1 / 17

Jingzi Huang, Ph.D Associate Professor Monmouth University NJ, USA jhuang@monmouth.edu

Jingzi Huang, Ph.D Associate Professor Monmouth University NJ, USA jhuang@monmouth.edu. A Functional Linguistic Approach to Teaching Chinese as an Additional Language - Helping Classroom Teachers Address the National Standards in a Systematic Way. Guiding Questions: .

miyo
Télécharger la présentation

Jingzi Huang, Ph.D Associate Professor Monmouth University NJ, USA jhuang@monmouth.edu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jingzi Huang, Ph.D Associate Professor Monmouth University NJ, USA jhuang@monmouth.edu A Functional Linguistic Approach to Teaching Chinese as an Additional Language - Helping Classroom Teachers Address the National Standards in a Systematic Way

  2. Guiding Questions: • Facing the requirement for standards-based foreign language instruction, what are the Chinese teachers struggling with in their effort to align their teaching with the national standards? • Can successful foreign language program models provide helpful implications for Chinese teaching?

  3. Background of the Study Five Cs for learners (ACTFL,1996): Goals for Foreign Language Learning • Communicate in Language Other Than English • Gain Knowledge & Understanding of Other Culture • Connect with Other Disciplines & Acquire New Information • Develop Insight into the Nature of Language & Culture (through Comparison) • Participate in Multilingual Communities at Home and Around the World

  4. Background of the Study ACTFL (2002) SPA Standards for Teachers: • ACTFL SPA Standard 2. Cultures, Literatures, Cross-Disciplinary Concepts. Candidates (a) demonstrate that ... they integrate the cultural framework for foreign language standards into their instructional practices; (b) ... and (c) integrate knowledge of other disciplines into foreign language instruction and identify distinctive viewpoints accessible only through the target language. • ACTFL SPA Standard 4. Integration of Standards into Curriculum and Instruction. Candidates (a) demonstrate an understanding of the goal areas and standards of the Standards for Foreign Language Learning and their state standards, and they integrate these frameworks into curricular planning; (b) integrate the Standards for Foreign Language Learning and their state standards into language instruction; and (c) use standards and curricular goals to evaluate, select, design, and adapt instructional resources.

  5. Background of the Study A need to address the standards in a systematic way: • The National Standards (ACTFL 1996) specifically require attention to the integration of content and culture into the teaching of foreign languages. Nevertheless, classroom language teachers find themselves struggling in an effort to address the linguistic and the content/cultural goals in an integrated way.

  6. Struggles Experienced by Teachers: • Public Schools • Heritage Weekend Chinese Schools

  7. Content Knowledge Activities Linguistic Resources A Socio-Cultural Perspective for a Successful Foreign Language Program Model Text Structures lexis grammar

  8. A Field Tested Model (Huang and Mohan, 2009): The Knowledge Framework (Mohan 1986)

  9. Setting: Elementary school in Western Canada where dominant language and culture is English.

  10. Participants • A Canadian-born Chinese Canadian whose strongest language is English and who is fluent in Cantonese. Mandarin Chinese is her second language which she acquired later as a university student. • Students: 23 students who started the program in year 1 at the ages of 8 and 9 in third and fourth grades and continued into year 3. All speak English as their first language with no Chinese backgrounds except for one boy who is from Cantonese cultural background.

  11. Data collection: three years Data sources: • observation; • field notes; • student written work; • audio taped oral products; • video taped lessons; • informal interview; • lesson notes from the teacher; • curriculum and instructional resources and materials.

  12. Findings: Year 1 activities conducted on the topic of Family (Huang, 2003b)

  13. Findings: Year 3 Activities Conducted around the KF on the Topic of Personal Information (Huang, 2003a)

  14. Findings: Grammatical and lexical systems (Halliday1994, Martin 1992) through which semantic relations are reflected:Form-Function Relations in Student Discourse (Monhand & Huang, 2002)

  15. Findings: A Spanish Example (Huang & Facer, 2009)- Unit Design Addressing Five Cs: Schools in the US and Argentina

  16. Conclusions (Huang and Mohan, 2009): At the curriculum level: • Embrace the five Cs in an integrated way At the level of activities: • Integrate language and content systematically; • Bring about a wide range of form-function connections.

  17. References ACTFL (1996). Standards for foreign language learning: Preparing for the 21st century. Lawrence, KS: Allen Press, Inc. ACTFL (2002). ACTFL Standards for the Preparation of Foreign Language Teachers .http://www.ncate.org/documents/ProgramStandards/actfl2002.pdf Halliday, M. A. K. (1994). An introduction to functional grammar (2nd Ed.). London: Edward Arnold. Huang, J. (2003a) Activities as a Vehicle for Linguistic and Sociocultural Knowledge at the Elementary Level. Language Teaching Research 7, (2), pp. 3-33. Huang, J. (2003b). A Content-Based Approach to Achieving the Dual Goals of Language and Culture Learning for Young Beginners – A Case Study of an Elementary “Mandarin Chinese as a Foreign Language Program”. Language, Culture & Curriculum16 (1), pp. 70 - 89. Huang, J. & Facer, C. (2009). A Functional Approach to a Culture-Based Language Curriculum – When goals of foreign language education go beyond language. Paper presented at the 36th International Systemic Functional Conference, July 14 - 18, Beijing, China Huang, J. & Mohan, B. (2009). A Functional Approach to Integrated Assessment of Teacher Support and Student Discourse Development in an Elementary Chinese Program. Linguistics and Education 20, pp. 22-38. Huang, J. & Morgan, G. (2003). A Functional Approach to Evaluating Content Knowledge and Language Development in ESL Students’ Science Classification Texts. International Journal of Applied Linguistics 13, (2), pp.234-262. Martin, J. (1992). English text. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: Benjamins. Mohan, B. & Huang, J. (2002). Assessing the Integration of Language and Content in a Mandarin as a Foreign Language Classroom. Linguistics and Education, 13 (3), pp. 405-433.

More Related