
Ss evaluate their own learning and increasingly direct themselves
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES