8) Oral & Written Interpersonal Communication Flashcards
Describe the ACTFL Rating Scale for speaking at these levels:
- novice
- intermediate
- advanced
- superior
1) NOVICE : can communicate minimally w/formulaic and rote utterances, lists and phrases
2) INTERMEDIATE: can create w/lang, ask/answer simple questions on familiar topics, and handle a simple situation or transaction
3) ADVANCED: can narrate and describe in all major time frames, and handle a situation with a complication
4) SUPERIOR: can support opinion, hypothesize, discuss topics concretely and abstractly, and handle a linguistically unfamiliar situation
What does it mean to be “proficient” in a language?
the ability to use language to perform global tasks or language functions within a variety of contexts/content areas, with a given degree of accuracy, and by means of specific text types.
Explain “low,” “mid,” and “high” sub-levels within the ACTFL speaking proficiency levels.
1) LOW: use linguistic energy to sustain requirements; show less fluency/accuracy; more lapses in vocab; more self-correction
2) MID: mix of quantity (how much can say) and/or quality (efficiency and effectiveness with which message is communicated), and some degree of features of the next level
3) HIGH: communicate w/confidence, capable of functioning for at list half of the time at the next level but can’t sustain it w/out difficulty or intermittent lapses
What kind of speaking practice do students need at the “NOVICE” ACTFL speaking level?
acquiring concrete vocabulary in context through activities such as TPR to acquire and retain it well; using contextualized vocabulary in short conversations and oral presentations; developing a personalized vocabulary
What kind of speaking practice do students need at the “INTERMEDIATE” ACTFL speaking level?
engaging in spontaneous conversations on familiar topics related to self and personal environment, as well as work and/or school; asking questions; speaking in complex sentences (with dependent clauses); participating in simple survival situations (eg: making invitations, asking for directions, ordering a meal); negotiating meaning in conversations; interpreting what a conversational partner says
What kind of speaking practice do students need at the “ADVANCED” ACTFL speaking level?
conversing in a participatory manner; speaking in paragraphs (or extended utterances) using connector words such as adverbial expressions, subordinating conjunctions, and ordinal numbers (eg: therefore, although, before/after, first/second, etc.); narrating and describing in present, past, future; participating in situations with unanticipated complications (eg: losing one’s luggage, reporting a car accident)
What kind of speaking practice do students need at the “SUPERIOR” ACTFL speaking level?
discussing topics concretely and abstractly; supporting and defending an opinion through development of a logical argument, hypotheses and extended discourse; circumlocuting in the absence of specific words/expressions; conversing in linguistically unfamiliar situations
Explain the difference between “natural discourse” and “traditional instructional discourse.”
1) INSTRUCTIONAL: teacher/student act out institutional roles; tasks are concerned with transmission/reception of info and are teacher-controlled; focus on knowledge as a product and accuracy
2) NATURAL: more fluid roles established through interaction; tasks that encourage equal participation in the negotiation of meaning; focus on the interactional process itself and on meaning
What makes “interpersonal communication” interpersonal?
- 2+ speakers engaged in convo and exchange of info
- face to face/phone; spontaneous; not scripted/read/memorized
- meaningful; has objective/reason for communicating
- “info gap”–needs info/doesn’t know how other will respond
- since spontaneous, must listen to and interpret other speaker
- negotiate meaning (asking for repetition, clarification, confirmation)
- natural convos have pauses, repetition, restatement,self-correction
- use gestures/circumlocution to make self clear or w/unknown word
Explain the term “Willingness to Communicate,” or “WTC.”
the probability of speaking in the TL when free to do so
major factors: motivation and anxiety
brings together: motivational processes with communicative competencies and perceived self-confidence
When looking at WTC, explain the difference between “situational influences” and “enduring influences.”
1) SITUATIONAL: those that are transient and unique to the immediate situation (desire to talk to specific ppl, topic knowledge)
2) ENDURING: those that represent long-term characteristics of the environment or person that apply to almost any situation (intergroup relations, learner personality, communicative competence)
What are the 6 layers of the pyramid model of WTC, from top to bottom?
1) communication behavior (L2 use)
2) behavioral intention (WTC)
3) situated antecedents (desire to com. to person; self-confidence)
4) motivational propensities (interpersonal/group motivation)
5) affective-cognitive context (intergroup attitudes/social situation/communicative competence)
6) social/individual context (intergroup climate, personality)
What implications does WTC have for L2 instruction?
1) extroverts = higher WTC w/new vocab in unfamiliar situation
introverts = higher WTC in familiar situations
Why? Es like change/novel situations; Is prefer familiar/routine
2) lower WTC if: try to use L2 but native speaker responds in L1
3) low WTC situations: lack of self confidence when communicating w/strangers and/or when they feel they are being criticized by the listener, especially for accent and grammatical errors
Review: what are features of effective “Teacher talk” and classroom interaction?
- maximum use of comprehensible TL that contributes to goal/topic
- max amt of IRF (initiation-response-feedback) to stimulate meaningful convo and push learners to perform at higher levels
- integrates authentic oral/printed texts that reflect natural language use and bring context and interest to the classroom
- incorporates subject-matter content into lang learning experience
What are “Instructional Conversations” (ICs)?
- discussion-based lessons geared towards creating opportunities for students’ conceptual and linguistic development
- teachers use to facilitate convo w/students on topic/theme that is interesting to them and intellectually challenging, while providing them with assisted performance
- aka: “responsive teaching” – how mom’s teach kiddos lang