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Talk for the British Council conference
in Sicily. March 2003.
"The Common European Framework is more of the wrong thing".
I have divided the essay into 3 parts. The central part 4-8 can be read separately as the actual critique of CEF, but part 1 and part 3 are I think necessary in order to explain how I come to feel so antagonistic towards CEF. To do battle with CEF you have to also deal with all the conventional wisdom that lies behind its conception.
Part 1. 1-3. Background to my critique of CEF.
Part 2. 4-8. Critique of CEF
4. It is badly written. Stodgy prose, stodgy minds?
5. "A rose by any other name". Taxonomic madness.
6. How do you teach these indistinct categories and are these test categories
the best ground plan of a didactics?
7. CEF's disingenious disclaimers about hospitality to all methodologies.
8. "CEF's grids and boxes will force up standards". Really?
9. The distinction-"Acquire" versus "Learn" and the failed
"communicative approach" that underpin CEF.
Part 3. 9-10. Our alternative practice which informs
this critique of CEF.
Part 1. 1-3.
1. Background to my critique of CEF.
It is obvious that any criticisms of CEF will only be possible from some very
non CEF standpoint. I have met Italian inspectors who view me as almost heretical
in my criticism of what seems to them to be CEf's self evident truths. This
is important. As one British Council director said to me with a wry shake of
the head, "CEF is a big beast". We need to know why it has, like a
hungry pike, devoured all other fish in the river. If we are to mount an effective
critique of CEF it has to be from a strongly different premise.
My criticism grows from my teaching experience. I have taught for 35 years and for 25 years I have run a summer language school for foreign children. It has surprised me how little most children know after years of school. In 2002-03 I and my wife taught some 50 classes in Italy (each for 12-20 hours) as part of a chalk face teacher training project. We therefore saw more than 800 pupils.
2. "Grid lock". The mania for tick boxes.
CEF is part of the larger cultural trend in Europe for what one could call
a nosey managerial lack of trust in the competence of subordinates. Box filling
"descriptors" are the result of not trusting that subordinates do
their job properly: in our case, teachers. The trouble with this kind of managerial
mistrust is that it is incredibly demotivating. It is also desperately time
consuming and mistrustful. Teachers, in good faith, try to position pupils within
the amorphous target categories of CEF or Britain's national tick boxes, but
this complicated and time consuming record keeping treats the teacher as an
imbecile. Not only this but any such authoritative definition of what language
teaching should do runs this risk: suppose the whole monolith were mistaken
in its premise yet everyone had been forced to follow it? Remember the British
Council manager's forlorn description of "CEF as "a big beast"
The boxes of CEF are arranged as A1 A2 B1 B2 C1 C2 levels and these are supposed
to bring rigour to teaching and to thus "force up standards", but
I have seen examples of a school's tick boxes of the "Portfolio" (which
derive from the CEF grids) which were effectively pure fiction: the pupils abilities
were nowhere near the descriptors that had been ticked! The vagueness of the
descriptors just encourages cheating and superficiality! These tick boxes remind
me of something I read by Tim Brighouse, of Birmingham education authority.
"No one forgets a good teacher but who remembers an inveterate filler in
of boxes and teacher of "targets"? He says that under present proposals
the teachers of 3-5 year olds in England and Wales (imagine the fate of the
older kids!) will be required to tick 117 boxes for each pupil. Now for an average
class this equals a total of 3515 boxes for one class in a year. And then??
The fantastic Primary school head teacher of my older children's school, became
a taxi driver. He was driven out by the mad, managerial folly of making teachers
fill in target boxes of rubber exactitude THAT NO ONE READS!! "Who",
he asked the ofsted inspector,"will read these pages that I have lost my
week end filling in - you"? he asked. The inspector admitted they would
be unread before they were binned.
The CEF constitutes a maze placed between us and language! Another Alps to rival
that of old fashioned grammar - except that these Alps are higher!
The CEF "descriptors" are already being used to determine text book
format and these books judging from one from Longmans will make the old functional
text books seem exciting by contrast!
3. The underpinning of CEF:
" The distinction-"Acquire" versus "Learn"
" The "communicative approach"
" Grammar isn't natural.
" "Natural learning".
CEF is an integral part of the accepted wisdom that, in my opinion, has failed
pupils. The sheer conventionality of CEF explains why my criticism seems so
outlandish and heretical to some. In general we could say that this conventional
wisdom has absorbed the theory behind "The Communicative Approach".
It was invented on the basis of an insight of doubtful relevance in the context
of schools. The insight went like this. We learn our mother tongue unconsciously.
We "pick it up". I prefer this metaphor to the more canting Latinate
"acquire". The communicative approach was based on the distinction
between the Germanic word "learn" that had served well and the Latin
word "acquire". Supposedly classrooms could become acquiring places
like the L1 home.
But we cannot be said in any meaningful way, to "acquire" languages
in school. We learn them, or even learn by heart, with heart, through heart
- ie by motivation, desire, enjoyment, entertainment. But somehow or other we
have to learn them, or end up as I have seen many, knowing nothing: having acquired
nothing either! I have seen the vast majority of children at Secondary level
who do not understand or use correctly the present tenses in English after 7,8
years! How come that the "acquiring" system has failed them so badly?
CEF follows the conventional rejection of grammar centred learning and gives
the only alternative: an extension of the phrase book method! The CEF however
is not a phrase book but an exhaustive description of what such a phrase book
method would have to flesh out. It contains 33 pages of grids and all these
grids are divided into fussy but rubbery "descriptors" which vainly
try to describe all uses of language and all divided into A1 A2 B1 B2 C1 C2
levels.
CEF follows the phantasma of "natural learning" and "real situations",
but this means that the material used in schools will be excruciatingly boring.
"Alors qu' est ce que tu fais le matin quand tu te leves"? "Je
me brusse les dents". (English secondary school lesson that was fulfilling
the CEF type curricula "Daily routines"!). A phrase book approach
imprisons: you rehearse THAT situation, but suppose your interlocutor says something
unexpected and not in the script! Furthermore, such everyday material is so
boring! To forestall this limitation in the phrase book method, CEF has tried
to cover every imaginable use of language. By contrast, a grammar centred approach
is much more manageable and is also liberating and of infinite recyclability;
as long as it does not consist of the numbingly inappropriate old fashioned
grammar of previous ill repute with its abstract rules and as long as an alternative
includes a lot of vocabulary work.
The test of our teaching methods should be this. Will students be put in a position
to produce autonomous English without having to rely on just those "situations"
that their text books and CEF have prepared them for in "airport phrase
book" fashion.
Part 2. 4-8. Critique of CEF
4. CEF is badly written. Stodgy prose, stodgy minds?
The "Common European Framework" is badly written. With all its repetitive
reference to "language competence", how could it be this incompetent?
It is rubbery with imprecise precision. Is it Brussels English? My attempted
translation is in blue.
PAGE 9. "Approach adopted" Chapter 2. ……"Any form of language
use and learning could be described as follows: Language use, embracing language
learning, comprises the actions performed by persons who as individuals and
as social agents develop a range of competences, both general and in particular
communicative language competences. ( these
3 lines say, "Language is moulded by the individual and society")
They draw on the competences at their disposal in various contexts under various
conditions and under various constraints (isn't this obvious?) to engage in
language activities involving language processes (you
use "language processes" when you "engage in Language activities"
ie when you SPEAK!! -" WOW!!) to produce and/ or receive texts in
relation to themes in specific domains, activating those strategies which seem
most appropriate for carrying out the tasks to be accomplished. (this
is a rehash of the previous incompetent expression! = A person's language skill
both conditions and is conditioned by his present understanding and his place
in the world.) The monitoring of these actions by the participants (jargon!
Why can't they say "the speaker's awareness" instead of "the
monitoring of the participants"!) leads to the reinforcement or
modification of their competences".( yet another
repetition of the opening! How unpleasant is this ubiquitous "competences"
in prose so incompetent)
What hope for English in Europe! This is the Ebola disease of our language!!
5. "A rose by any other name". Taxonomic
madness.
Let's look in a bit more detail at CEF. I've read the book three times. Not
an easy read. It contains a lot of what I call Latinglish: precise vagueness.
European committees will create a new pidgin English. A boneless monster like
my example above of Euro gibberish.
The CEF, at one level, is a harmless enough - if mad - endeavour to categorise
language use. Mad? On page 46 it deals with what it defines as the 4 domains
of language use. In each of these domains, it distinguishes what it calls themes.
It gives 14 examples of possible themes for one of the domains, each of which
it subdivides into 8 possible sub-categories. Each of these sub-categories is
divided into a further sub-sub-category. Were the other three domains no further
divided, you would end with a total of 4 x 14 x 8 x 6 = 2,688 categories. The
CEF rather charmingly admits "this particular selection and organisation
of themes, sub themes and specific notions is "not exhaustive". Well,
how terribly modest! This little appetiser of 2688 is "not exhaustive"!
There they go, the committee experts, flying around Europe to high powered meetings
at our expense extruding like spiders their definitions. They may not be "exhaustive",
but certainly they know how to exhaust teachers even before they have faced
the bored kids climbing up the walls!
If I am indignant it is because I have seen the chalk-face results of this obstinate
wrong headedness and seen the blind inspectors treating the wounds! (an influential
school inspector of Lombardia angrily warned me against "going round undoing
all our work, with such talk")!
Incidentally, try playing this parlour game: read the 6 levels ( A1 A2 etc)
of any grid. Cut them up and cut off the letter/number category and then try
to reassemble the 6 in the right order! Difficult!. Then do the same with 2
grids and reorder the 12 unnamed "descriptors"!
6. How do you teach these indistinct categories and
are these test categories the best ground plan of a didactics?
There is an odd fact of language noted by Wittgenstein. He called it "picture
theory". Some concepts or events are resistant to sequential verbal description.
The more you describe, the unclearer it gets! Wittgenstein noted this after
seeing a lawyer demonstrating in court with tables, the sequence and circumstances
of a crash between 2 cars. What would have required 33 pages was in fact quite
simple to understand. This picture theory is also supported by what we could
call less grandly the "IKEA theory". You put up their assembly shelves
with a picture, not an explanation! In the CEF there are 33 pages of "descriptor"
grids! A verbal swamp!
CEF has tried to classify language so that a system of comparable cross-European
tests can be made in all the languages. Such tests will be used for all the
firms who employ workers moving across Europe. "One of the aims of the
CEF is to …describe levels of proficiency required by existing standard tests,
examinations so as to FACILITATE COMPARISON". Behind this beauocratic tidiness
The difficulty is: how do you teach these indistinct categories and are these
test categories the best ground plan of a didactics? Will they" force up"
the ability to speak autonomously or just encourage a narrow range of phrase
book type coaching of students, (those students who acquiesce, that is) and
will the teacher boxes just encourage cheating and window dressing by the schools
which are now considered to be "businesses" and need to convince the
"customers". ?
7. CEF's disingenious disclaimers about hospitality
to all methodologies.
What worries me is what effect will the vague precision of the CEF categorisation
have on teaching. Here are some of CEF's contradictions of intention. It is
here that we must nail the CEF.
Now the CEF states (p.8) that it has "no intention of being prescriptive
about methods of language teaching: non dogmatic, not irrevocably attached to
any one of a number of competing linguistic or educational theories or practices".
However the sheer scale of the 33 grids is a massive for-closure on didactics.
They will be taught to. They are already conditioning text books.
despite the "no intention.." this on P. 18
sounds rather menacing!! "An open "neutral" framework of reference
does not of course imply an absence of policy". AND " but CEF also
deals with processes of language acquisition and learning as well as teaching
METHODOLOGY". (all this I presume done in a "neutral" fashion!).
P. 19 "Chapters 4 and 5 are mainly concerned with
the actions and competences required of a language learner … in order to communicate".
No modest neutrality there! The trouble is that CEF is so literal minded, it
cannot work by indirections. School kids are expected to seriously describe
in French their "daily routines" because that is "real life".
Is it however a serious didactics, and is it any surprise if self respecting
school kids don't learn languages?
Chapter 6 deals with the plurilingual, pluricultural approach.
(one of those politically correct notions that are barely relevant to the pupils
I've seen.) Apparently this "approach" entails a "paradigm shift".
What a canting appropriation of a serious intellectual concept in order to SPEAK
BIG. It is obvious, has always been obvious that learning another language lets
one in to another "forma mentis", lets you see out of previously walled
up windows in the human experience. Up to a point! But I've heard fluent English
speakers of Italian still talking with the mind set of Britannia! So it's a
"paradigm shift", this "plurilingualism"? Something big
like Galileo or Newton's "paradigm shift"? No, this "paradigm
shift" is typical of the inflated tone of the CEF. Out with multi-lingual
and in with plurilingual!
P.21 "a conceptual grid which users of the CEF can
exploit to describe their system"!! BUT this is ingenuous. If such a "conceptual
grid" becomes central and referential for description of any system it
will become THE system: and surely that is precisely the aim. The makers of
the CEF did not spend all that time and money just making a check list. In fact
I was present in Sicily at a presentation of a NEW course book by Longman, in
which the authors were boasting of how it "delivers" the necessary
language "competences" to satisfy the CEF. It looked a mortifying
book for the pupil and the poor teacher will have to progressively tick a passage
through various grid labyrinths.
P.21 "the description also needs to be based on THEORIES
OF LANGUAGE COMPETENCE", but whose definition of competence and whose valid
theories were referred to by this European committee? They will resemble those
of the guiding wisdom - the importance given to "functions" and all
the language use possible within this or that "domain". (the framework
for language teaching in the last 20 years has been according to "functions"
and everyday situations). The trouble is that, whereas though these "functions"
made for boring banal situations, they were at least manageable and linited
in number, the CEF, while repeating this boring "paradigm" of language,
is "functions" with knobs on!
8. "CEF's grids and boxes will force
up standards". Italian school inspector.
One day in Bolzano, I heard an Italian inspector of schools bring glad tidings
to teachers in Bolzano and announce that: "these grids of the CEF "descriptors"",
would "force up standards". Just by being there! However, these descriptors
are very difficult to teach to as they are so vague.
Teaching material needs to be much more sharply focused than the CEF grids permit.
What matters is the material's ease of memorisation; its interest, and whether
it is subject to repetition and revision and thus to memorisation. Pupils in
school need FOCUS on forms. They need to become very familiar with the formalities
of the language, while also speaking them. A young child hears forms that only
subsequently fill out with full meaning. It seems that we have been missing
some fundamental points about the much quoted young learner of L1.
Think, the basis of all this bad teaching is the following truth misapplied:
when we learn our mother tongue as infants, we don't have lessons or use grammar
rules. Good. So we were supposed to apply this fact in the class room. We should
"acquire" and not "learn" This was a sort of 1968 ripple.
Learning should become painless "acquiring". "Learning"
was teutonic in its overtones of hard work. "Acquire" was the humanistic
face of '68! This was despite the interesting genius of the language that had
invented the phrase "learn by heart"! Passionate, feeling learning!
In the classroom for 3 hours a week (maybe only 2 after deducting interruption
time!) there is no time for steady intuitive "acquisition" - and anyway,
whereas the young child gets lots of very delimited and focused repetition,
the school child has a chaos of text book and the company of variously motivated
companions.
As I've said, the communicative approach is naturalist; it wants a "natural"
language "acquisition", and the non grammar learning of childhood.
Marvellous dream but not possible in school. Firstly the language acquisition
of childhood is so specific and dynamic that Chomsky coined a term for its specificity,
"LAD "the language acquisition device". It is no longer operative
after a certain age. That's why my 4 year old daughter at barely 4 has 2 languages
already tucked away! The miserable 2-3 hours of school language, with all the
interruptions and distractions, are light years away from the focused, contextualised
and continual exposure of childhood. As for communicative approach, there is
nothing in a classroom that is communication other than the few phrases that
a teacher may use such as "have you all finished", etc. The "communication"
of text books is mere imitation. A child learning the mother tongue has to understand,
in a sense his life depends on it. In school all this pseudo communication just
annoys and bores students. It would be much better to give them, as we do, grammar
focused plays in which they genuinely are asked to act rather than the dull
conversations organised around the functions to which the CEF gives second life
to. Further we should use the exciting real life material of newspapers if we
first boil down and simplify the language. This simplification is, in my experience,
best done by choosing material that allows for a repetitive use of the various
target grammar structures: In this way a pupil is in a position to make the
intuitive recognition of the regularities of language:what is called grammar!
9. An alternative. Who is afraid of grammar?
So what do I recommend to put in its place? Simple. We put grammar back at the
centre of teaching. The change of teaching approach in the CA and its text books
completely repositioned grammar; put it in the back seat. Now in one way this
demotion of grammar was thoroughly justified. It is a subversive truth that
none of us learnt our mother tongue through a grammar. Good, but what does that
mean for the classroom? The classroom is not an L1 environment, but contrariwise,
the environment of the child is not "natural" either. A child is given
cleverly modified and focused language by its mother. Mothers are in fact very
good language teachers! A lot of the theorists who wanted natural learning in
the classroom might have spent more time considering some of the artifices of
the native child learner and its parents.
It is true that the grammar method before the communicative approach was wrong,
just as the communicative approach is wrong because unrealistic. There is a
third way! Lets not go back to old fashioned grammar but forward to new fashioned
grammar. This new grammar will be with very few rules. It will be more a system
of organising material rather than those pedantic rules which no one can remember.
The material will be presented through the eye of grammar. It will be grammar
specific and grammar focused but it will see grammar as not just frightening,
dead, abstract stuff but the sinews of expression (see our grammar plays on
www.middlesmoor.com ). It is simple grammar, visualised and reduced. This kind
of grammar sets us free. It is to quote the title of that book by Murphy that
has outstripped all others; "grammar in use". Marvellous irony: Murphy
is a heretic who has made oodles of money because he has given people what they
find useful. The democratic virtue of good business!
Who need be afraid of grammar? Grammar is simply a name for those regularities
of language which allow us to differentiate action in time (tenses), make refinements
of quantity and quality assessment ( quantity words, comparatives and superlatives)
etc. These islands of grammar form groups: archipelagos of interrelated structures.
As long as we use them to navigate a language, and move straight into speaking
activities, teaching and learning becomes simple.
Make students learn by heart, to give them initial confidence and mouth-tongue
exercise. Invent games for more extemporising uses of the structures around
likely human situations. Make them write and act their own "grammar plays".
Just look again at these grids from the CEF. The mind reels under their delirious
soft exactitude that is trying to pin down language.
Think of the Present simple and try to list its CEF type range of communication
competence that are activated by use of the present simple! "Talk about
your future plans", "tell someone what you like to do", "inform
or be informed of train and bus time tables", "describe to a doctor
your symptoms and your worries about them", "tell someone about the
sports and leisure activities", "tell someone about the usual weather
you have", "tell someone about your daily routines at work or at home",
"complain about someone's annoying habits" etc etc That isn't a bad
tally is it for poor old grammar category "present simple" So who
is so terrified by grammar? Now contrast this with just one more tense the Present
Continuous".with its list of communication potential. You HAVE TO teach
these contrasting tenses together. The present continuous and the Present simple
need to be taught together: along with the exceptions, because most foreigners
have so much difficulty with them both TOGETHER. . Yet one poor student in Brescia
told me that after my lesson she had finally understood something that had been
muddled for 4 years. I do not mean that we go banging on about rules. What I
mean is that we keep returning to the quick definitions while AT THE SAME TIME
using focused speaking material that digs the memory furrow deeper. Remember
at school there is so little time: so get focused!!
10. Teachers don't need systems. What matters is the
piecemeal accretion of activities that work!
We want no more new approaches, no more revolutionary wheezes. What system makers
don't realise is that each of us has his own "system". It fits us
like a glove. A system is not self evident to anyone except the originator.
We are all in love with our own creations. We need to beware of doing anything
more than offering a POSSIBLE extra string to everyone's bow. We don't need
presumptuous systems like CEF that are gorged on Brussels money and which through
their backing become monstrous and devour all around them.
tell me what you think: mail@middlesmoor.com
our website: www.middlesmoor.com
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