KEY
COMPETENCES OF A TEACHER OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE
International Kazakh-Turkish
University by
H. A. Yassawi
Berkimbayev K.M. - Professor of Pedagogical
Science.
Kerimbaeva B.T. - Teacher of
English Department.
 äàííîé ñòàòüå ðàññìàòðèâàåòñÿ ðîëü êëþ÷åâûõ
êîìïåòåíöèé
áóäóùåãî ó÷èòåëÿ àíãëèéñêîãî ÿçûêà
Competence is
translated from the Latin «competentia» means a subject a person is versed in,
a special area of knowledge and experience. A person who is competent in a
certain area possesses a certain standard of knowledge and skills which makes
it possible for him to judge soundly about this very area and act efficiently
in it.
The idea of «competence» is not a new one in methodology of
teaching foreign languages.
For instance linguistic competences have been discussed for
a long time and are used by specialists in the area of methods of teaching
foreign languages where the communicative competence is also analyzed. Recently
the concept of «competence» has started to be studied at the level of general
didactics, general pedagogic and methodology. It can be explained by its
system-practical functions and its integration role in general education.
Competence is a totality of interrelated
qualities of a person (knowledge, skills, experience, command of methods of
working), assigned with respect to a certain sphere of objects and processes
and necessary for efficient and productive activity in respect to them [1].
Level of Competence refers to the possession of a
relevant competence including a personal attitude towards it and towards the
object of activity.
Competence is understood as a
requirement (norm) relation to the standard of achievement of a pupil and Level
of Competence is understood as his personal quality or totality of qualities
and a minimum experience in the relevant activity. A level of competence
achieved is always something which has a personal dimension to it, which is
reflected in a pupil’s personal qualities [2].
In recent investigations the following functions of competence
and level of competence in relation to the personality of a learner are singled
out [3]:
·
reflect and develop personal relevance to a learner of the of the
objects under study;
·
characterize the personal component of a learner’s education, the
degree of his abilities and practical skills;
·
set a minimum standard of experience in practical activities;
·
develop possibilities of solving real problems in everyday life – from
common problems to professional and social ones;
·
they are many-dimensional – they certain to all the basic groups of
personal qualities of a learner to be developed ;
·
represent integral characteristics of the quality of learners’ training;
·
in the aggregate, they determine and reflect the functional competence
of a pupil.
Functions and content of educational competence:
·
multifunctional, in as much as they let a learner to solve problems of
different spheres of life;
·
they are shaped by means of the contents of education;
·
they give a possibility to construct purposes, the contents of education
(Educational standards) and educational technologies as a system;
·
they transcend individual subjects – through separate elements or as a
whole they are present in different subjects and educational spheres.
·
allow to use theoretical knowledge to solve specific problems;
·
allow to pick out clear criteria to assess the success of students in achieving the purposes and aims in
question;
·
are verified in the process of performing a certain series of actions.
Educational competence is a totality of interconnected
semantic orientations, knowledge, skills and learners’ experience which are
necessary for performing personally and socially relevant productive activities
in relation to the objects of reality [4].
Structural components of educational competence:
·
name;
·
type in their general hierarchy (key, general subject, subject);
·
circle of objects of reality with respect to which the competence is
introduced;
·
its determination by social and practical factors as well as its
significance (why and what for it is necessary in society) ;
·
personal significance/relevance of competence (in what and what for a
pupil has to be competent) ;
·
knowledge of a range of objects of reality;
·
skills and experience related to this very range of real objects;
·
methods used in respect to them;
·
minimal standard of experience of a learner in the sphere of competence;
·
«indicators» - tests and tasks which are used to determine the level of
a learner’s competence.
Communicative competence is an ability to solve by
means of foreign language communicative problems important for an individual
and for society, arising in the everyday, educational, professional or cultural
spheres of life. It is an ability to realize linguistic competence in different
situations of communication [5].
Linguistic competence is possession of a
system of information and knowledge about the foreign language pertaining to
its levels (phonetics, grammar etc.) as well as an ability to use this
knowledge in practice. The linguistics
aspects of communicative competence are those that have to do with achieving an
internalized functional
knowledge of the elements and structures of the language [5, 48].
Phonological competence is the ability to recognize
and produce the distinctive meaningful sounds of a language, including:
• Consonants
• Vowels
• Tone patterns
• Intonation patterns
• Rhythm patterns
• Stress patterns any other
suprasegmental features that carry meaning (A
suprasegmental is a vocal
effect that extends over more than one sound segment
in an utterance, such as
pitch, stress, or juncture pattern.)
Related to phonological
competence is orthographic competence, or the ability to decipher and write the
writing system of a language [6].
Grammatical competence is the ability to recognize
and produce the distinctive grammatical structures of a language and to use
them effectively in communication [6, 82].
Generally educational competence is an ability to
make use of rational ways of intellectual work and to make independent progress
in the chosen area of study [7].
Subject competence is a totality of
knowledge, experience, skills which are formed during the process of studying a
subject. Subject competence, acquired during the process of studying a language
as an educational subject and characterizing a certain level of language,
includes the following types of competence – linguistic, speech, communicative
competence, etc [7, 218].
Professional competence is an ability of a
teacher for successful professional activity. It includes knowledge of
didactics, psychology, linguistics, psycholinguistics, theory and methods of
teaching foreign languages and other sciences which are important for a
successful and effective activity of a teacher, possession of professional
skills (constructive, organizational, communicative) and skills in organizing
students’ activity and in the
management of this activity.
Professional competence is one
of the main goals of training in any Pedagogical University [7, 238].
And this competence
includes:
-
linguistic competence,
-
speech and communicative competence,
-
methodological competence is an
ability to use the foreign language with a view to achieving professional
purposes as well as an ability to teach
the language.
Lexical competence is the ability to recognize
and use words in a language in the way that speakers of the language use them.
Lexical competence includes understanding the different relationships among
families of words and the common collocations of words [7, 252].
Speech competence (is a part of
communicative competence) is a command of
the methods of forming and formulating thoughts using the foreign
language, and an ability to use these methods in the process of speech
perception and speech production [7, 254].
Discourse competence is used to refer to two
related, but distinct abilities. Textual discourse competence refers to the
ability to understand and construct monologues or written texts of different
genres, such as narratives, procedural texts, expository texts, persuasive
(hortatory) texts, descriptions and others. These discourse genres have
different characteristics, but in each genre there are some elements that help
make the text coherent and other elements which are used to make important
points distinctive or prominent [8].
Learning a language
involves learning how to relate these different types of discourse in such a
way that hearers or readers can understand what is going on and see what is
important. Likewise it involves being able to relate information in a way that
is coherent to the readers and hearers.
Functional competence refers to the ability to
accomplish communication purposes in a language. There are a number of
different kinds of purposes for which people commonly use language [8, 105].
The pragmatic aspects of communicative competence
are those that have to do with how language is used in communication situations
to achieve the speaker's purposes [9,145].
Cultural competence is a totality of knowledge about
the country of the foreign language. Such knowledge provides the learner with a
certain level of skills and experience in using national-cultural component of
the language, speech etiquette and non-verbal means of communication. Cultural competence is the
ability to understand behavior from the standpoint of the members of a culture
and and to behave in a way that would be understood by the members of the
culture in the intended way. Cultural competence therefore involves
understanding all aspects of a culture, but particularly the social structure,
the values and beliefs of the people, and the way things are assumed to be done
[9, 148].
Linguo-Cultural Competence is knowledge of national
customs, traditions, features of the country of in question; an ability to
extract culturally relevant information from units of the language and an ability
to use this information to achieve effective communication [9, 149].
Strategic Competence (compensatory competence) is an ability to
fill gaps in the knowledge of the language, speech and social experience during
the process of communication in foreign language [10, 64].
Social Competence is an ability to
have communicated successfully with other people. A wish for entering
communication is explained by the presence of need, motives, a definite
attitude toward the future partners of communication and personal experience.
An ability to enter communication requires an ability to behave adequately
in a social situation and to manage it [10,
73].
Socio Cultural Competence means familiarity of students
with national cultural specific features of linguistic behavior and an ability
to use those components of socio - cultural context. That are relevant for
production and perception of speech from
native speakers’ point of view: customs, rules, norms, social
conventions, rituals, social stereotypes, knowledge of regional geography etc [11].
Sociolinguistic competence is the ability to interpret
the social meaning of the choice of linguistic varieties and to use language
with the appropriate social meaning for the communication situation [12].
Interactional competence involves knowing and using
the mostly-unwritten rules for interaction in various communication situations
within a given speech community and culture. It includes, among other things,
knowing how to initiate and manage conversations and negotiate meaning with
other people. It also includes knowing what sorts of body language, eye
contact, and proximity to other people are appropriate, and acting accordingly [13].
LITERATURE
1.Hymes D. On communicative
competens.In: J.B.Pride and J.Holmes.Sociolinguistics-Middlesex:Penguin Books
LTD, 1972.-67
2. M.Canale,
M.Swain.From communicative competence to communicative language pedagogy.
Language and Communication. London: Longman, 1983. - 122 p.
3. Brown G.,
Malmkjaer K., Williams J.Performance and competence in Second Language
Acquisition.- Cambridge University Press, 1996. – 25-34 p
4. Littlewood W.
Communicative Language Teaching. An Introduction. – Cambridge, Cambridge
University Press, 1981 – 33 p.
5. Brumfit S.
Communicative Methodology in Language Teaching – Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1984 – 88 p.
6. Chomsky N. Syntactic
structure. New York, 1957.- 80 p.
7. Widdowson H.G.
Aspects of Language Teaching.-Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990.-218-260 p.
8.Stempleski, Susan
and Tomalin Barry. Video in action. Prentice Hale International ELT, 1990. - p. 105
9. Cooper R., Lavery
M. and Rinvolucri M. Video. Oxford University Press. 1993. - p.145-149
10.Bamfield Andrew, Littlejohn
Andrew and Hicks Diana. Welcome to English Video. Cambridge UP, 1997. – p.64-73.
11. Kelly R. Video and
language learning, an approach to viewing comprehention. RELC Journal, 1992. –
p. 52-57.
12.
Geddes M. Video in the language classroom. London, Heinemann Educational Books,
1997. – p. 74-81
13.The Intensive
English Course. A Challenging Program for Serious Students // Intensive English Programs.- London, 1996. – p. 2-3