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Multiple choice questions based on Current Trends in the Development and Teaching of the Four Language Skills Chapter one: Approaches to language learning and teaching 1. The main goal in communicative approaches to language teaching over the last few decades has been to develop learner’s .......... a. communicative competence self-esteem in language skills autonomy and self-dependence awareness of linguistic features 2. Three approaches have been discussed with regard to the history of language learning namely .......... a. environmentalist, innatist and the interactionist structuralist, generativist and cognitivist structuralis, transformationalist, generativist environmentalist, innatist and generativist 3. The linguistic school affecting the environmentalist approach to language teaching was that of the .......... lingusitics a. structural generative transformational cognitive 4. .......... linguists assumed that language was primarily an oral phenomenon based on the evidence that many languages did not have a written form and that people learnt to speak before they learnt to read or write Structural Generative Transformational Cognitive 5. To the .........., language was viewed as consisting of different elements related to each other in a linear way by means of a series of structures or rules, these elements being phonemes, morphemes, words, and sentence types. a. structuralists Generativists Transformationalists Cognitivists 6. To the .........., the target of language learning was to master all the elements of the system and to learn the rules by which these elements were combined, from phoneme to morpheme to word to phrase to sentence. a. structuralists Generativists Transformationalists Cognitivists 7. In psychology, the .......... school (Skinner 1957) dominated thinking in the field of language teaching during the 1940s and 1950s. a. behaviorist psychoanalysts functionalists positivists 8. The approach in .......... school of psychology stemmed from early learning theorists who attempted to describe the learning process in terms of conditioning. a. behaviorist psychoanalysts functionalists positivists 9. To the .........., behavior happened in associative stimulus-response chains, and all learning was seen as associative learning or habit-formation which became stronger with reinforcement. a. behaviorists psychoanalysts functionalists positivists 10. To the behaviorists, the occurrence of behavior was dependent upon three crucial elements in learning: a .........., which elicited the behavior; a .........., which was triggered by the stimulus; and .........., which marked the response as being appropriate or inappropriate and encouraged repetition or suppression of the response. a. stimulus / response/ reinforcement reinforcement / stimulus / response stimulus / reinforcement / response/ reinforcement / response/ stimulus 11. Behaviorist theory placed emphasis on the role of the .......... and denied the existence of .........., which was regarded as inaccessible to proper scientific investigation. a. environment/ internal mental process internal mental process / environment stimulus / self self / stimulus 12. according to Skinner (1957), .......... were strong contributing factors in the language learning process. a. Imitation and practice mind and ego thought and personality imagination and exploration 13. By the 1960s, linguistics saw a paradigm shift from .......... linguistics, which was based on the mere description of surface forms of utterances, to .......... linguistics, which was concerned with both surface forms of utterances as well as the abstract structures underlying sentences, thus emphasizing the creative nature of human language. a. structural/ generative structural / cognitive generative / structural cognitive / structural 14. In his book, “Syantactic Structures,” Chomsky (1957) contends that language has a(n) .......... structure, which consists of the essential meanings, and a(n) .......... structure, which is made up of the particular way in which ideas are stated. a. deep/surface surface / deep internal / external external / internal 15. In his book, “Syntactic Structures,” Chomsky (1957) contends that there is one type of rules, .......... rules, which generate deep structures, and a second type, called .......... rules, which are responsible for converting deep structure into surface structure. a. phrase structure/ transformational transformational / phrase structure deep / surface surface / deep 16. Following Saussure’s (1915) dichotomy of langue (the language system) and parole (actual speech), Chomsky made the theoretical distinction between .......... a. competence and performance depth and surface phrase structure rules and transformational rules syntax and semantics 17. By criticizing behavioristic approaches to language learning, Chomsky claimed that children were innately predisposed to acquire the language of the community into which they were born because they were born with some kind of .......... to tackle the language learning task. a. language acquisition device mental transformation ability learning potential universal linguistic rules 18. Chomsky and his followers (Chomsky 1981; Cook 1988; White 1989) replaced the old term .......... by the idea of ........... a. LAD/ universal grammar universal grammar / LAD language acquisition device / mental transformation ability learning potential / universal linguistic rules 19. In its initial years of existence, .......... aimed to test Chomsky’s innatist theory of language acquisition. a. psycholinguistics sociolinguistics pragmatics psychoanalysis 20. @ studies (Klima and Bellugi 1966; Slobin 1970; Brown 1973) showed conclusively that children were active rather than passive participants in the language learning process, since they inferred rules to test how language worked. a. psycholinguistic sociolinguistic pragmatic psychoanalytic 21. By the 1970s, researchers in the linguistics field, began to turn their attention to .......... or language beyond the sentence (Schiffrin 1994). a. discourse semantics pragmatics sociolinguistics 22. The functional analysis of language by Halliday’s systemic grammar (1970, 1973, 1974, 1975) attempted to explain how the .......... of language determines the .......... of language. a. Function/ form form / function structure / meaning meaning / structure 23. Halliday (1975) postulated a total of .......... communicative functions characterizing the child’s early communicative development, all of which were related to aspects of social life. a. 7 4 5 6 24. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to get things. instrumental, regulatory interactional personal 25. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to regulate people’s behavior; regulatory, instrumental interactional personal 26. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to interact with other people interactional, regulatory instrumental personal 27. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to express one’s feelings; personal, interactional regulatory instrumental 28. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to explore the outside world; heuristic, imaginative representational instrumental 29. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to create an environment, imaginative, heuristic representational instrumental 30. The .......... function of language by Halliday (1957) involves the use of language to communicate information. representational, heuristic imaginative instrumental 31. the .......... (Atkinson and Shiffrin 1968; Schank and Abelson 1977), was mainly concerned with the way human beings take in information, process it and act upon it. information processing approach 32. the.........., was mainly concerned with the way human beings make their own personal understanding from the experiences that surround them. constructivist approach 33. Hymes (1971) introduced the term.........., which included not only Chomsky’s (1965) grammatical competence but also the rules of language use in social context and the sociolinguistic norms of appropriacy. communicative competence 34. The .......... ideas in language learning emphasized the role of the linguistic environment in interaction with the child’s innate predisposition to language development. Interactionist 35. The model of communicative compentence by Canale and Swain (1980) presented an integrative theoretical framework consisting of four main competencies namely.......... competence. grammatical, sociolinguistic, strategic, and discourse 36. In Canale and Swain’s model of communicative competence (1980), .......... competence refers to the knowledge of the language code. It includes knowledge of vocabulary, rules of pronunciation and spelling, word formation and sentence structure. grammatical 37. In Canale and Swain’s model of communicative competence (1980), .......... competence refers to the knowledge of the sociocultural rules of use in a particular context. Sociolinguistic 38. In Canale and Swain’s model of communicative competence (1980), .......... competence involves the knowledge of how to use verbal and nonverbal communication strategies to handle breakdowns in communication. strategic 39. In Canale and Swain’s model of communicative competence (1980), .......... competence is concerned with the knowledge of achieving coherence and cohesion in a spoken or written text. Discourse 40. Bachman (1987) developed a model of communicative language ability in which three components were included namely .......... language competence, strategic competence and psychomotor skills. 41. According to Bachman’s proposed model of communicative competence (1987), Language competence is divided into two components, namely .......... organizational and pragmatic competence. 42. According to Bachman’s proposed model of communicative competence (1987), organizational competence consists of .......... grammatical competence and textual competence, 43. According to Bachman’s proposed model of communicative competence (1987), pragmatic competence is divided into two subcomponents, namely .......... competence, which refers to the knowledge of the pragmatic conventions for performing acceptable language functions, and .......... competence, which deals with the knowledge of the sociolinguistic conventions for performing language functions appropriately in a given context. Illocutionary/ sociolinguistic 44. Bachman (1987, 1990) considered two more components of communicative language ability, namely .......... which allows language users to employ the elements included within language competence depending on the context in which communication takes place in order to negotiate meaning, and .......... which involve the receptive or productive mode in which competence is performed through a particular type of channel: oral or visual in the case of receptive language use, and aural or visual in the case of productive language use. strategic skills/ psychomotor skills 45. Meyer (1991) defines .......... as “the ability of a person to behave adequately in a flexible manner when confronted with actions, attitudes and expectations of representatives of foreign cultures.” intercultural communicative competence Chapter Two: Towards acquiring communicative competence through listening 1. Up to the end of the .........., listening was viewed as a passive process with no role in language learning. 1960s 2. According to Brown (1990), during the .......... period of language learning, the listeners’ main role was simply based on the recognition and discrimination of sounds rather than the understanding of what they were listening to. Environmentalist 3. In the .......... period of language learning, listening was viewed as the primary channel by which access could be gained to L2 input, while in turn serving as the trigger for acquisition. Innatist 4. According to Rost (2002) .......... refers to the fact that listening should be the first aspect to be tackled in the language classroom). initial listening or listening first 5. Asher (1969), in .......... believed that once learners had been exposed to an extended period of listening and had been able to understand this spoken language through non-verbal actions, they could be ready for oral practice. Total Physical Response 6. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, listening was seen as the.......... . promoter of language learning 7. the .......... view of listening claimed that comprehension of a given message only occurred when it was internally reproduced in the listeners’ mind. information processing 8. the .......... view of listening emphasized the fact that listeners did not merely receive and process meaning, but rather constructed such meaning according to their own purposes for listening as well as their own prior knowledge. Constructivist 9. The theory proposed by Rumelhart (1980) involves the collection of prior knowledge and experience that is stored in listeners’ memory and assists the process of comprehension. Schema 10. Schemata can be of two types: schemata and schemata (Lynch and Mendelsohn 2002). The former includes topic familiarity, cultural knowledge and previous experience with a particular field. The latter involves knowledge about discourse forms, rhetorical conventions as well as the structural organization of different text types, such as an academic lecture. content/ formal 11. In the .......... approach to listening, learners are engaged in a listening and using model in which they are first asked to listen to authentic language samples and then to carry out a particular task using the information received. Task-Based 12. In the .......... approach to listening, learners follow a decoding, critical-thinking, speaking model in which they have to first decode the information they hear, react to it by processing it critically, and finally produce an appropriate response. Interactive 13. .......... competence implies an understanding of how language operates at a level above the sentence. It involves knowledge of discourse features such as markers, coherence and cohesion as well as formal schemata in relation to the particular purpose and situational context of the spoken text. Discourse 14. competence involves an understanding of the function or illocutionary force of a spoken utterance in a given situation, as well as the sociopragmatic factors necessary to recognize not just what that utterance says, in linguistic terms, but also what it is meant by it. Pragmatic 15. .......... competence implies having knowledge of both cultural and non-verbal communicative factors in order to appropriately interpret a given spoken text. Intercultural 16. .......... competence involves the mastery of both communication and learning strategies that will allow listeners to successfully construct meaning from oral input. Strategic