ELTABB Journal Issue 1 1 | Page 6

More problematic is providing ‘point of need’ instruction with groups, while still maintaining lesson flow and engaging the attention of all learners. ‘Instructional detours’ (to use Cazden’s expression) need to be short, to the point, yet salient: a case of ‘putting the task on hold’ for a minute or two, while an error is remedied or a grammar point explained. Of course, involving other students in the intervention is often a viable means of avoiding the lesson becoming a series of one-to-ones. Ideally, too, a running record needs to be kept of these interventions, so that they can be revisited after the task, and so as to provide a ‘scaffold’ for a possible repetition of the task. A further stage, in which learners review and record the grammar and vocabulary issues that arose during the lesson, serves not only to help fix these in memory, but to persuade those who crave it that formal accuracy has not been sacrificed for the sake of fluency. References Cazden, C. (1992) Whole Language Plus: Essays on Literacy in the US and NZ, New York: Teachers College Press. Gee, J.P. (2007) What Video Games Have To Teach Us About Learning and Literacy, New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Long, M. and Norris, J. (2009) ‘Task-based teaching and assessment’, in van den Branden, K., Bygate, M. and Norris, J. (eds), Task-based Language Teaching: A Reader, Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Nelson, M.W. (1991) At the Point of Need: Teaching Basic and ESL Writers, Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Samuda, V. (2001) ‘Guiding relationships between form and meaning during task performance: the role of the teacher’, in Bygate, M., Skehan, P. and Swain, M. (eds.) Researching Pedagogic Tasks: Second Language Learning, Teaching and Testing, London: Longman. Willis, D. (1990) The Lexical Syllabus: A New Approach to Language Teaching, London: Collins ELT. How a Task-Based Approach Works: Learning by Doing TBLT – the hype! The concept of ‘learning by doing’ has been around since time immemorial, although as a more formalised approach to language learning, TBLT (task-based language-learning and - teaching) has only existed since the mid-1980s. Since its inception in the world of EFL, teachers have been bombarded with reminders of how wonderful TBLT is and how, if we simply make everything ‘task-based’, our students will make enormous gains in their language proficiency. This “drooling” over TBLT has even led to large organisations throwing out their old textbooks and methodologies and demanding that their teachers adhere exclusively to task-based syllabuses and teach only task-based lessons. 6