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Task Based Language Learning

This article discusses the differences between the traditional Present-Practice-Produce (PPP) approach to language teaching and a Task-Based Learning (TBL) approach. PPP presents new language, has students practice it through drills, and then produce it, but students often cannot accurately produce or retain the language. TBL focuses lessons around tasks and allows the language needed to emerge naturally from task completion, providing a more varied, student-driven experience that motivates learning. The advantages of TBL include freeing students from language control, creating personalized contexts, exposing students to a wider range of language, and making lessons more communicative and enjoyable.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views2 pages

Task Based Language Learning

This article discusses the differences between the traditional Present-Practice-Produce (PPP) approach to language teaching and a Task-Based Learning (TBL) approach. PPP presents new language, has students practice it through drills, and then produce it, but students often cannot accurately produce or retain the language. TBL focuses lessons around tasks and allows the language needed to emerge naturally from task completion, providing a more varied, student-driven experience that motivates learning. The advantages of TBL include freeing students from language control, creating personalized contexts, exposing students to a wider range of language, and making lessons more communicative and enjoyable.

Uploaded by

lucianaparanoid
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
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A Task-based approach

Richard Frost, British Council


In recent years a debate has developed over which approaches to structuring and planning and
implementing lessons are more effective. This article presents and overview of a task-based learning
approach (TBL) and highlights its advantages over the more traditional Present, Practice, Produce
(PPP) approach.

This article also links to the following activity.


Try - Speaking activities - Task based listening - planning a night out

• Present Practice Produce


• The problems with PPP
• A Task-based approach
• The advantages of TBL
• Conclusion

Present Practice Produce (PPP)


During an initial teacher training course, most teachers become familiar with the PPP paradigm. A
PPP lesson would proceed in the following manner.

• First, the teacher presents an item of language in a clear context to get across its meaning.
This could be done in a variety of ways: through a text, a situation build, a dialogue etc.
• Students are then asked to complete a controlled practice stage, where they may have to
repeat target items through choral and individual drilling, fill gaps or match halves of
sentences. All of this practice demands that the student uses the language correctly and helps
them to become more comfortable with it.
• Finally, they move on to the production stage, sometimes called the 'free practice' stage.
Students are given a communication task such as a role play and are expected to produce
the target language and use any other language that has already been learnt and is suitable
for completing it.

The problems with PPP


It all sounds quite logical but teachers who use this method will soon identify problems with it:

• Students can give the impression that they are comfortable with the new language as they are
producing it accurately in the class. Often though a few lessons later, students will either not
be able to produce the language correctly or even won't produce it at all.
• Students will often produce the language but overuse the target structure so that it sounds
completely unnatural.
• Students may not produce the target language during the free practice stage because they
find they are able to use existing language resources to complete the task.

Top of page

A Task-based approach
Task -based Learning offers an alternative for language teachers. In a task-based lesson the teacher
doesn't pre-determine what language will be studied, the lesson is based around the completion of a
central task and the language studied is determined by what happens as the students complete it. The
lesson follows certain stages.

Pre-task
The teacher introduces the topic and gives the students clear instructions on what they will have to do
at the task stage and might help the students to recall some language that may be useful for the task.
The pre-task stage can also often include playing a recording of people doing the task. This gives the
students a clear model of what will be expected of them. The students can take notes and spend time
preparing for the task.
Task
The students complete a task in pairs or groups using the language resources that they have as the
teacher monitors and offers encouragement.

Planning
Students prepare a short oral or written report to tell the class what happened during their task. They
then practice what they are going to say in their groups. Meanwhile the teacher is available for the
students to ask for advice to clear up any language questions they may have.

Report
Students then report back to the class orally or read the written report. The teacher chooses the order
of when students will present their reports and may give the students some quick feedback on the
content. At this stage the teacher may also play a recording of others doing the same task for the
students to compare.

Analysis
The teacher then highlights relevant parts from the text of the recording for the students to analyse.
They may ask students to notice interesting features within this text. The teacher can also highlight the
language that the students used during the report phase for analysis.

Practice
Finally, the teacher selects language areas to practise based upon the needs of the students and what
emerged from the task and report phases. The students then do practice activities to increase their
confidence and make a note of useful language.

Top of page

The advantages of TBL


Task-based learning has some clear advantages

• Unlike a PPP approach, the students are free of language control. In all three stages they
must use all their language resources rather than just practising one pre-selected item.
• A natural context is developed from the students' experiences with the language that is
personalised and relevant to them. With PPP it is necessary to create contexts in which to
present the language and sometimes they can be very unnatural.
• The students will have a much more varied exposure to language with TBL. They will be
exposed to a whole range of lexical phrases, collocations and patterns as well as language
forms.
• The language explored arises from the students' needs. This need dictates what will be
covered in the lesson rather than a decision made by the teacher or the coursebook.
• It is a strong communicative approach where students spend a lot of time communicating.
PPP lessons seem very teacher-centred by comparison. Just watch how much time the
students spend communicating during a task-based lesson.
• It is enjoyable and motivating.

Conclusion
PPP offers a very simplified approach to language learning. It is based upon the idea that you can
present language in neat little blocks, adding from one lesson to the next. However, research shows
us that we cannot predict or guarantee what the students will learn and that ultimately a wide exposure
to language is the best way of ensuring that students will acquire it effectively. Restricting their
experience to single pieces of target language is unnatural.

This article published: 26th April, 2004

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