Changing Patterns in Foreign Language Programs: Report on the Illinois Conference on Foreign Languages in Junior and Community Colleges

1974 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 181
Author(s):  
Rosemary Hyde Thomas ◽  
Wilga M. Rivers ◽  
Louise H. Allen ◽  
Sandra J. Savignon ◽  
Richard T. Scanlan
Author(s):  
Liudmila Konyakhina ◽  
◽  
Lora Yakovleva ◽  

The article discusses a number of issues related to developing the linguistic persona and intercultural competency and focuses on educational ideas, strategies, technologies, and practices that embody intercultural approaches to foreign language education. To ensure the high quality of foreign language education, our priorities must include the development of competences in the area of professional communication in foreign languages. In that regard, the article identifies pedagogical conditions conducive to fostering the socio-cultural competence and the successful development of the learner’s linguistic persona. The authors present mechanisms of implementing the said pedagogical conditions in the following areas: a) developing communication skills and competencies of foreign language instructors; b) modeling situations with communication barriers in diverse ethnocultural environments; c) acquiring and selecting ethnocultural information; d) integrating in-class and out-of-class activities in a foreign language; and e) establishing a good rapport between an instructor and her students. The authors go on to describe the methodological basis for designing the content of foreign language programs, identify optimal approaches to teaching and learning foreign languages, and reflect on the context of the intercultural paradigm in university-level foreign language education.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kari Soriano Salkjelsvik

SUMMARY This article is a reflection on the possibilities that the concept of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL), can provide for the teaching of foreign language programs at the university level, using as an example the programs of Hispanic studies in Norway. After reviewing the concept of CLIL, and placing it in the context of Hispanic studies, the article investigates its practical, political, and educational applications. It is argued that integrating skills and content fully at the university level is a task that depends on specific administrative infrastructures, as well as on methodological resources that can make this integration an object of study and reflection. In this context, this work aims to promote the creation of new teaching proposals for university programs of foreign languages ​​that respond to the challenges and demands that are currently facing the humanities. RESUMEN Este artículo se concibe como una reflexión sobre las posibilidades que el concepto de Aprendizaje integrado de contenido y lengua (AICLE), puede aportar para la enseñanza los programas de lenguas extranjeras en las universidades, utilizando como ejemplo los programas de estudios hispánicos en Noruega. Tras revisar el concepto de CLIL, y situarlo en el contexto de los estudios hispánicos, el artículo indaga sobre su aplicación práctica y político-educativa.  Se arguye que integrar destrezas y contenidos plenamente a nivel universitario es una tarea que depende de infraestructuras administrativas específicas, así como de recursos metodológicos que hagan de dicha integración un objeto de estudio y reflexión. En este sentido, este trabajo quiere impulsar la creación de nuevas propuestas docentes para los programas universitarios de lenguas extranjeras que respondan a los retos y exigencias a los que actualmente se están enfrentando las humanidades.


2000 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 290-291
Author(s):  
Thomas Lovik

As indicated by the title of this volume, this collection of public speeches, conference presentations, and practical tips for the elementary foreign language classroom truly celebrates the vibrancy and mission exhibited by many teachers of foreign languages at the elementary level. The designation FLES* (pronounced “flestar”) has been created by Lipton as an “overall term for all types of elementary school foreign language programs” (p. 1), including sequential FLES (Foreign Language in the Elementary School), FLEX (Foreign Language Exploratory), and Immersion. According to Lipton, the term “sequential FLES” subsumes the model usually referred to as FLES.


Author(s):  
Inga Aksenova

Teaching a foreign language is aimed at the formation of foreign language communicative competence. The purpose of foreign language teaching is the development of speech skills. The methodology of foreign languages teaching continuously searches for new forms of work that increase the productivity of the process and have a large linguodidactic potential. For many years teachers has used one type of work at foreign languages lessons – a dictation. Dictogloss is dicta-tion with more ambitious goals, develop not only writing, but also speaking, reading, listening. The analysis of the Model Foreign Language Programs for Schools shows that it is necessary to develop exercises that help in the shortest possible time to develop as many speech skills as possi-ble, increasing the productivity of the process of foreign language teaching. So we study a number of research of both Russian and foreign authors on dictogloss and derive on their basis the dictogloss technique in stages and a variety of this type of work. We present: 1) the definition of dictogloss; 2) the main stages of its implementation (preparation, dictation, processing, analysis and correction); 3) the dictogloss types; 4) the great linguodidactic potential of the dictogloss, ex-pressed in the application of students' lexical and grammatical not separately, but in a complex for solving practical speech tasks.


1993 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 377
Author(s):  
Diane F. Ging ◽  
Gladys C. Lipton

2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-60
Author(s):  
Noriko Iwashita ◽  
Robyn Spence-Brown

Abstract Foreign language programs in schools have a strong focus on the development of communicative language ability and, increasingly, assessment tasks are designed to capture communicative abilities required for real-world situations. In communicative test tasks, sociolinguistic and discourse components, which are beyond grammatical accuracy, target the abilities required to produce integrated texts that fulfil their communicative purposes. However, the majority of the work on assessment of communicative abilities has been carried out in the context of academic English, and less is known about the abilities of secondary students in foreign language teaching situations. This study examines the outcomes of an integrated writing task designed as part of formal year 12 assessment in Japanese as a second language. It seeks to elucidate the features which differentiate students at higher and lower levels of competence, and, through a focus on content and how it is presented, it demonstrates how these aspects of competence can be observed in responses to the task. The study contributes to our understanding of the nature of communicative abilities and their assessment in a secondary education context, and it also sheds light on aspects of competence which might benefit from more targeted teaching in such settings.


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marianne Nikolov ◽  
Veronika Timpe-Laughlin

AbstractGiven the exponential growth in the popularity of early foreign language programs, coupled with an emphasis of evidence-based instruction, assessing young learners’ (YLs) foreign language abilities has moved to center stage. This article canvasses how the field of assessing young learners of foreign languages has evolved over the past two decades. The review offers insights into how and why the field has developed, how constructs have been defined and operationalized, what language proficiency frameworks have been used, why children were assessed, what aspects of their foreign language proficiency have been assessed, who was involved in the assessment, and how the results have been used. By surveying trends in foreign language (FL) and content-based language learning programs involving children between the ages of 3 and 14, the article highlights research into assessment of and for learning, and critically discusses areas such as large-scale assessments and proficiency examinations, comparative and experimental studies, the impact of assessment, teachers’ beliefs and assessment practices, young learners’ test-taking strategies, age-appropriate tasks, alternative and technology-mediated assessment, as well as game-based assessments. The final section of the article highlights where more research is needed, thus outlining potential future directions for the field.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 640
Author(s):  
Nguyễn Ngọc Lưu Ly

For foreign language education in Vietnam, passive teaching and learning with limited materials is thought to be associated with low achievement. This paper discusses the design and implementation of an innovative approach to guide students to build a Fun Reading Corner in foreign language using an autonomous-based approach in a Vietnam university. Survey data were collected before and after the project and from a focus group’s writing samples. The findings indicated that students’attitudes towards reading in French changed and their personal qualities and skills improved during the course. The paper concludes by explaining the significance of the results and implications for other Vietnamese foreign language programs.


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