ОБУЧЕНИЯ АНГЛИЙСКОМУ ЯЗЫКУ В НАЧАЛЬНОЙ ШКОЛЕ КАК ОБЪЕКТ НАУЧНОГО ПЕДАГОГИЧЕСКОГО ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ В КАЗАХСТАНЕ - Студенческий научный форум

VII Международная студенческая научная конференция Студенческий научный форум - 2015

ОБУЧЕНИЯ АНГЛИЙСКОМУ ЯЗЫКУ В НАЧАЛЬНОЙ ШКОЛЕ КАК ОБЪЕКТ НАУЧНОГО ПЕДАГОГИЧЕСКОГО ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ В КАЗАХСТАНЕ

Шелестова Т.Ю. 1, Жетписбаева Б.А. 1
1Карагандинский государственный университет им.Е.А.Букетова
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It is undeniable that during the past decades English has been playing an increasingly crucial role in all spheres of life for people around the world. Globalisation has made English a pivotal factor for the development of all countries in terms of economy, information technology, politics, education and cultures [1]. As a result, most countries have realised that the English communicative competence of their citizens must be urgently developed and English pedagogy in all schools must be improved to meet this goal. In many countries, in addition to their own languages, English is used as a second language (ESL). It is used as the medium for teaching and learning in schools, and for official purposes in government and business sections. In many other countries, English is neither a home language nor official language, but rather is taught and learned in schools as a foreign language to prepare students to communicate with foreigners, for example in Kazakhstan English language is international language for communication. In these cases it is known as EFL, English as a Foreign Language. Recently, these countries have extended the time for learning English, and English language teaching has started at the lower levels in primary schools.

According to Education Development State Program of the Republic of Kazakhstan for 2011-2020 primary foreign-language education is the first stage of new 12-year school. Therefore, there was an essential necessity for working out theoretical and linguo-didactic support of the process of early foreign languages teaching [2].

However, there is now general consensus that while a more receptive disposition is only an enabling factor and an early start is neither strictly necessary nor a sufficient condition for the attainment of proficiency in another language, if the right educational environment is produced an early start can be extremely beneficial and facilitate the introduction of a second foreign language at a later stage. Above all, an early start to foreign languages is seen to positively impact on the child’s overall language and educational development and in particular to help engender a positive attitude towards other cultures. It is this educational and pedagogical argument which underpins the primary foreign language policy in Kazakhstan.

Early foreign language education has become a priority issue on the agenda of Kazakhstan government with central government agencies and ministries committed to promoting it nationwide. Commitment to multilingualism, the attention to the development of intercultural competences and their contribution towards building Kazakhstan citizenship, as well as the insistence on life-learning as an essential concept in Kazakhstan’s new educational policy, have made early language learning a focal point in Kazakhstan programmes and actions.

At the beginning of the 2010s, following the primary school reform, the government set about the ambitious task of introducing foreign languages as a compulsory subject in as many primary classes as possible. The intention was to entrust the teaching to primary teachers already in possession of the necessary competences but shortage of staff thwarted the original intention to start the teaching from the age of 7 to the age of 8, and the idea to embed the language in the curriculum was also difficult to put into practice for the same reason that there were simply not enough class teachers with sufficient language competence. Once again it soon became quite evident that unless the vital problem of teacher training was addressed comprehensively and incisively all plans to generalize primary FLT would be doomed to failure.

Prior to 2004 English has not been a compulsory course in primary schools although some teaching of English has taken place at this level. This has been on a very modest scale although on an increasingly larger scale mostly in urban key schools.

Nevertheless, the teaching of English at this level had not been standardized, due to its unrecognized position in the school curriculum, limited availability of qualified teachers and lack of appropriate teaching materials. The starting age varied from age 8 to age 11 and the weekly time allocation ranged from 1 period to 2 periods depending on the availability of the teachers. The approach to teaching was more often a mixture of the structural and functional, with situational dialogues being the main form of texts along with a strong emphasis on learning IPA to ensure correct pronunciation and intonation at the initial stage.

Most textbooks used for primary schools were produced locally including a few licensed foreign textbooks, such as Brilliant (for Kazakhstan), Round-up (starter). Some schools simply used secondary school English textbooks for the primary level. The transition or continuity from the primary to the secondary has long been a problem but never seriously tackled as there has been very little research conducted on foreign language teaching at the primary level in Kazakhstan.

The Basic Requirement for Primary School English postulates that the main aims of primary English include:

- to develop pupils’ interests, self confidence and positive attitude towards learning English;

- to cultivate the pupils’ language sense and enable good pronunciation and intonation;

- to develop the pupils’ preliminary ability to use English in daily exchanges and lay a good basis for further study.

Although the Basic Requirement does not enforce any specific method for teaching, the performance descriptors designate a change in methodology. They clearly reflect an activity-based approach, encouraging teaching and learning through listening, speaking, singing, playing, doing, acting, viewing, reading and writing to provide children opportunities to experience the language and facilitate their own discovery of meaning as a first-hand experience. Children are required to do things with English, and the learning process is expected to be a playful and happy experience.

Introducing English into primary schools is not a temporary policy. It is rather a long-term goal and an enterprise to enhance the cultural and educational quality of all the citizens and promote quality-oriented education. To ensure success in primary school English teaching, the Ministry of Education has encouraged the use of satellite TV for both English teachers and school children. A separate channel on satellite TV is used to broadcast primary school English teacher training sessions and actual English lessons for use in classrooms where needed. All textbooks for use in the primary school will have to be reviewed by the national textbook review committee under the Ministry of Education. Most of them are joint-venture productions between a Kazakhstan publisher and a foreign publisher. The government does not welcome complete imports of foreign textbooks but cooperation in textbook writing and production is encouraged, as textbooks by foreign publishers have to be localized to meet the needs of the Basic Requirements and the needs of children in the Kazakhstan contexts. In order to ensure success, the Ministry of Education emphasizes that research in primary school English teaching is to be strengthened and supported. It requires that full time ELT advisors on primary school English teaching be recruited into local educational departments to take responsibility for guiding teaching and research in the area. Demonstration schools and regions are encouraged to carry out experiments and reforms so as to lead the whole area for teaching and research. To protect other foreign languages taught in schools, special support will be given to keep the present number of schools teaching Russian and Kazakh or other foreign languages within the same areas.

The Ministry of Education expects that educational departments at all levels be energetic and committed to taking effective measures to train primary school English teachers. Both pre-service and in-service courses are being developed to prepare and train primary school English teachers. The Ministry of Education requires each province to work out their strategic plans for implementing primary school English teaching in terms of timeframe, scale of teaching and teacher training .

With the government decision to introduce primary English in Kazakhstan and with the issuing of the Basic Requirement for Primary School English, English teaching in the primary school will move gradually from the current ‘chaotic’ situation towards standardization in terms of its teaching objectives, the beginning age and time allocations. As far as teaching methods and assessment are concerned, the Basic Requirement provides some guidelines for teaching and assessment. Textbooks are also going to be geared more towards children’ needs and the level of their cognitive development as the government will make sure that only those textbooks that meet the Basic Requirement and the Kazakhstan context will be recommended. Assessment will enter a new phase of development to better reflect the nature of primary school foreign language teaching.

Despite many positive sides to standardizing primary school English teaching in Kazakhstan, many problems still remain to be tackled. The first and foremost is the training of enough qualified teachers.

With the introduction of primary English, a new college degree for training primary school English teachers is to be introduced and programmes are being designed for training future primary English teachers. At the same time, many of the existing teachers need to go through in-service training as many of them will face the situation of working with lower age groups and they need to acquire new skills and techniques to work with younger learners. Also, the teaching aims and objectives postulated in the Basic Requirement expect primary school teachers to change in many aspects. First, they are expected to change their views about language teaching from a knowledge-based one to an ability-based one. Second, they are expected to change their role from that of a knowledge transmitter to a multi-role educator aiming for the whole child development. Thirdly, teachers are expected to use a more activity-based approach and make the students the center of learning. Fourthly, teachers are expected to change their way of assessing pupils’ achievement in learning the language. They need to use formative assessment in addition to using tests, which they are already very familiar with. Last but not the least, teachers are expected to use modern technology in teaching, creating more effective resources for learning and for using the language. In addition to all of these, the teachers’ own language proficiency need to be improved, without which other roles can hardly be fulfilled.

English language teaching in Kazakhstan has entered a new era with the introduction of primary English. There is an obvious shift of paradigm from the structural audio-lingual approach to a global approach to language education through activity-based learning in the primary school. Increasing numbers of teachers, teacher educators and researchers are now beginning to devote themselves to the study of language teaching with young learners. New textbooks are being developed and teacher training programmes at primary and secondary levels are being funded by both the national and local governments. Many teachers are beginning to realize the need to change their beliefs about language and language learning, and the need to acquire new skills and techniques in teaching and in assessment according to the new concepts in teaching and learning and according to the needs of their students. Research into primary school English teaching and teacher training are urgently needed to ensure a better understanding so as to better inform and improve practice.

References

1 Carter, R., Nunan, D. Teaching English to speakers of other languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.- 2001.- pp. 1-6.

2 State program of a development of education of the Republic of Kazakhstan for 2011–2020, approved by the Decree of the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan No. 1118 of December 7, 2010 // www.akorda.kz

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