Teaching English in the Priy Classroom | Page 74

collaborative learning activities and communicative language teaching, their classes are still teacher-centred, while they still put more emphasis on accuracy rather than fluency. This inconsistency between the progressive beliefs teachers hold, and their traditional classroom practices indicates, according to Anderson (1985), that, although they might have acquired declarative knowledge concerning a number of issues (i.e. knowing what), they have not yet acquired the necessary procedural knowledge (knowing how) which would allow them to put theory into practice. Question 3: Taking into consideration that a curriculum innovation is under way, which involves the publishing of new course books, the question which arises is whether the beliefs teachers hold will allow them to use the new books according to the specifications of the new curriculum or will they use them according to the way they themselves consider appropriate. What has been refereed to so far in this section, in addition to the finding that, for many teachers, the planned curriculum is invisible (Nunan 1988a: 138), has a number of implications concerning its effective implementation. This is because the individual beliefs teachers hold make them have a rather intuitive knowledge of what to teach, and how to teach it, which informs their practices. This can be a reason why they consider essential to supplement the official teaching material with exercises which focus exclusively on the mastery of decontextualised grammatical items, despite the fact that the present curriculum conceives language ‘… as a social act rather than an independent system of structures and meanings’ (Dendrinou, et. al 1997: 72). In this way a mismatch is created between what is planned and what is actually being implemented which not only renders the present curriculum incoherent (Johnson 1989), but also raises the question of how ready these teachers are to implement a prospective innovation. Johnson (ibid) emphasises that when the official curriculum differs radically from a teacher’s beliefs about teaching and learning, what happens in the classroom is likely to conform to an ‘alternative’ curriculum’ which, as it is incompatible with the aims and means of the official programme, it usually produces unsatisfactory outcomes. 3.2.2 Suggestions for an effective in-service training programme As the answers to the research questions indicate, despite the fact that there are many teachers who have participated in a number of in-service training programmes on how to teach Young Learners (see appendix IV, p. 111, tables 8 and 9), these programmes have not been successful in helping them change either their beliefs, or 74