Candlin & Mynard
  • Home
  • About us
    • Mission and promises
    • Publishing ethics
  • Series
    • Autonomous Language Learning Series
    • Communicating Risk in Systems, Communities, Organisations and Professions
    • Generative AI and Foreign Language Education
    • Leadership in Language Education
    • Life and Education in Japan Series
    • Positive Pedagogical Praxis
    • Teaching English to Young Learners Series
  • Titles
  • For authors
    • Calls for proposals
  • Distribution
  • Open access
  • Contact us
  • Blog
  • Subscribe

Chapter 1. What are conversation strategies and why teach them? ​ ​https://doi.org/10.47908/19/1

Picture

In this chapter, the author aims to explain the theoretical basis of this book. In doing so, there is a need to look at several key areas. He starts by defining conversation strategies and showing how they differ from and are related to more generalised communication strategies. Next, he defines communicative competence (Hymes, 1972) and shows why this theory should still provide an important basis for developing the teaching of conversation within a communicative teaching framework, whichever precise form that takes. Following this, he explores why we might teach conversation strategies as a means of helping to develop communicative competence. Finally, he gives one brief example of how this might look in the classroom. 




Publication details

Publication date: March, 2021
Print book, 172 pages, $29.99. ISBN: 9798720382643 
Ebook: $9.99. ISBN: 9781005631925
​
https://doi.org/10.47908/19
Series: Positive Pedagogical Praxis
https://www.candlinandmynard.com/conversationstrategies.html