participants and b) the written genre of the letter to the editor. Because of this, the two
approaches (CTB as a general language teaching approach and GA as a writing
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or in brief the often called task-based approach (TB)
Янги Ўзбекистонни қуриш ва ривожланишида ёшларнинг фаоллиги
180
approach) are mutually inclusive in a writing class. You may say that a CTB approach
to a language syllabus tends to subsume a GA approach in the writing lessons. See the
diagram on next page to see the relationship between the two:
As GA tends to be situated in a CTB syllabus, which calls for creating
communicative tasks for students to complete, a genre-based writing classroom calls for
the design of communicative tasks which are associated with some identifiable genres.
A CTB approach to the design of a language syllabus: i.e., language learning = learning
how to communicate with others using the target language
Diagram 1: The GA approach situated within a CTB curriculum.
Thus,writing tasks in the foreign language classroom typically fall into one of
two possible categories: writing as support skill and writing as main skill. Both are
appropriate pedagogical tools, as long as both are included in the lesson plan. When
designing a writing task, a teacher should follow these simple steps:
1. Make sure that your assignment is appropriate for the learners' language level.
2. Select level-appropriate writing purpose.
3. Decide on writing as a support skill or as a main skill.
4. Identify sub-skills students need in order to complete the main task.
5. Design activity set that prepares sub-skills.
6. Guide students through pre-, during-, and post-writing activities.
These points are important to consider in order to design more effective writing
tasks that:
a. fulfill the pedagogical purposes of the assignment (e.g., do not say that the
task practices narration when all it does is drill the past tense),
b. reflect pedagogically sound practices (e.g., the process approach to writing,
effective feedback, etc.),
c. can be successfully completed by the students (i.e., the sub-skills that they
need have been reviewed and/or learned), and
Speaking tasks being
communicatively
calls for
teaching of relevant speech
events (genres)
Writing tasks being
communicatively-
oriented calling for
teaching of relevant
genres
Reading tasks being
communicatively-
oriented including
reading of different
types of texts (genres)
Other basic language skills
training, e.g., phonics, sounds
identification, e.g., basic
organization training, etc.
Listening tasks being
communicatively-
oriented calls for
training students to
listen to some
identifiable genres,
etc. (e.g., a speech, a
telephone message)
Grammar learning
backgrounded and taught
using a functional approach
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