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Please cite as: Ortega, L. (2007). Social context in task-based language learning: (How) Does it matter? Paper presented in the colloquium “Towards an educational agenda for research into task-based language teaching, Martin Bygate convener. Conference on Social and Cognitive Aspects of Second Language Learning and Teaching, University of Auckland, New Zealand, 12-14 April. Copyright © Lourdes Ortega, 2007

Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

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Page 1: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Please cite as:Ortega, L. (2007). Social context in task-based language learning: (How) Does it matter? Paper presented in the colloquium “Towards an educational agenda for research into task-based language teaching, Martin Bygate convener. Conference on Social and Cognitive Aspects of Second Language Learning and Teaching, University of Auckland, New Zealand, 12-14 April.

Copyright © Lourdes Ortega, 2007

Page 2: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Social Context in TBLL&T: (How) Does it Matter?

Lourdes OrtegaUniversity of Hawai‘i at Mānoa

Social & Cognitive Aspects of Second Language Learning and Teaching ConferenceUniversity of Auckland, April 12-14, 2007

Page 3: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Challenge for TBLL&T:

Learner experience mattersDepending on their social, linguistic, and personal circumstances, learners do different things with words (i.e., they do different tasks) with different people in different places at different times... with important consequences for L2 learning.

Page 4: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

TBLL&T: Learner experience matters...

... But little has been said about possible conceptualizations of social context and their relative value for TBLL&T.

Page 5: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Task-based research

1970s-1980s~Sociolinguistics into SLA: Ellis’s (1985) Variable Competence model; Tarone’s (1988) Capability Continuum model (also Adamson, 1990; Bayley and Preston, 1996; Young, 1991)

Goal: Connections between systematicity, variation, and change, as part of a coherent theory of IL development

e.g., Tarone & Parrish (1988), Yule & Macdonald (1990)

Context (linguistic & social)as a source for linguistic variation

Page 6: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Task-based research

1980s-1990s~The communicative turn: Long (1980), Gass & Varonis(1985), Pica, Kanagy, & Falodun (1993)

Goal: Connections between task communicative demands, variation, and opportunities for learning, as part of a coherent theory of task-based language learning

e.g., Pica (2005)

Task as a substitute for context

Page 7: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Task-based research

1990s~ The cognitive turn: Long (1996), Skehan (1998), Robinson (2001)

Goal: Connections between cognitive demands, variation, and opportunities for learning, as part of a coherent theory of task-based language learning

Research on the here-now/there-then; planning & rehearsal; reasoning demands; motivational tasks; working memory... R. Ellis (2003, 2005), Robinson (2001), Skehan (2003), etc.

Task as cognitive conditioning

Page 8: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Criticisms all along

Sociolinguistic caveats:Aston (1986), Ehrlich, Avery, & Yorio (1989),

Hawkins (1985), Yule, Powers, & Macdonald (1992), Lindemann (2002)

Caveats raised by the social turn:Duff (1993), Coughlan & Duff (1994), Tarone & Liu

(1995), Foster (1998), Nakahama, Tyler, & van Lier (2001), Mori (2002), Storch (2002), Foster & Ohta (2005), Seedhouse (2005), Markee (2006)

Page 9: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Tasks after the social turn

Task-basedL2 use & learning

(blurred boundaries)

Contingency Social context(blurred boundaries)

Agency Variability

Page 10: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Contingentdata

•Generalization

•Particularization

(only options?)

Epistemology?

Ontology?

Inferences

Contingency:

cf. papers in Chahoulb-Deville, Chapelle, & Duff (2006)

Page 11: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

AgencyIntentionality Identity

Power

ConsciousnessGoals

Regulation

Relations with othersSenses of self

Social and cultural worldsAffiliations / Imagination

DialogueResistance

Transformation

Page 12: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

AgencyIntentionality Identity

Power

ConsciousnessGoals

Regulation

Relations with othersSenses of self

Social and cultural worldsAffiliations / Imagination

DialogueResistance

Transformation

Page 13: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

VariabilityComplementary Central

Random noise

PsychologicalSLA theories:

Learner-externalvariables

learner-internal IDs

Sociocultural theory:Constitutive of

human experience &

Complexity & DSTheories:

Site of development

Formal linguisticSLA theories

Page 14: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

VariabilityComplementary Central

PsychologicalSLA theories:

Linguistic environmentTasks demands

IDs, learner-externalIDs, learner-internal

Only peripherally donein TBLT research so far

Sociocultural theory:Constitutive of

human experience &

Complexity & DSTheories:

Site of development

Only recently begun asa line of TBLT research

Page 15: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

What to do?Take social context

seriously in TBLL&T...

Page 16: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Strategy 1:Look to theories that offer

social re-specifications of our phenomena

Page 17: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Some theories offering social re-specifications of phenomena:

L2 interaction:Conversation Analysis

L2 grammar:Systemic-Functional

Linguistics

L2 cognition:• Vygotskian theory

• Dynamic Systems theory

L2 learning:Language socialization

L2 self:Identity theory

Page 18: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Strategy 2:At a minimum, contextualize

Page 19: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Contextualization =

“understanding and documenting the research context”

(Duff, 2006, p. 76)

Page 20: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Contingentdata

Epistemology?

Ontology?

Inferences

Continuum of options:

Contextualization is a must

Generalization[demands well-defined populations, cross-context

replication]

Analytic generalization[generalization to theories, not

populations; Duff (2006, after Firestone, 1993)]

Particularization[understanding singularities the

goal]

cf. papers in Chahoulb-Deville, Chapelle, & Duff (2006)

Page 21: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Strategy 3:Investigate diverse contexts

& populations

Page 22: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

How much TBLL&T research on:

Second & foreignlanguage contexts

Disparate social milieuswith varying L2 use needs

L1 semiliterate/L1 oralpopulations of L2 learners

Varying ages

Heritagelanguage contexts

Page 23: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Big changes in findings and theories would accrue just if diverse contexts & population were investigated (cf. Bigelow & Tarone, 2004; Ortega, 2005; Siegel, 2003; Sridhar, 1994; Valdés, 2005)...

Page 24: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

But...How exactly can social context be theorized (in

TBLL&T)?

Page 25: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Theories offer a theoretical continuum that ranges from externally documentedexperience to lived experience in physical, inter-personal, social, political, and cultural-historical context.

Page 26: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Metaphor OntologyEpistemology Methodology

raw - perceived

etic - emic

general –particular

homogeneous –variable

quantitative

qualitative

naturalistic data

elicited data

positivist

constructivist

Critical pragmatic

container

resource

source

Site of struggle, to be transformed

Social context, external or lived?

Page 27: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

To me, the importance for L2 learning of diverse experiences in TBLL&T resides less in externally documented experience or fixed environmental encounters and more in experience that is lived, made sense of, negotiated, contested, and claimed by learners in their physical, interpersonal, social, cultural, and historical context.

So, yes, there are options, but...

(Ortega, 2006)

Page 28: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

TBLL&Treclaimed

ContextLived, not raw

ContextualizationA must

Diverse contextsA must

EpistemologyDiverse

MethodologyRange of choices &

continua

EthicsCritical pragmatism

Education

Prioritize: students, teachers, programs

Research

Negotiate: values, social impact, research choices

How does social context matter in TBLL&T?

Page 29: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

What we think we’d like to see:Tasks as education eventsReclaiming the discourse of TBLL&T

Martin, Gin, John, & Lourdes

Page 30: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

The unbearable ineludibility of the social context

“[Studying L2 learning] is in many ways similar to painting a chameleon. Because the animal’s colors depend on its physical surroundings, any one representation becomes inaccurate as soon as that background changes.”

Adapted from Tucker (1999, pp. 208-209),who found it in Donato (1998),

who took it from Hamayan (n.d. given)... And it could also have been written by Tarone!

Page 31: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Thank [email protected]

Chamaleon and books in Kafue National Park, Zambia.Photo from http://www.knoware.co.uk/Travelogues/Zambia%20and%20Botswana/Day%2001.htm

Page 32: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

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Tarone, E., & Liu, G. Q. (1995). Situational context, variation, and second language aquisition theory. In G. Cook & B. Seidhofer (Eds.), Principles and practice in the study of language (pp. 107-124). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

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Page 36: Please cite aslortega/OrtegaAuckland2007.pdf · Alternative arguments for generalizing from data as applied to qualitative research. Educational Researcher, 22(4), 16-23. Foster,

Please cite as:Ortega, L. (2007). Social context in task-based language learning: (How) Does it matter? Paper presented in the colloquium “Towards an educational agenda for research into task-based language teaching, Martin Bygate convener. Conference on Social and Cognitive Aspects of Second Language Learning and Teaching, University of Auckland, New Zealand, 12-14 April.

Copyright © Lourdes Ortega, 2007