Language teaching as activity: a sociocultural perspective on second language teacher practice
thesis
posted on 2017-02-08, 03:58authored byCross, Russell
Whereas the majority of second and foreign language education research to date
has been concerned with the nature of language learning, the focus of this thesis is
the practice of language teaching itself - cognizant of calls from the likes of
Freeman and Johnson (1998, 2005), Shultz (2000), and others who have argued
that "we [still] need to know more about language teachers: what they do, how
they think, what they know, and how they learn" (Freeman & Richards, 1996
cited in Velez-Rendon, 2002, p. 465).
Drawing on recent theoretical developments in the field of second language
acquisition after Vygotsky (1978, 1987), this thesis presents an interpretive study
of foreign language teaching in which teaching has been conceptualised as a
"sociocultural activity" in the tradition of cultural-historic activity theory
(Engestrom, 1987; Leontiev, 1981).
The data for the study are case studies of teacher activity. The participants are four
recent non-native language teacher graduates who teach Japanese in the middle
years (i.e., Grades 7-9) of high school in Victoria, Australia. Using the
Vygotskian concepts of genetic analysis and mediated activity, the study
examines the nature of these teachers' activity with respect to the cultural-historic,
ontogenetic, and microgenetic domains of analysis.
Surprisingly, the analysis reveals that the participants in the study do not see
themselves as being "language teachers". This is despite the fact they are all
recent graduates of language teacher education programs and are positioned as the
subject of an activity system that would suggest, notionally at least, that this is
their classroom role. Consequently, the study also establishes that the activity of
language teaching, at least in the context examined here, has very little to do with
the goal of language teaching and the focus of second language teacher education;
namely, the development of students' communicative competence in a target
language (Savignon, 2005).
However, having applied a genetic-analytical framework to the study of these
teachers' activity, the study is able to provide an explanatory account of how and
why the participants, in this context, have come to see themselves, what it is they
do, and how they then make use of (or ignore) their past experience and
knowledge to fulfil the outcome of an activity - as a "language teacher" - for
something "other than" language teaching.
The thesis concludes with a consideration of the implications of the analysis for
the field of second language teacher education, as well as for second language
teaching. In particular, it argues of the need to contexualise the knowledge base of
second language teacher education by being more attentive to the broader social,
cultural, and historic discourses that shape the contexts within which language
teacher graduates are expected to apply that knowledge. Furthermore, the thesis
also argues of the need to address the nature of contexts for language teaching -
both at the broader, cultural-historic level, as well as the micro genetic level of the
classroom - to redress impediments that stand in the way of good practice.