Text VII, for questions from 39 through 43.
Grammar-Based Teaching (GBT) vs.
Focus on Form (FonF)
1 Grammar teaching has received renewed attention in
academic circles since the late 1980s or early 1990s, when
the naturalist movement began to fade. This attention has
4 generally taken on the nomenclature of Focus on Form
(FonF), even though a focus on grammar includes a great
deal more than simply a focus on form. Form and meaning
7 are inseparable, especially in any worthwhile L2 grammar
instruction. Basically, FonF, in my understanding, seeks ways
of introducing grammar instruction into Communicative
10 Language Teaching (CLT), which is often content- or
task-based.
Both GBT and FonF mingle grammar and
13 communicative teaching, but approach the integration of
grammar into a curriculum differently. Generally speaking,
FonF seeks to integrate a grammar component into a CLT
16 curriculum. GBT seeks to integrate CLT into a structural
syllabus, usually in one class within a larger, varied
curriculum. Simply stated, the issue facing practitioners today
19 is whether to teach grammar separately but integrated with
CLT methods and materials as one component out of many in
a well-balanced program of second language instruction, or to
22 integrate grammar into a content- and/or task-focused
approach, either incidentally as opportunities arise (reactively)
or by a predetermined grammar syllabus (proactively).
25Though I have limited experience with FonF, I have
taught variations of it, most notably in some basal series and
in composition classes. For reactive teaching of grammar in
28 composition classes, I would excerpt common errors from the
students' writing and use them for a grammar-teaching
segment within the composition syllabus. However, it was not
31 difficult to notice that semester after semester students made
the same errors, so I decided it would be more efficient and
effective to prepare a grammar syllabus to integrate into the
34 writing syllabus in a systematic way.
I observed that students in my writing class who had
experienced grammar instruction had an advantage over
37 those students who had not. Students with a good grounding
in grammar needed only to be reminded that, for example,
they were trying to say "I was really bored" not "I was really
40 boring." Those without that grounding in grammar needed a
lot more teaching time in order to understand, just as one
example, the difference between –ing and –ed adjectives.
Betty Azar. Internet: <http://tesl-ej.org> (adapted).
The naturalist movement