Abstract

Foreign language learning has been a part of German elementary schools for several years now. Montessori schools focusing on individual learning, i.e. mostly independent from the teacher and based on auto-education, interest, and free choice, are also asked to teach an L2. The original lack of a concept of L2 learning for this environment has brought forth different approaches. Bilingual education seems to be feasible and applicable in Montessori education. The downside to this is that even in a bilingual classroom the Montessori way of learning may not allow for very much oral production of the foreign language. The role of L2 production (cf. Swain 1985, 1995, 2005) for language acquisition has been theoretically claimed and empirically investigated. Output can have a positive influence on L2 learning (cf. e.g. Izumi 2002, Keck et al. 2006). This also applies to interaction (cf. Long 1996), where negotiation of meaning and modified output are factors supporting L2 development (cf. e.g. de la Fuente 2002, McDonough 2005). Task-based Language Learning (TBLL) presents itself as one way to promote oral language production and to provide opportunities for meaning-negotiation. Especially tasks with required information exchange and a closed outcome have been shown to be beneficial for the elicitation of negotiation of meaning and modified output. This paper argues that TBLL is a promising approach for the facilitation of L2 production and thus the development of speaking skills in a Montessori context. It also hypothesizes that TBLL can be implemented in a bilingual Montessori environment while still making the Montessori way of learning possible. Different tasks on various topics, examples of which are presented in this article, can lay the foundation for this. Offering such tasks in a bilingual Montessori elementary classroom promises to foster language production and the use of communication strategies like negotiation of meaning, both being facilitative for L2 acquisition. This hypothesis remains to be tested in future research.

Highlights

  • Customizing foreign language learning and catering to the individual needs of children have been discussed in educational policies and teaching practice for quite some time

  • Montessori elementary schools try to cater to the individual needs of children through the concept of Freiarbeit, which is the prevalent way of learning in these environments

  • Those Montessori schools offering foreign language learning by bilingual education as part of the regular Freiarbeit are assumed to lack sufficient opportunities for children's oral use of the foreign language

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Summary

Introduction

Customizing foreign language learning and catering to the individual needs of children have been discussed in educational policies and teaching practice for quite some time. Various schools have developed a number of different approaches One of these is to offer foreign language learning opportunities through bilingual learning, for example immersion, during Freiarbeit. This can be accomplished by introducing language teachers who teach content matter in the L22 and only communicate with the children in the foreign language. Sufficient opportunities for oral output (cf Swain 1985, 1995, 2005) and interaction (cf Long 1983, 1996) on the part of the learners are hypothesized to foster language acquisition This paper introduces Task-based Language Learning (TBLL) as a means of enabling individual foreign language learning in a Montessori environment so that the development of speaking skills is facilitated as well.

Montessori education
Foreign language learning at Montessori schools
Immersion and its effects on L2 skills
Output in language acquisition
Task-based Language Learning
Task-based Language Learning at Montessori elementary schools
TBLL: Promoting speaking skills through meaning-negotiation
Meaning-negotiation
Task design and negotiation for meaning
Negotiation of meaning with children
Further studies
Performance-based task analysis
TBLL: Catering for individual needs in the Montessori environment
Learning on the basis of interest using tasks
Learning on the basis of free choice using tasks
Learning on the basis of auto-education using tasks
Task examples
Conclusion
Full Text
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