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Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

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A. ORAL SKILLS B. LITERACY SKILLS C. RECEPTIVE AND PRODUCTIVE SKILLS Macro Skills
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Page 1: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

A . O R A L S K I L L S

B . L I T E R A C Y S K I L L S

C . R E C E P T I V E A N D P R O D U C T I V E S K I L L S

Macro Skills

Page 2: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

A. Oral Skills

1. Listening

2. Speaking

Page 3: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

1. Listening

Listening is the ability to accurately receive and interpret messages in the communication process.

There are three common modes of listening: competitive, passive and active.

Page 4: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

2. Speaking

Speaking is done through the vocalization of human communication.

Speaking depends on the context wherein communication will take place.

Speaking can be formal or informal

Page 5: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

B. Literacy Skills

1. Reading

2. Writing

Page 6: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

1. Reading

Reading comprehension involves decoding symbols with the intention of deriving meaning from the text.

This can be used for sharing knowledge, for self-development or simply for relaxation

Page 7: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

2. Writing

Writing is the process of using symbols to communicate thoughts and ideas in a readable form.

Writing allows for a more meaningful and in-depth transmission of ideas compared to speaking.

Follow the writing process: 1) prewriting 2) drafting 3) revising 4) proofreading 5) publishing

Page 8: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

3. Viewing

Refers to the ability to perceive meaning from visual images and presentations

Process that supports oracy and literacy

Broadens the ways in which students can understand and communicate their ideas

non verbal communication

Page 9: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

ways to represent ideas visually:

Drawings

Photographs

Organizational graphs and charts

Videos

Multimedia

WebPages – and web based correspondence

Page 10: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

Types of viewing:

Visual Literacy

Ability to interpret meaning from visual images (Georgis, 1999)

Ability to construct effective visuals in order to convey ideas to others (Valmont, 2003; Heinich, 1999)

Critical Viewing

Ability to carefully comprehend and evaluate information presented by visual media

Ability to think critically about the composition of the picture

Page 11: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

4. Receptive and Productive

ORAL SKILLS

LITERACY SKILLS

RECEPTIVE SKILLS

Listening Reading

PRODUCTIVE SKILLS

Speaking Writing

Connection

Page 12: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence
Page 13: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

Significance

To effectively communicate

To understand subtext and various aspects of communication

To solve future problems or successfully achieve objectives which essentially derive from effective communication

Page 14: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

Significance

To accomplish four main purposes including: expressing wants and needs, developing social closeness, exchanging information, and fulfilling social etiquette routines (Light, 1997)

Page 15: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

A . D E F I N I T I O N

B . D E L L H Y M E S

C . C O M P O N E N T S

D . S P E A K I N G M O D E L

Communicative Competence

Page 16: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

A. Communicative Competence

“The ability to function in a truly communicative setting.”

Not limited to linguistic forms

Social rules and context

Coined by Dell Hymes

Page 17: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

B. Dell Hymes

-language and social context

-oral narratives

Page 18: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

He says…

“…a normal child acquires knowledge of sentences not only as grammatical, but also as appropriate. He or she acquires competence as to when to speak, when not, and as to what to talk about with whom, when, where, in what manner. In short, a child becomes able to accomplish a repertoire of speech acts, to take part in speech events, and to evaluate their accomplishment by others.”(Hymes 1972, 277)

Page 19: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

5 Components

Page 20: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

1. Linguistic/Grammatical Competence

Knowledge of language code:

Phonology

Morphology

Syntax

Lexicon

Page 21: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

2. Sociolinguistic Competence

Knowledge of socio-cultural use of the language

Page 22: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

3. Cultural Competence

Awareness and sensitivity to other’s culture and tradition.

Setting

Topic

Taboos

Page 23: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

4. Discourse Competence

Knowledge of producing , comprehending , combing oral and written language:

Organizing words, phrases, sentences

Page 24: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

5. Strategic Competence

Ability to recognize, adjust and repair verbal and non verbal communication errors:

Paraphrasing

Shifting

Avoidance

Page 25: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

S-P-E-A-K-I-N-G MODEL

Page 26: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

1. Setting and Scene

Physical circumstances

When and where communication take place

Ex: Hearing in the court; simple class discussion

Page 27: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

2. Participants

Speaker and audience

Ex: friends; business tycoons

Page 28: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

3. Ends

Purposes, goals and outcomes

Ex: to persuade, to inform

Page 29: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

4. Act Sequence

Form and order of event

Ex: begin-middle-end

Page 30: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

5. Key

Tone, manner or spirit

Ex: lively, serious

Page 31: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

6. Instrumentalities

Forms and styles of speech

Ex: informal, formal

Page 32: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

7. Norms

Social rules

Ex: Do’s and Don’ts

Page 33: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

8. Genre

Kind of speech act or event

Ex: anecdotes to entertain or to give moral lessons.

Page 34: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

Lyle Bachman

1990- Language Competence

Grammatical and Discourse (Textual)

Functional (Illocutionary) and Sociolinguistic

Strategic

Page 35: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence
Page 36: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

John Gumperz

“Communicative competence is going beyond mere description of language patterns”

Page 37: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

James Cummins

CALP- Cognitive/Academic Language Proficiency

School oriented language- Context Reduced

BICS- Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills

Face to face communication- Context Embedded

Page 38: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence
Page 39: Macro Skills and Communicative Competence

Basically, greatly developing one’s macro skills promotes communicative competence.

The macro skills play a key role in fostering learners’ communicative competence since:

they are the manifestations of interpreting and producing a spoken or written piece of discourse

as well as a way of manifesting the rest of the components of the communicative competence construct.


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