It is a long-lasting issue for most researchers and teachers to apply Communicative Teaching Method (CLT) in language teaching. The roles that teachers play in CLT are the key whether CLT is successfully applied in ...It is a long-lasting issue for most researchers and teachers to apply Communicative Teaching Method (CLT) in language teaching. The roles that teachers play in CLT are the key whether CLT is successfully applied in teaching. This paper aims to discuss how to apply this teaching method in language teaching by means of teachers' roles, namely, information collector, designer, organizer and controller of the class, participant and evaluator.展开更多
The rise of a socially-defined form of constructivism is identified as a central motif in current theorising around educational practice. The role of technology in supporting such a shift is noted along with a relativ...The rise of a socially-defined form of constructivism is identified as a central motif in current theorising around educational practice. The role of technology in supporting such a shift is noted along with a relative marginalisation of the role of teachers. While technology is implicated in creating less frequent contact between students and teachers in higher education, it is also argued to be implicated in rendering the contact that does occur to be less personal. Such re-mediation of the traditional student-teacher relationship represents a shift that might need to be more vigilantly monitored.展开更多
文摘It is a long-lasting issue for most researchers and teachers to apply Communicative Teaching Method (CLT) in language teaching. The roles that teachers play in CLT are the key whether CLT is successfully applied in teaching. This paper aims to discuss how to apply this teaching method in language teaching by means of teachers' roles, namely, information collector, designer, organizer and controller of the class, participant and evaluator.
文摘The rise of a socially-defined form of constructivism is identified as a central motif in current theorising around educational practice. The role of technology in supporting such a shift is noted along with a relative marginalisation of the role of teachers. While technology is implicated in creating less frequent contact between students and teachers in higher education, it is also argued to be implicated in rendering the contact that does occur to be less personal. Such re-mediation of the traditional student-teacher relationship represents a shift that might need to be more vigilantly monitored.