Traditional classroom speaking
practice often takes the form of drills in which one person asks a question and
another gives an answer. The question and the answer are structured and
predictable, and often there is only one correct, predetermined answer. The
purpose of asking and answering the question is to demonstrate the ability to
ask and answer the question.
In contrast, the purpose of real
communication is to accomplish a task, such as conveying a telephone message,
obtaining information, or expressing an opinion. In real communication,
participants must manage uncertainty about what the other person will say.
Authentic communication involves an information gap; each participant has
information that the other does not have. In addition, to achieve their
purpose, participants may have to clarify their meaning or ask for confirmation
of their own understanding.
To create classroom speaking
activities that will develop communicative competence, instructors need to
incorporate a purpose and an information gap and allow for multiple forms of
expression. However, quantity alone will not necessarily produce competent
speakers. Instructors need to combine structured output activities, which allow
for error correction and increased accuracy, with communicative output
activities that give students opportunities to practice language use more
freely.
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