Development of functional literary discourse models of advanced skills in teaching for prospective english teachers
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Farook Training College, University of Calicut
Abstract
A cohort of skilled pedagogues indoctrinated with advanced skills for a system of
holistic and effective education, ‘making India a global hub of skilled manpower’ should
be the outcome of teacher education programme. “Most prospective English teachers are
inadequately prepared to handle the demands of 21st-century ESL classrooms, when
traditional teacher preparation programmes often fail to address the evolving needs and
complexities of modern language teaching” (Richards, 2017). The art and science of
pedagogy of English as Second Langugae on the discipline-based specificity of
functional, literary and discourse orientation is to be redefined to fit in twenty first century
classrooms. To address this gap, the study aimed to develop and validate Functional
Literary Discourse (FLD) Models of Advanced Skills in Teaching English with focus on
the generation of a theory on pedagogic skill acquisition.
The qualitative research study had framed six objectives on need analysis,
identification of pedagogic skills, development of FLD models, testing the appositeness
of the developed model through qualitative experiment, validation and theory generation.
Teacher educators in English language education, prospective English teachers,
secondary school students and experts in ELT served as the purposive and theoretical
samples for the study. The study followed a multi-stage process in the constructivist
grounded theory (CGT) framework starting with the identification of advanced skills
through initial sampling of prospective English teachers and interviews with teacher
educators. Designing the model and conducting field trials, including opinion surveys
with target group school students, field observations, interviews and focus group
discussions with prospective teachers, formed the methodology to refine the model. An
analysis of the rubric data on field trial was carried out to map and address potential
challenges in implementing the model. The appositeness of the model was established
through focus group discussion and validation by experts in ELT. Generation of a theory
on Pedagogic Skill Acquisition through Functional Literary Discourse Models was the
definitive phase of the study.
The pedagogic skill sets developed with advanced skills and process skills and the
structure of the FLD models designed with the new concepts of composite phases and
focal segments for practice sessions are the major contributions of the study to address
the quantum leap in ELT. A pragmatic theory on pedagogic skill acquisition was also
generated. To assess the mastery level in the acquisition of the developed advanced skill
sets rubrics on the performance of identified skills for prospective English teachers have
been developed. The decisive phase devolves on the appositeness of the outcomes of the
research study in the context of a transformational change in the pro-active curriculum of
teacher education programme in India.
