Teaching Oral Skills Communicatively | Page 42

impossible without words and thinking in concepts does not exist beyond verbal thinking.” It goes without saying that, although the above reasons are presented as being distinct, in fact they are closely related. Allwright (1984: 157) stresses that: “…the process of communication is, in an important sense, a learning process.” while Vygotsky (1962) draws a link between learning and development by pointing out that: “… the two are interrelated from the child’s very first day of life.” 1.2 What to teach Having justified the need for teaching speaking, it is time to define the content of a speaking lesson. This refers to the characteristic features of spoken language which students need to be familiar with in order to communicate effectively and which comprise the following: 1.2.2.3. Speaking is an act of communication West (2000, Unit: 11) refers that in the traditional foreign language classroom speaking is considered as a means to demonstrate learning rather than an end in itself. This attitude limits the focus of the teaching of speaking to the students’ ability to respond to the teacher’s questions and to produce grammatically correct sentences. However, Hymes (1971: 278) stresses that: “there are rules of use without which the rules of grammar would be useless” and he proposes a wider notion of competence, that of communicative competence. The notion of communicative competence was further explored by Canale and Swain (1980: 27) who identified two of its elements, that of sociolinguistic competence (i.e. the ability of the speaker to take under consideration the social context within which language is produced), and strategic competence (i.e. the ability of the speaker to use negotiation strategies in order to clarify meaning). Finally, Blum-Kulka and Levenston (1983) also added the element of semantic competence (i.e. the characteristic of language to carry meaning). The above elements of communicative competence allow the speaker to speak naturally and appropriately according to the situation and to adjust her speech according to the topic, the relationship and the shared knowledge between the interlocutors. 42