Task Based Approach Vs Traditional
Task Based Approach Vs Traditional
By
Sultan A. Al Muhaimeed
December 2013
© Copyright, 2013 by Sultan A. Al Muhaimeed
All Rights Reserved
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A dissertation written by
Sultan A. Al Muhaimeed
Approved by
Accepted by
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AL MUHAIMEED, SULTAN A., Ph.D., December 2013 CURRICULUM AND
INSTRUCTION/TESOL
constructivist instructional practice for English language teaching and learning on the
intermediate school level. This study, in part, strives to determine whether or not the
the traditional teaching method of the English language that involves (among other
things) prompting and drilling of students. This study also strives to gain issues and
insights that accompany the application of TBLT through constant comparison and
for collecting quantitative data, and classroom observation and researcher log for
collecting qualitative data. The study involved 122 participants divided into treatment
and control groups. The treatment group has received ten weeks of English language
instruction via the TBLT method while the control group has received ten weeks of
English language instruction via the traditional teaching method. The independent
variable is the use of TBLT in the classroom and the effect/dependent variable is the
A Two-Factor Split Plot analysis with the pretest as the covariate is used for
analyzing the quantitative data. Analysis of qualitative data included synthesis, rich, and
detailed description for classroom observation and grounded theory for researcher log
data. The findings show that teaching via the TBLT method has significantly helped
students increase their reading comprehension achievement scores more than that of the
traditional teaching method of the English language. The findings also suggest that the
TBLT method, as a constructivist practice, is a better way for English language teaching
and has involved practices that are desired in a modern educational context when
I wish to thank those whose emotional support has greatly helped me accomplish
this work. I would like to thank my mother, Latefah S. Aldobaikhi, for being my source
of love, devotion, and enthusiasm as she is always the vital reason for any success I
accomplish throughout my entire life. I also would like to thank my father, Abdullah S.
Abdulaziz, & Abdulmajeed, for their encouragement, willingness to listen, and services.
Special thanks are to my partners of every success, my wife, Hibah I. Alzaben, and my
daughter, Almas S. Almuhaimeed, for their patience, love, and help. Gratitude extends to
I also wish to thank those whose professional support has profoundly guided this
work from the beginning to the end. Above all, there are no words that could express my
William P. Bintz, Aryn C. Karpinski, and Vilma Seeberg. Without their help,
knowledge, and expertise, this study would not be accomplished. I also would like to
Alrobai’an for their collegial discussions and services. Gratitude extends to Qassim
University, Educational Directorate in Qassim, and Kent State University for facilitating
and observing the work of this study. Special thanks are to all students who participated
in this study.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................................. iv
CHAPTER
I. BACKGROUND, RATIONALE, AND THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK ..........1
Introduction ..............................................................................................................1
Background ..............................................................................................................1
Targeted Curriculum ..........................................................................................3
Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT) ..........................................................3
Rationale ..................................................................................................................5
Purpose of the Study ..........................................................................................5
Significance of the Study ...................................................................................6
Why TBLT Method in this Study ......................................................................7
Theoretical Framework (Foundation for TBLT) ...............................................8
Research Questions ...............................................................................................11
Terms ....................................................................................................................12
Summary ................................................................................................................14
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TABLE OF CONTENTS (Continued)
CHAPTER Page
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TABLE OF CONTENTS (Continued)
CHAPTER Page
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TABLE OF CONTENTS (Continued)
CHAPTER Page
APPENDICES .................................................................................................................164
REFERENCES ...............................................................................................................235
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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure Page
5 Estimated Means of Standardized Posttests for TBLT and Control Groups .........84
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LIST OF TABLES
Table Page
6 Standardized Posttests Estimated Means with Their Standard Errors and 95%
Confidence Interval ................................................................................................85
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CHAPTER I
Introduction
information about the current curriculum for teaching English in Saudi Arabia and a
significance of the study, and presents its theoretical framework. The last two parts of
the chapter articulate research questions and present a brief glossary of terms.
Background
Saudi Arabia is located in the Middle East at the western part of the Asian
Continent. The country occupies 2,149,690 square kilometers and has a population in
make up 69% of the population and Arab and non-Arab nationalities constitute the
remainder; the latter group also accounts for a greater percentage of the labor force
(Central Department of Statistics & Information, 2010). The predominant and official
There are three institutes that are responsible for education in Saudi Arabia: the
Education, which controls education above secondary school; and the Technical and
training.
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fact, in 2010/2011, 25% of the Saudi Budget (150,000,000,000 Saudi Riyals/ USD
40,000,000,000) was allocated for this purpose. Within education, English language
teaching and learning receives great emphasis and efforts of development. This could be
linked to the realization that English has become the predominate language of the world
and the discourse of international business, medicine, technology, and other fields.
Therefore, Ministry of Education has placed a particular emphasis on the teaching and
learning of this subject. Accordingly, students in Saudi Arabia begin studying English at
age 12 and there are plans to have students start learning the English language at an
earlier age.
country about student proficiency (Maroun & Samman, 2008). This dissatisfaction is
explicitly seen in the way the private sector in Saudi Arabia conceives graduates or
specialization, practice, credibility in assessment systems, and work ethics. Also, the
students’ skills are “soft” and that there is inadequate coordination between business and
education (Maroun & Samman, 2008). Many families feel similarly and have chosen to
send their children (after school and on vacation) to private, specialized English language
institutes to learn the language. Many families believe that their children learn the
English language in those private institutes better than in governmental schools linking
that, in part, to the existence of better English language teachers in private institutes who
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could teach their children through modern teaching practices. Consequently, the demand
for these institutes has increased; in 1999, there was only one private English language
institute in Buraydah; so far in 2013, there are more than 15, with the possibility of more
to come.
Targeted Curriculum
In this study, the author targets the English language curriculum that is taught in
Saudi Arabia in the third intermediate grade. By the time students enter this grade, they
have already completed six years of general study in elementary school and two years in
intermediate school and have studied English for three years (in Saudi governmental
schools, students start learning English at age 12, in the sixth year of elementary school).
After third intermediate grade, they will study English for three more years in secondary
school. This study chose this age group because it falls in the middle of the seven years
of English language study that is taught in Saudi schools and because the author believes
that students in the third intermediate grade at the age of 15 have enough English
Teaching (TBLT) uses meaningful, inquiry-based, real world activities (Brown, 2007;
Willis & Willis, 2007). Many researchers view this method as emerging from
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) (Brown, 2007; Ellis, 2003). Others see it as a
In TBLT, priority is placed on the completion of tasks that are assessed in terms
of outcome (Brown, 2007; Willis & Willis, 2007). Also, students pass through three
stages when adopting TBLT in an English language lesson. In the first stage, groups of
students engage in real life situations that are similar to the task they will perform in the
classroom (pre-task stage). In the second stage, groups of students perform the main task
of the associated lesson or content (running task stage). In the third stage, groups of
students display or provide an indicator that they have successfully completed the task for
the purposes of assessment and evaluation (task completion stage). The task as a
workplan (Breen, 1989; Ellis, 2003) is specified by the four competencies it can serve:
linguistic, sociolinguistic, discourse, and strategic (Canale, 1983). The inner design or
“complexity” of the task itself can be viewed from both cognitive and sociocultural
Cognitively, the task is a means of carrying topics into classrooms, setting the
discourse motion, and encouraging students to produce an output (Wright, 1987). Tasks
require that learners build (a) an exemplar-based system that is lexical in nature and
language; and (b) a rule-based system that consists of abstract representations of the
underlying patterns of the language, requires more processing, and is best suited for more
controlled, less fluent language performance (Skehan, 1998). When performing tasks,
learners pass through three stages during the process of producing the language:
that can provide a “window for viewing the cognitive processes the learner is
internalizing” (Ellis, 2003, p. 184). In this way, learning is mediated through interaction
with others (Vygotsky, 1978)1. (For further information about TBLT, see the vignette,
lesson plan sample under Chapter III, and further lesson plans in Appendix K).
Rationale
Some teachers, the author among them, believe that one reason for families’
related to the existence of the traditional way of English language teaching in schools.
This traditional way of teaching includes instructional practices that are collectively
referred to as ‘prompting’ because they involve the prompting and ‘drilling’ of students.
These practices are also described colloquially as ‘drilling and killing,’ ‘memorizing,’
‘answering and not questioning,’ ‘checking and not correcting,’ ‘individual learning’ (as
opposed to group work learning), ‘teachers are the sources and producers of knowledge,’
‘students are the recipients,’ and ‘leaving no place for much thinking and understanding.’
Due to research scope purposes, this study assumes that the traditional way of English
language teaching does not help students better comprehend English when the emphasis
1 Further connection between TBLT and the sociocultural theory is discussed under the Theoretical
reading comprehension reflected through insights obtained while observing students and
introduces TBLT as a transitional step for teaching practices in Saudi Arabia—a moving
away from skills-based (behaviorist) teaching and learning and towards practices that are
will help teachers make changes and avoid certain practices in the curriculum in favor of
having concrete progress and development in the instructional practices and which by the
end will lead to better teaching practices and learning in public schools.
The notion of significance varies from one society or culture to another and from
one person to another within the same community. What is important or meaningful to
one person could be nonsense to another and vice versa. However, there are universal
issues that are perceived to be positive and desired by the majority of people, such as
positive growth, morals and ethics, peace, and a good education. This study defines
significance as that which helps to bring about desirable results or when it helps avoid
undesired results. Applying this definition, investigation of this study, primarily, seeks to
The significance of the study extends to help all parties involved directly and
indirectly in the educational process achieve desired outcomes through the avoidance of
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doing inappropriate instructional practices that lead to undesired learning outcomes. The
avoided instructional practices should be replaced by more appropriate ones that could
help teachers develop professionally and which would lead to better learning situations.
findings out of the adoption of the TBLT method would suggest or explain issues related
to its adequacy, advantages, and disadvantages, to the intermediate level. Knowledge and
practice of modern instructional practices could help English language teachers develop
professionally and, accordingly, students would learn more and even be more accurate
and fluent in the language of the world, the English language. By the time, the students
become accurate and fluent in English, more opportunities would be available for them to
pursue advanced studies in many countries and in various fields such as medicine,
politics, business, and industry, and which would lead to distinguished growth in society
Besides the good qualities mentioned earlier that hopefully would take place in
the targeted curriculum when applying a constructivist practice rather than practices that
discussed under Chapter II) and after reviewing the literature of second language
acquisition (SLA), and working and learning in the field of second language teaching and
learning, this study argues that TBLT is a suitable method that helps learners be fluent,
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accurate, and even increase their reading comprehension achievement. It also argues that
TBLT serves the ultimate goal of learning a language which is using it. The general goal
of language learning is the fluent, accurate, and pragmatically effective use of the target
language and TBLT is a form of teaching that treats language primarily as a tool for
incorporates the four language skills as it is manipulated through oral and written
(Bygate, Skehan, & Swain, 2001). It also develops students’ competence that enables
them to use the language in the kinds of situations outside the classroom that imitate real
life as well as a tool for communicating inside it. It is also beneficial to both the teacher
and the learners as they are focusing on a language as a tool (Brindley, 2009).
There is a new social attitude that argues that there is no one comprehensive
learning theories (Jarvis, 2006; Jarvis & Parker, 2005). TBLT is grounded in
constructivist theories, which adds strength and value to this method of teaching. The
component of TBLT (Lee, 2000). For clarification, the cognitive and sociocultural
perspectives of learning, the psychological (cognitive) theories trace the arrows from the
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theories start with objectified culture and point inwards to the individual and, hence,
learners is a fundamental principle of TBLT (Lee, 2000). At the same time, this principle
essence, suggests that learning is socially constructed (Vygotsky, 1978). (Further details
about Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory are discussed under Chapter II). Tasks in TBLT
include mediation by others in social interaction, by self through private speech, and
Second, the sequence of TBLT in classroom and the roles played by both of the
students and teacher (Brown, 2007; Ellis, 2003; Skehan, 1998) are consistent with or
Development ZPD. In essence, ZPD refers to what the learner can do without the help of
others and what the learner cannot do alone, but with the help of others. Linkage of
TBLT to ZPD suggests that the latter one guides task-based learning from two
perspectives. The first one is that in ZPD, “learning is oriented toward developmental
levels already reached by the learner and it does not aim for a new stage of the
developmental process but rather lags behind this process” (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 89). This
suggests that learning advances development where the learner builds new knowledge
(the things that she/he needed help from others to learn) upon the already known
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important to emerge from the known (in the pre-task stage) to the unknown or intended to
be learned (in the running and post task stages). Also, task-based learning needs to be an
appropriate challenge by requiring learners to use the language in situations that enable
The second perspective is that the nature of the ZPD requires the presence of self
and others so as to provide the necessary interaction for learning to take place. This is
similar to the case in TBLT since it requires the presence of the learner (the one who has
the limited knowledge) and the presence of the more knowledgeable others (these could
be the more knowledgeable peers or most likely their teacher who models the facilitator
role). The interaction required by the ZPD is present in the TBLT and which can be seen
by the roles played by students in groups work while performing tasks and the role of
their teacher as a facilitator. (Further details about TBLT principles in literature and
linkage to the Vygotsky’s learning perspectives are elaborately discussed under Chapter
II).
totally external nor totally internal, but a result of interaction between heredity (internal)
and environment (external) (Piaget, 1969). This theoretical perspective embodies the
TBLT method involves two factors to be present when producing the language, which are
(a), the simultaneity of the information processed by the learner and (b) involvement in
context (Cummins, 1983). In other words, the nature of tasks requires students to have a
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reciprocal interaction of language with their colleagues through production (within the
thinkers. For instance, tasks which are seen as a synonym of activities and problem-
solving exercises (Brown, 2007; Wright, 1985) are informed by the notion of learning
through activities (Dewey, 2009), which holds that the curriculum “should exhibit these
activities to the child, and reproduce them in such ways that the child will gradually learn
the meaning of them, and be capable of playing his own part in relation to them” (p. 36).
Similarly, the best way to learn is through the exercise of problem-solving (Bruner,
1961). At last but not least, the notion of imitation of real life world to be present in
based language teaching and learning (Fulcher, 2000). At last, the notion of dialogue
needed to be present in curricula (Schubert, Marshall, Sears, Allen, & Roberts, 2007) is
present among learners and teacher when performing a task (Willis & Willis, 2007).
Research Questions
1. Is using the TBLT method for teaching English as a second language for male
2. What insights and issues can be gained about implementing TBLT in this research
setting?
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Terms
build their own reality or at least interpret it based upon their perceptions of
one's prior experiences, mental structures, and beliefs that are used to interpret
knowing (Henderson & Gornik, 2007). Following best practice implies that the
practitioner is aware of the current research and consistently offers clients the full
language teaching that a focuses on meaning, fluency, the roles of teachers and
the ability of learners to use language in real communication” (Ellis, 2003, p. 27).
third intermediate school in Saudi Arabia. (More details are presented under The
6. Tasks are activities that require the use of meaning-focused language (Skehan,
7. Task-based assessments (TBA) are performance assessment tools that can assess
of language teaching in which meaning is primary, there are real world problems
to solve, and priority is placed on the completion of the tasks, which are assessed
in terms of the outcome (Brown, 2007; Willis & Willis, 2007). This method is
Teaching (CLT) (Brown, 2007; Ellis, 2003). Others see it as a new approach to
questioning, teachers’ checking and not correcting students’ homework and tests,
and individual learning (versus group learning). In this system, teachers are the
Summary
The study will take place in Buraydah, Saudi Arabia, where education, in general,
and the teaching of the English, in particular, receives considerable attention from the
dissatisfaction in the country with the quality of English language instruction. This study
argues that this dissatisfaction is due, in part, to the “prompting” method used to teach
English, and seeks whether or not the TBLT method will increase students’ reading
Questions clearly show that this study intends to find out whether or not the TBLT
method can help the students better acquire the English language through increasing their
achievement scores on reading comprehension and also seek for insights or issues that
can be gained about the TBLT method in this research setting. Towards the end of the
LITERATURE REVIEW
Introduction
This chapter discusses the literature that relates to the study. It consists of five
major sections. The first section outlines the principles of constructivism and
behaviorism, which are two of the theories on which the study is based. The treatment
group is grounded in constructivism and the control group is based on behaviorism. The
second section in this chapter discusses the evolution of Task-based Language Teaching
thinkers of tasks, tasks across time, psycho and sociolinguistic dimensions of tasks,
research on TBLT. The third section focuses on TBLT basic principles shared by other
comprehension and miscue analysis. The last section of this chapter concludes with a
production with an emphasis on the two types of tests used in this study (placement and
achievement tests).
common and influential of which are behaviorism and constructivism. The principles
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underlying these theories of learning have greatly influenced education systems and
Behaviorism
credited to the Russian physiologist, Ivan Pavlov (1927/1960). Pavlov’s work was
developed later on to be known as behaviorism when the term behaviorist was introduced
by Watson (1924) and whose work was a progress or development of Pavlov’s. Since
then, a set of learning theories which are built upon certain assumptions and share similar
external workings of humans and animals and implies that learning takes place through a
structure or pattern of behavior that the learner must go through for learning to occur
(Guthrie, 1935; Hull, 1935; Pavlov, 1927/1960; Skinner, 1938; Thorndike, 1913; Watson,
1924). One of these assumptions is that human behavior (learning) is a reflexive reaction
to environmental stimuli and that humans and animals share the same basic laws of
behavior (Pavlov, 1927/1960). This practice involved ringing a bell at the same time that
food was given to a dog; after consecutive repetitions, the dog associated the bell with the
food and salivated when the bell rang, even without the presence of food. That
experiment outlined that the first cue (the food) was innately effective or previously
learned (the unconditioned stimulus) and the second and new cue (the bell) was the
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conditioned stimulus and, hence, the repeated association between the unconditioned and
to environmental stimuli, is that behavior is a product of the brain (Watson, 1924). This
assumption infers that all learning can be attributed to environmental stimuli and
responses. Laws for learning under this theory included frequency—which is the theory
which refers to the response that comes right after the stimulus and is usually paired with
it. In essence, this theory sees that learning happens due to the accumulation of habits.
simpler by having fewer laws. For instance, the law of contiguity, one-trial learning, is
introduced to be responsible for human learning and that the stimulus gains its associative
strength through its first pairing with the response (Guthrie, 1935). This law also
suggests that eliminating bad habits can be realized through: (a) the incompatible
response, which consists of connecting specific stimuli with specific response; (b) the
fatigue method, which allows an unwanted act to be repeated until it fatigues; and (c) the
threshold method, through which the cues that normally elicit the unwanted behavior are
The preceding and even the following assumptions of the behaviorist school do
emphasize two important characteristics for learning occurrence as outlined which are
repetition and motivation. These two characteristics needed to be present when learning
since learning takes place due to the stimulus and response bond and happen through trial
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and error (Thorndike, 1913). The notion of learning due to stimulus and response bond
and happens through trial and error involves three major laws and five minor laws for this
vision of learning: (a) the law of effect, which proposes that the responses that lead to
satisfaction are repeated while those that lead to annoyance are not; (b) the law of
readiness, which states that the annoyance and satisfaction depend on the state of the
behaving organism; and (c) the law of exercise, which states that learning is enhanced by
practice. The minor laws for learning include: (a) the law of multiple responses, which
states that, when the learner is faced with a problem and produces an unsatisfying
response, s/he tries again to produce something satisfactory; (b) the law of attitude, which
holds that learning does not occur independently of the state of the behaving organism;
(c) the law of the prepotency of elements, where the learner responds only to the relevant
aspects of a situation; (d) the law of response by analogy, which states that the learner
can respond to a situation with the responses learned in a similar previously learned
situation; and (e) the law of associative shifting, which refers to a transfer of stimulus
control from one cue to another. In essence, these major and minor laws infer that better
Placing the most important goal first when teaching and designing lesson plans is
characteristic is inferred from the Hull’s (1935) Molar behavior Theory which was based
(response). This theory involves five major variables that intervene with learning. The
first, which Hull termed drive was defined as an aroused state of the learner, caused
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either by the lack of some needed substance or a painful stimulation. The second variable
was habit strength which connected the stimulus with the response. The third variable is
reaction potential which referred to the tendency to give a learned response to a given
stimulus at a particular time. Reactive inhabitation is the fourth variable, which involved
a muscular effort that led to fatigue. The final variable is conditioned inhabitation
referred to stopping the drive. In essence, this theory in one perspective suggests that a
learner comes with a desire or need where she/he begins to learn (Drive) and becomes
happens through operant conditioning, where the learner acts in response to the
eventually produces a bond between the operation (behavior) and the stimulus (Skinner,
1938). This assumption involves two classes of reinforcers: positive reinforcers, to elicit
a desired response and aversive stimuli, to repress those that are deemed undesirable or to
encouraging the repetition of the response by rewarding the learner with a prize or
reinforcement by itself such as not giving a learner a privilege s/he usually receives
To conclude, there are some key assumptions under the behaviorist school of
(Pavlov, 1927/1960). Another, learning is the product of learning and can be attributed to
environmental stimuli and responses (Watson, 1924). Also, the one-trial learning is
responsible for human learning and that the stimulus gains its associative strength
through its first pairing with the response (Guthrie, 1935). Moreover, learning takes
place due to the stimulus and response bond and happens through trial and error
(Hull, 1935). Furthermore, learning occurs through operant conditioning which takes
1938). At last but not least, these assumptions of the behaviorist school of learning had
(versus group) learning, and recently placing emphasis on motivating learners through
both types of reinforcement. At last, these practices underlie the traditional method of
Constructivism
The constructivist school of thought appeared early in the 20th century and has
roots in psychology and physiology (D’Angelo, Touchman, & Clark, 2008; Driscoll,
1994). The constructivist school of thought, unlike the behaviorist one, does distinguish
the study of human behavior from that of the animal. The constructivist school of
thought emphasizes the role of social interaction in cognitive development (Piaget, 1970;
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contributed to our understanding of how learning takes place from various perspectives.
However, this study is not intended to emphasize the differences among the constructivist
school foundational thinkers or to support one vision over another, but instead, outlines
the major assumptions and principles of constructivism and which embody the treatment
processes can be understood only by considering where they occur in growth (Vygotsky,
1978). This assumption involves a genetic or developmental method that higher mental
(cultural) processes in the individual have their own origin in social processes and the
claim that mental processes can be understood by identifying the tools and signs that
mediate them. In other words, human behavior (i.e., learning) occurs according to a
genetic development within the child accompanied by the trigger of culture and which are
chronological order of speech and action. At an early stage the child’s action precedes
his/her speech while in a later stage the child’s speech precedes his/her actions
(Vygotsky, 1978).
Another assumption that interacts with learning is that, within society, individuals
have the property of the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) which refers to the phase
between what the child could do alone and what s/he can do or learn with the help of a
more knowledgeable other (Vygotsky, 1978). This assumption necessarily infers that
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“learning oriented toward developmental levels already reached is ineffective from the
viewpoint of a child’s overall development. [Learning] does not aim for a new stage of
the developmental process but rather lags behind this process” (p. 89). In other words,
the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) suggests that learning should be in advance of
constructivist school of thought, sees that learning is socially constructed. Learners build
their own reality or at least interpret it based upon their perceptions of experiences.
Knowledge, then, is a function of prior experiences, mental structures, and beliefs that are
Another vision of learning under the constructivist school of thought was that
learning was more cognitive than social but included maturational variables that were
affected or shaped by the environment (Piaget, 1970). This vision of learning proposed
three types of experience: (a) exercise that is self-directed and self-rewarded; (b) physical
experience, which is a process of learning about the properties of objects; and (c) logico-
that is spontaneous and directly related to the maturation of the brain. Thus, cognitive
responsible for development (defined as the physical and social experience of the
environment); (b) assimilation, which is the process of adding new experiences or inputs
to old and existing ones; and (c) accommodation, which involves building new
proposing four stages of development (Piaget, 1970). In the first one, sensorimotor
period, from birth to two years old, the child progresses from unintentional behavior to
learning from “trial and error” and begins thinking of symbols and causality. In the
second one, pre-operational period, from two to seven years old, the child begins to show
some conceptual behavior. In the third one, concrete operations, from seven to eleven
years old, the child displays reversible thinking and understands the change in the
appearance of some substances. In the fourth one, formal operations, from eleven to
fifteen years old, the child arrives at a higher-order schema by going beyond the
A very important vision under the constructivist school of thought emphasized the
role of experience arguing that individuals learn though activities (Dewey, 1938/1997).
This argument sees that when the child is involved in activities will gradually learn their
meanings and can do his/her own part in relation to them. This vision of learning sees
The present affects the future anyway. The persons who should have
some idea of the connection between the two are those who have achieved
maturity. Accordingly, upon them devolves the responsibility for instituting the
conditions for the kind of present experience which has a favorable effect upon
One more vision of learning under the constructivist school of thought is the
emphasis of meaning construction through culture (Bruner, 1984). This vision sees that
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reality is synonymous with learning and the product of meaning-making that was shaped
by traditions and culture (Bruner, 1984). In other words, culture could not be excluded
and that individuals were only mirrors that reflected culture. A vital component of this
vision for learning is interaction which provides “a communal cast to individual thought
and impose[d] certain unpredictable richness on any culture’s way of life, thought, or
feeling” (p. 11). Education, in this regard, is to aid individuals in making meaning and
constructing reality and that the best way to learn is through the exercise of meaningful
problem-solving.
experience and conceptual growth comes out of the negotiation (Driscoll, 1994; Merrill,
educators around the world and has started to influence schools and instructional
practices with the above constructivist stated assumptions. Some of the considerable
rather than memorization, group work rather than solo or individualized learning, and
imitation of real life experiences. The principles of the constructivist school of thought
underlies the principles of TBLT as will be revealed shortly, which is the treatment used
in this study.
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The use of tasks (or activities as called earlier in literature) began in the field of
second language acquisition SLA towards the end of 1960s and at the beginning of 1970s
(Burt & Dulay, 1973; Hakuta, 1976; Krashen, 1994; Long, 1996). Tasks, at the
beginning, were used to describe particular aspects of language acquisition such as that of
grammar and, later, were based on theories such as those related to language production.
Across time, a task was sometimes used as a synonym with problem-solving and role-
play techniques and the vice versa (Brown, 2007). The use of tasks in English language
teaching and learning was linked to the development of SLA research (Ellis, 2003). The
Language Teaching TBLT in the field of SLA. Some of these aspects include
foundational thinkers of tasks, definitions of tasks including the one this study was based
teaching from task-based assessment, and finally research on task-based learning and
teaching.
Every field has foundational thinkers who share certain characteristics. One of
these characteristics is that the scholar has provided the field, through his/her work, with
the scholar’s work informs the current and future generations. This study discusses
26
foundational thinkers in the TBLT field and the important contributions made by each as
Attempting to define and theorize tasks has developed and accumulated across
time beginning in the mid of 1980s (Breen, 1989; Bygate, Skehan, & Swain, 2001;
Crookes, 1986; Ellis, 2003; Lee, 2000; Long, 1985; Nunan, 1989; Prabhu, 1987;
Richards, Platt, & Weber, 1985). These attempts have sometime provided literature with
a broader definition of tasks (Breen, 1989; Crookes, 1986; Richards, et al) and sometime
with a narrower definition of tasks (Bygate, Skehan, & Swain, 2001; Ellis, 2003; Lee,
2000; Long, 1985; Nunan, 1989; Prabhu, 1987). The broader attempts have suggested
that a task is an activity that helps accomplish language learning or simply a piece of
work that provides learners with opportunity and knowledge to communicate in the target
language. The narrower attempts have suggested that a task is a piece of work related to
the real world, facilitated by the teacher, urged learners to comprehend, manipulate,
produce, and interact in the target language, and call for primarily meaning-focused
separately shows defining and designing tasks for this study are grounded in two
definitions. The first one suggests that a task is an activity characterized by interaction,
production of the target language (Lee, 2000). The second one suggests that a task
requires learners to use the language in a meaningful way (Bygate, Skehan, & Swain,
2001).
27
Teaching was attempts to cognitively theorize and describe tasks (Kumaravadivelu, 1991;
Prabhu, 1987; Robinson, 2001). Tasks are cognitively analyzed to have thought,
negotiation between the learner and the teacher, and varied in their formation according
to the learners’ cognitive needs and goals. Cognitive processes involved in tasks
manipulating, producing, and interacting in the target language” (Nunan, 1989, p. 10).
placed noticeable and careful consideration when designing tasks (Brown, 2007; Wright,
1987). Tasks are designed as a means of instruction that carry topics into the classroom
settings, set the flow of instruction, and urge the students to produce an output. Tasks are
designed as a workplan (Breen, 1989) and are also designed based on the four aspects
discourse competence, and strategic competence (Canale, 1983). The multiple aspects of
the cognitive dimension of tasks yielded a crucial conclusion that tasks can be focused
2003).
of Task-Based Language Teaching was linking TBLT to existing learning theories. For
instance, the Socio-cultural Theory of Mind (SCT) originally brought by Vygotsky (1978)
28
does theoretically embody tasks (as explained earlier in Chapter I and later through
Chapter II) and has greatly participated in shaping tasks. For instance, the Socio-cultural
Theory of Mind (SCT) proposed three ways for mediated learning to take place which
include: the use of material tools, the use of interaction with others, and/or the use of
symbols (Vygotsky, 1978). Tasks do go along with the mediated learning since the
teacher.
Linking tasks in language learning to the mediation underlying SCT has been
perceived similarly in literature (Lantolf, 2000). This linkage suggests that mediated
learning can be carried out through three ways: (a) by others in social interaction, (b) by
self through private speech, and (c) by artifacts such as tasks. Also, that external
mediation serves as the means by which internal mediation is achieved and, hence, the
new linguistic forms and meanings arise out of the social or interpersonal linguistic
activity that learners engage in while they are performing a task (Ellis, 2003). This is to
say that an important phase of the evolution of TBLT in second language acquisition was
linking tasks when used in language learning and teaching to a constructivist learning
theory as shown clearly in the exposed relationship between TBLT and the SCT.
accompanied the evolution of TBLT in the field of second language acquisition was
present through attempts to psychologically theorize or explain tasks and linking them to
existing psychological theories (Long, 1996; Skehan, 1998; Yule, 1997). The first
attempt is the Interaction Hypothesis which is built on the premise that learners obtain
29
communication breaks down (Long, 1996). The second one is the Cognitive Approach to
Tasks which indicates that learners build (a) an exemplar-based system, which is lexical
in nature and includes both discrete lexical items and, importantly, ready-made formulaic
representations of the underlying patterns of the language, requires more processing, and
is best suited for more controlled, less fluent language performance (Skehan, 1998). The
undertake the various problems that appear when performing a task through the
identification of the referent and through the role taking where learners need to identify
and encode the referents they wish to communicate about (Yule, 1997). Such attempts
helped greatly researchers and teachers who were interested in investigating or adopting
application of TBLT.
tasks to Vygotsky’s (1978) Zone of Proximal Development theory (ZPD) (Ellis, 2003).
The ZPD basically explains the difference between an individual’s actual and potential
levels of development (what the learner can do without the help of others and what the
learner cannot do alone, but with the help of others). Linkage of TBLT to ZPD suggests
that the latter one guides task-based learning from two perspectives. The first one is that
in ZPD, “learning is oriented toward developmental levels already reached by the learner
and it does not aim for a new stage of the developmental process but rather lags behind
30
this process” (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 89). This suggests that learning advances knowledge
and the learner builds new knowledge (the things that she/he needed help from others to
learn) upon the already known knowledge (the learner’s actual knowledge). Similarly,
when adopting tasks, it is important to emerge from the known (in the pre-task stage) to
the unknown or intended to be learned (in the running and post task stages). Also, task-
The second perspective is that the nature of the ZPD requires the presence of self
and others so as to provide the necessary interaction for learning to take place. This is
similar to the case in TBLT which requires the presence of the learner (the one who has
the limited knowledge) and the presence of the more knowledgeable others (these could
be the more knowledgeable peers or most likely their teacher who models the facilitator
role). The interaction required by the ZPD is present in the TBLT which can be seen by
the roles played by students in group work while performing tasks and the role of their
teacher as a facilitator.
with TBLT to refer to the same concept) and Task-Based Assessment TBA in the field of
second language acquisition (Brindley, 2009; Brown, 2007; Ellis, 2003; Fulcher, 2000;
Kumaravadivlu, 2006,). There is fine thread of difference between the two terms TBT
and TBA. In TBT, participants learn collaboratively through tasks and can also be
31
assessed through performance tools. TBA, on the other hand, involves performance
assessment tools only that can assess the learners’ second language communicative
abilities (Chalhoub-Deville, 2001). This means that there are teaching tasks (TBT) and
assessment tasks (TBA) (Brindley, 1998). The reason for presenting the distinction
between TBT (TBLT) and TBA lies behind the frequent confusion among practitioners
who use TBA thinking they are applying TBLT in classroom. The following will provide
TBT from TBA (Ellis, 2003). TBA requires extensive attention for task selection to
maintain validity and the focus of TBA is on measuring task performance. Further, TBA
tasks are holistic tools that are used for evaluating communicative performance from
learners in the context of language use that is meaning-focused, imitates real world
behavior, and is aimed at a specific objective. Among the three language assessment
authenticity, and imitation of real life situations (Fulcher, 2000). In practical words, TBA
is used as a test tool for measuring a particular language aspect/s and involves
communication within the assessment by the test taker, measures what it is intended to
measure, and the nature of the assessment content needed to imitate real life experiences.
Task-based teaching (TBT). TBT (or TBLT) method on the other hand is seen
as a new teaching method by itself (Kumaravadivelu, 2006). Whereas others view it not
Language teaching (CLT) framework that places more emphasis on tasks (Brown, 2007).
characterized by being (a) a method where meaning is primary, (b) a problem to solve,
(c) related to the real world, and (d) a method were much priority is placed on the
completion of the tasks, which are assessed in terms of the outcome (Willis & Willis,
2007). Discussion of the distinction between TBLT and TBA during the evolution of
learning and teaching (De Bot, 2001; Kim, 2008; Rivers, 2010; Skehan, 1998; Stevens,
1983; Swain & Lapkin, 2000; & Swan 2005). These aspects included the complexity of
when adopting task-based learning, and criticism of task-based learning and teaching.
The following presents the reviewed research literature on each of these aspects.
Complexity of tasks. The complexity of tasks has been a central theme for task-
based research due to its immediate relevance to learner production (Carless, 2008;
Robinson, 2001; Skehan, 1998). The (inner) complexity of tasks influences learner
production and, hence, attention needs to be paid for sequencing tasks on the basis of
obvious that emphasis on the (inner) complexity of tasks goes along with the principles of
33
the Zone Proximal Development ZPD (as further discussed earlier in Chapter I and II)
proposed by Vygotsky (1978). The (outer) complexity of tasks needs to be organized and
designed carefully due to its beneficial effects on learner production. Task-based lesson
is organized in accordance with the three stages of a task (pre-task, during task, and post-
research literature of task-based learning and teaching (Brown, 2007; Swain & Lapkin,
2000). Task-based teaching promotes pedagogical tasks which form nucleus of the
classroom activity. Also, Oral and written tasks provided the learners with opportunities
to learn language. In addition, children know far more language through activities (tasks)
than what they exhibit in response to classroom drills (Stevens, 1983). Moreover,
artifacts such as tasks helped in tracking learner development over time and also
contributed to shaping the teacher’s interactions with learners as they pulled into focus a
participate in creating a real purpose for language use and provides a natural context for
language study (Izadpanah, 2010; Swain & Lapkin, 1998). In other words, learning
through tasks helped students learn language since the context the tasks present does
provide the students with a real learning purpose. Providing learners with a purpose
while performing tasks helped students also solve linguistic problems through dialogue.
& Kormos, 2004; Kim, 2008). For instance, creativity is found to affect participants’
output in oral narrative tasks moderately. Similarly, learner’s higher level of involvement
during the task promoted more effective initial vocabulary learning and better retention of
the new words. Also, learners need to know that the task outcome (completing the task)
is the most important thing as the purpose of the task to use the language rather than
display it (Ellis, 2003). In addition, learning through any given task should represent a
were skeptical about the efficiency of tasks in language teaching (Mohamed, 2004; Swan
2005). For instance, task-based instruction is not greatly better than the traditional
methods and is based on unproved hypotheses (Swan, 2005). Also, learners’ preferences
relating to deductive and inductive tasks and how learners see the effectiveness of both
types showed that learners see both types to be useful and there are no significant
opposing perspectives about the efficiency of tasks in language teaching were explained
in TBLT literature as discussed below, the main purpose that made this study bring those
two opposing perspectives prior to the application of this study is to have an outlook to
are not in favor of or against task-based learning) are also explained or challenged in
35
TBLT research literature (Murphy, 2003; Plews & Zhao, 2010; Swain and Lapkin, 2000).
One explanation in a study about Canadian English as a second language revealed that
teachers adapt TBLT in ways that do not go along with or contradict its theoretical
principles. In other words, some teachers implement TBLT in way that they do not
follow all of TBLT principles and, hence, students might not get the desired outcome.
This makes teachers mistakenly refer this problem to the application of TBLT. Another
principles such as that of learners’ influence that is found to jeopardize or hinder the task
designer’s goals. A final explanation for the emergence of the opposing perspectives
about the efficiency of tasks in language teaching could be attributed to the need of
further research to cover various aspects of task-based learning and teaching (Candlin,
2001; Samuda & Bygate, 2008) and one of the purposes of this study is to participate in
related to second language acquisition, there are three other disciplines of knowledge that
Education, and (c) the concept of Continuous Process within Educational Leadership.
The following intends to outline the basic principles those disciplines share with TBLT.
36
developed by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)
children’s social and cultural contexts (Kasten, Lolli, & Wilt, 1998). DAP involves that
children need to construct their own knowledge through exploration and interaction
(Bredekamp & Copple, 1997). Also, teachers using DAP prepare the learning
environment and plan authentic experiences in which children will become actively
is authentic and emerges from the “experiences” in which the children have been actively
The above characteristics of DAP do exist in TBLT. TBLT, for instance, requires
providing the students with the context while performing a task (Willis & Willis, 2007).
TBLT requires the appropriateness level of difficulty of the task to the students’ level
requires three characteristics including performance, authenticity, and imitates real life
Whole Language
Whole Language is a broad concept and takes its roots from various disciplines of
knowledge and which refers to the “beliefs and assumptions that represent the best in
what the field of language arts/reading has to offer in terms of the emerging body of
knowledge regarding language and becoming literate” (Kasten, Lolli, & Wilt, 1998, p.
37
24). Whole Language is a constructivist philosophy about learning and teaching and is
connected to the work of Vygotsky (1978), Piaget (1970), and Dewey (1938/1997). A
vital principle underlying Whole Language is that the learner is active and involved in the
process (Cazden, 1992). Other principles include emphasis on integrated curriculum and
that learning environment be authentic, meaningful, and stimulate real life situations
(Crafton, 1991).
TBLT, for instance, is placed on learner as s/he does most of the work during the stages
of tasks (Ellis, 2003). Also, imitating real life experiences and focus on meaning and
understanding are key components when designing tasks (Willis & Willis, 2007). At last
but not least, the nature or complexity of task-based learning and teaching makes it
necessary to use or integrate more than one learning skill such as that of reading with
writing and speaking with listening (Skehan, 1998). At last, the terminology used for
forming the principles of Whole Language shows that Whole Language is more holistic
and more comprehensive than that of the terminology used in TBLT and even more than
(Kasten, Lolli, and Wilt, 1998, p. 28). Continuous Progress and TBLT share a number of
their learning based on their interests, needs, and abilities (Anderson & Pavan, 1993) and
which is the case of the principle of negotiation under TBLT (Skehan, 1998). While
38
experiences (Anderson & Pavan, 1993), TBLT stresses learners’ imitation of real life
situations (Ellis, 2003). Teachers play very much similar roles in both of Continuous
Progress and TBLT as they are responsible for creating the learning experiences based on
the learners’ needs. (Anderson & Pavan, 1992; Willis & Willis, 2007). At last but not
least, the only part that Continuous Progress is quite different from TBLT is the part
related to assessment which requires very long term in Continuous Progress (Anderson &
Pavan, 1992) which might not be a must in TBLT as assessment in the latter one could be
determined by the completion of the task (Ellis, 2003). At last, what is said about the
Continuous Progress since the principles underlying each show the possibility of
Reading Process
shed some light on or discuss what reading means and what happens when reading. Each
discipline defines reading from different perspectives or with different lenses. In this
study, reading is defined from a literacy perspective. From that point of view, reading is
the author is making while at the same time building her/his own (Goodman, Watson, &
Burke, 1996). From this perspective, reading can also be described as a receptive
language process in which the reader constructs meaning from print. As Goodman
(2003) explained:
39
surface representation encoded by a writer and ends with meaning which the
though in reading. The writer encodes though as language and the reader decodes
Five processes take place during reading, (a) recognition-initiation, where the
brain recognizes a graphic display in the visual field as written language and initiates
reading; (b) prediction, where the brain starts anticipating and predicting while seeking
order and significance in sensory inputs; (c) confirmation, where the brain verifies the
obtained predictions; (d) correction, where the brain reprocesses when finding
inconsistencies; and (e) termination, where the brain terminates the reading when the task
Reading Comprehension
which function as a summary of the reader’s past experience that organizes everything
the reader knows about the world and functions as the basis of all his/her perceptions and
understanding of the world. Those cognitive structures include understanding spoken and
written language. Comprehension and prediction are related as prediction means asking
questions while comprehension means being able to answer some of these questions.
40
Reading cannot be separated from thinking since reading is a form of thought that is
focused on or stimulated by written text. These principles give three implications about
reading: (a) reading needs to be fast because the brain must move ahead quickly to avoid
becoming bogged down by the visual details of the text, (b) the brain directs eyes to
select the visual information in the text and where to move next, (c) and reading depends
reading comprehension, a teacher needed to consider four important issues (Fielding &
Pearson, 1994). These include allowing sufficient time for actual text reading, teacher’s
guiding students to focus on understanding the text, providing students with opportunities
for peer and collaborative learning, and giving students chance to talk to their teacher and
(Goodman, Watson, & Burke, 1996). The meaning is based on information tied to the
reader’s purpose for reading, which is then integrated with existing knowledge and
linguistic schema. This schema is used to produce and comprehend language (Goodman,
Miscue Analysis
Miscue is defined as “an oral response to the text which does not match the
expected response” (Goodman, 2003, p. 88). This means that cues are the responses that
match the expected ones. Hence, when analyzing miscues, a teacher or researcher
compares the observed responses to the expected ones. Miscue analysis emphasizes the
notion that the crucial difference between good readers and poor readers is not the
41
quantity of miscues, but the quality (Weaver, 1988). Reading is not an exact process and
(Goodman, Watson, & Burke, 1996). The relationship between reading miscues and
not what the eye has seen but what the brain has generated the mouth to report. The text
is what the brain responds to; the oral output reflects the underlying competence and the
At this point, this chapter addresses the last section of literature that relates to the
study emphasizing mixed method research with subsections of observation and testing.
Mixed method research refers to the research that involves two or more methods, such as
quantitative and qualitative, in the same study (Tashakkori & Teddlie, 1998). Also,
mixed method research is more common in quasi-experimental studies that are linked to
advantages. Those advantages include that the study avoids possible unimethod bias
(Wiersma & Jurs, 2009). Also, mixed method research can speak to and be heard by
different audiences—those who are convinced with numbers and those who are more
attracted to understanding and meaning. Mixed methods help investigators look at the
data from multiple perspectives, which can lead to a more complete understanding of the
findings. This advantage also enables researchers to address or answer more than one
Observation
researcher is the primary tool or instrument for collecting and analyzing data and the final
description of events, behavior, and artifacts in the social setting chosen for study”
(Marshall & Rossman, 1989, p. 79). Observation also helps an investigator describe the
existing situations under study using his/her five senses to gather data to provide a written
form (Erlandson, Harris, Skipper, & Allen, 1993). Observation as a qualitative data
collection technique can be used with other data collection methods in a study or by itself
as the main data collection technique, such as in grounded theory research and case
studies (Merriam, 2002). When collecting data through observation, a researcher is the
primary instrument of data collection and analysis as the nature of observation triggers
him/her to code, compare, and analyze data as s/he begins collecting it (Merriam, 2002).
Testing
Testing began at the end of the 1800s and at the beginning of 1900s when Binet, a
science French scholar, developed the first IQ tests in France which aimed at improving
Simultaneously, testing began in the United States with the U.S. Army for both medical
43
previous century found a strong relationship between IQ scores and real life suggesting
that individuals with lower IQ scores were unskilled workers and that, the higher the
score, the greater the skills (Terman, 1916). That finding promoted and presented IQ test
Tests are defined as a subset of assessment that has administrative procedures that
occur at identifiable times in a curriculum when learners “muster all their faculties to
offer peak performance, knowing that their responses are being measured and evaluated”
(Brown & Abeywickrama, 2010, p. 3). It can be inferred from this definition that the
inferred from the outlined definition that tests are a subset of assessment.
disadvantages and hence are accepted and adopted by some countries and rejected by
others. The advantages include high levels of practicality and reliability, availability,
accountability, curricular narrowing (teaching for the test), test biases, and the possibility
that indirect testing might not elicit a good sample of performance (Brown &
Abeywickrama, 2010).
used for assessing or testing while adopting TBLT (Brown, 1991; Newton & Kennedy,
44
1996; Swain & Lapkin, 2001; Willis & Willis, 2007). These types of tests include: (a) to
test one or more of the four language skills (reading, listening, writing, speaking), (b) for
tasks done outside the classroom, (c) to assesses with marks or grades based on how well
test takers meet the overall language demands of the tasks, and (d) to assess
communicative criteria. The tests in this study belong in the first category.
Literature also presented five purposes for testing that are linked to language
learning: (a) proficiency, (b) diagnostic, (c) placement, (d) achievement, and (e) aptitude
(Brown & Abeywickrama, 2010; Willis & Willis, 2007). In this study, there are two
primary reasons for using tests: (a) to determine the students’ current level of language
proficiency (via a placement test), and (b) to measure the students’ achievement after the
Placement tests. Placement tests involve such tasks as responding through oral
and written performance, open-ended and limited responses, selection, and gap-filling
formats (Brown & Abeywickrama, 2010). The primary reason for a placement tests is to
measure the students’ language proficiency level. Knowing this information helps
teachers assign or match the students to their appropriate levels. Teachers assign the
tests can play a crucial formative role by offering as the achievement tests can offer
feedback about the quality of the learners’ performance in the subsets of the unit or
45
course. Achievement tests can range from five minutes to a three-hour final exam
Summary
analysis of the basic principles underlying behaviorism and constructivism showed that
the teaching practice of the control group is grounded in behaviorism, while the teaching
Second Language Acquisition (SLA) began in late 1960s. The literature on TBLT shows
that tasks are supported and have roots from psycho and sociolinguistics. The reviewed
literature in this chapter identified some of the differences between Task-Based Teaching
and Task-Based Assessment and previewed research literature of TBLT. Three vital
issues in the reading literature were presented, which included reading process, reading
At last but not least, this chapter described Developmental Appropriate Practice
from Early Childhood, Whole Language from Literacy, and Continuous Progress from
Educational Leadership, noting the principles they shared with TBLT. At last, mixed
production and testing including the two types of tests used in this study (placement and
achievement).
CHAPTER III
Introduction
This chapter outlines the steps necessary to answer the following questions:
method?
Specifically, the chapter will focus on: (a) the selection of the subjects for the
study; where they come from and who they represent and how they were selected (b) the
research design of the study (c) the instruments that will be used for data collection (d)
the steps that will be followed for collecting the data (e) the internal validity of the study,
Participants
This study targets third intermediate grades (15 year old students) in
governmental schools in Saudi Arabia. English language curriculum for the intermediate
schools in Saudi Arabia is highly standardized across the country—all follow the same
curriculum and use the same textbooks for teaching the English language. Students’ final
46
47
assessments in all subjects, including English, are based on standardized tests that are
supervised by the ministry of education and administered by the schools. Because the
processes and the tests are the same country-wide, the findings of this study are
potentially relevant for all intermediate school students and English teachers in Saudi
Arabia. Thus, although the subjects or the study are all from Buraydah, Saudi Arabia, the
targeted population is all third intermediate level students and their teachers in Saudi
Arabia. This will help to establish an acceptable level of external validity, especially
Saudi Arabia have two sections (classes) at each level with approximately 25-30 students
in each class. Subjects in the study included four sections (classes) of the third grade of
the intermediate level from two governmental schools, for a total of 122 students. All
students participating in both schools are Saudis, mostly from the middle class, and share
study. One has taught the treatment group and the other one has taught the control group.
The treatment group teacher is the researcher since he is the most familiar with the
treatment method of instruction. The other teacher has been teaching the control group
through the use of the traditional method and who has been assigned by the school. To
control for the teacher effect on the outcome variable, a between teacher effect will be
Settings
Schools. Two intermediate governmental schools are selected from all of the
schools in Buraydah. These two schools are similar in terms of size, resources, and
location. Because, as a male, the investigator cannot have access to schools for girls, the
important to ensure the similarities of both of the control and treatment groups. The
effect of the classroom setting (such as those with well-equipped laboratories with
While Foster (1998) suggests that there is a difference in the amount of negotiation of
meaning between the classroom setting and the laboratory setting, in favor of the latter,
Gass, Mackey, and Ross-Feldman (2005) argue that the setting is not in itself a
significant variable in their analysis of research. To be on the safe side, this study has
involved classrooms with similar settings for both the treatment and control groups. The
time of the class (i.e., beginning, middle, or end of the day) are also similar.
method for teaching English as a second language to male third-grade students in the
intermediate schools in Saudi Arabia. The study is based on a mixed method design
(quantitative and qualitative) where the quantitative part includes a two-factor split-plot
to control (or at least reduce) the threats to the internal validity of the study. In this study,
one technique is to randomly assign the classrooms to the treatment and control groups
(Wiersma & Jurs, 2009). Variables such as the students’ gender, age, and citizenship, the
time of the class, classroom settings, teaching aids, the teachers, and the school are
already being controlled for due to the design of the study or statistically in the analysis
In addition to the tests’ scores of the students for the quantitative part of the study,
the researcher collects observational data as a quality check for the fidelity of the study
and as the qualitative part of the design of this mixed method study.
To gather data, the study uses: (a) a pretest—to document the level of students’
English language reading comprehension they have at the beginning of the study; (b)
observation of the treatment group (researcher log) and control group (classroom visits);
Pretest. The primary purpose of the pretest is to function as the main covariate.
It is used to provide a baseline for the students’ current English language reading
comprehension levels so this study can examine the effect of treatment, relative to initial
English language proficiency. The pretest also helps increase the power of the study by
reducing the error that can be attributed to prior differences among students and its
relation to the outcome. It is not used to place students in certain levels or groups. Two
reading passage practice tests were used and which were developed by Ohio Department
50
Weeks 9 & 10
Weeks 3 & 4
Weeks 5 & 6
Weeks 7 & 8
Weeks 1& 2
Section A
Section A
Section A
Section A
Section A
Section B
Section B
Section B
Section B
Section B
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
TBLT
teaching
method
group O XE XE XE XE XE
(Treatment
group)
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
Factor 1A
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
Traditional
teaching
method
group
(Control O CT CT CT CT CT
group)
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
ORPA
OTET
OTET
OTET
OTET
Factor 1B
O= pretest
XE= experiment (treatment) group
CT= Traditional (control) group
ORPA =observation (researcher prepared assessment posttest)
OTET =observation (textbook established posttest)
Sections A & B = both of the treatment and control groups have two sections of each.
of Education as the pretest in this study (See Appendix G). There are two reasons that
justify the choice of this particular test; one is that this reading test has met the criteria of
validity and reliability (Moore, 2008). The second reason is that this reading test is the
comprehension of the students and, hence, is compatible with the posttest (both of pre
and post tests measure students’ reading comprehension). Based on the identified
characteristics of the participating students (age, English language level), those two
reading passages are appropriate. The two reading passages have a total of 22 questions
that measure reading comprehension. Test scores are going to be based on a retelling
rubric2.
Observation. This study places great emphasis on this data collection tool and is
aware that field notes gathered are going to represent the eyes, ears, and the perceptual
senses of the reader (Patton, 2002). The form and notes provides insights and issues
about implementing both of the TBLT and traditional methods in the control and
treatment groups in this research setting. Observational data are accurate, detailed, and
rich in nature (Schram, 2006). Among the techniques used when taking field notes is the
usage of direct quotes, paraphrases, description of the context, and description of any
ten visits to observe the control group. These observations provide data for the study,
and help determine fidelity of the study. Two types of notes during these visits are used.
2 More details about the retelling rubric are provided under posttests.
52
In the first, a checklist is filled out and which is designed to give insights about the
engagement of the students and teacher in the lesson and the flow of instruction (see
Figure 2). In the second, open handwritten notes are gathered for collecting data that are
not covered by the first type of observational data. When observing the control group,
the observer does not interact with the teacher or students during the observation, make
any actions, or bring anything into the classroom other than a pen and a note pad. If the
observer has any questions, he is to talk to the teacher after the end of the class session.
TBLT observes the treatment teacher (researcher) while teaching the treatment group via
the TBLT method. This observer has several years of experience in English language
teaching as an English language teacher. He has also had studied advanced courses in
English language teaching methodology, teaching skills, curriculum and Instruction, and
Roles and duties of the observer while observing the treatment group are typical
to those adopted by the researcher when observing the control group. For clarification
purposes, two types of notes during these visits are used. In the first, a checklist is filled
out and which is designed to give insights about the engagement of the students and
teacher in the lesson and the flow of instruction (see Figure 2). In the second, open
handwritten notes are gathered for collecting data that are not covered by the first type of
observational data. When observing the TBLT group, the observer does not interact with
the treatment teacher or students during the observation, make any actions, or bring
anything into the classroom other than a pen and a note pad. If the observer has any
53
questions, he is instructed to talk to the teacher after the end of the class session.
Analyzing collected data about both of the control and the treatment groups is carried out
by both of the treatment teacher (researcher) and the observer, as explained with more
details under Chapter IV., through comparison and contrast between the two sets of
observational data.
Response
Elements Yes No N/A Comments
Setting the stage
Task sequence
Engaging the students
Running the task
Task completion
Students’ attitudes
Teacher’s attitude
Difficulties
Advantages
Disadvantages
Researcher log. As the researcher is doing the teaching part for the treatment
group using the TBLT, he cannot take notes (observed data) while he is teaching though
he might observe valuable data. Hence, the treatment teacher (researcher) creates a log
where he writes down notes as he recalls them by the end of each day he teaches the
treatment group (McNiff, Lomax, & Whitehead, 1996). Those notes include insights and
issues about implementing TBLT in this research setting. Out of the numerous visits of
writing to researcher log, data can be described by being rich, detailed, and accurate
(Schram, 2006).
Recalled data in researcher log can take the form of direct quotes, paraphrased
experience that take place in the classroom (Schneider, 2005). When logging into
researcher log by the end of each day, recalled data would be related to three types of
interactions that take place in classrooms: student-to-student (such as group work or pair
and workbooks).
Posttests. Posttests are administered at the end of each two weeks to assess
students’ reading comprehension on the content covered in those two weeks. This
process continues for ten weeks, which is the duration of the study. Each posttest
consists of two formats; one is the researcher’s prepared assessment (RPA) and the other
one is the text established test (TET) and which students need to do it all in English. The
RPA posttest is mainly retelling where the students read a passage and then are asked to
55
retell the passage using on their own words as they have understood it. Only on this
retelling question, students are allowed to retell in their first language (Arabic) so as to
reflect the level of their comprehension. The retelling question/s is designed in a way
that a) measures the students’ reading comprehension, b) imitates real life experiences,
Subjects in both of the treatment and control groups are tested with both formats
each time they have the posttest. This study has opted to adopt two formats of the
posttests for two reasons; one is to correlate the RPA posttest with the TET one and
which can, accordingly, establish concurrent validity. The second reason is that the
researcher and a group of experts in literacy believe that the RPA can be a more accurate
instrument for measuring the students’ reading comprehension. The order of the two
formats in each posttest is administered interchangeably during the duration of the study
to control for order effects that might bias responses on either instrument.
The questions on the RPA posttest are prepared by the researcher on the reading
content covered during the application of the study. Hence, the RPA format is created
literacy. RPA scores are based on a retelling rubric provided under Figure 3. The second
posttest format, text established test (TET), is an existing instrument provided by the
curriculum. This test is also on the covered content through the duration of the study
(See Appendix H for posttests). This study assumes that the psychometric properties of
this instrument have already been established by the curriculum designer. Both (RPA &
56
Retelling rubric. Test scores of both the pretest and posttests are based on a
retelling rubric originally designed by Applegate, Quinn, and Applegate (2008) and
which is shown in Figure 3. The retelling rubric consists of nine grading levels ranging
from zero to four where four represents the highest grading score and zero represents the
lowest one. The grading level starts with four points and decreases by half of a point
with each lower grade until it reaches zero as explained in the following.
supported personal response is graded with four points. Three and a half points is the
grade for an exceptionally strong retelling that omits a small but significant part of the
information but still includes a well-supported personal response. A very strong retelling
that includes all information, but does not include a personal response is graded with
three points. Two and a half points is the grade for a strong retelling that includes many
reader who achieves this score has clearly comprehended the primary gist of the text. A
solid retelling that includes most information but that is also characterized by some key
omissions and that may include a personal response receives a grade of two points. One
and a half points is the grade for a fairly weak retelling that includes some information
but also omits a good deal of key information and may contain some factual distortions
and that may include a personal response. A weak retelling that includes little
information but is also characterized by some glaring omissions and factual distortions
57
and that does not include a personal response is graded with only one point. At last but
not least, half of a point is the grade for a very weak retelling that includes little
disjointed information and factual distortion and that does not include a personal
response. At last, a retelling that may include nothing more than a vague idea of the topic
of the text and that does not include a personal response receives a grade of zero.
Score Description
4.0 A virtually perfect retelling that includes all information and a well-
supported personal response
3.5 An exceptionally strong retelling that omits a small but significant part of the
information but still includes a well-supported personal response
3.0 A very strong retelling that includes all information, but does not include a
personal response
2.0 A solid retelling that includes most information but that is also characterized
by some key omissions and that may include a personal response
1.5 A fairly weak retelling that includes some information but also omits a good
deal of key information and may contain some factual distortions and that
may include a personal response
1.0 A weak retelling that includes little information but is also characterized by
some glaring omissions and factual distortions and that does not include a
personal response
.5 A very weak retelling that includes little disjointed information and factual
distortion and that does not include a personal response
.0 A retelling that may include nothing more than a vague idea of the topic of
the text and that does not include a personal response
Procedural Details
instruction that uses a problem-solving approach to meaningful, real world tasks. In this
method, priority is placed on task completion and tasks are assessed according to
outcome (Brown, 2007; Willis & Willis, 2007). Students pass through three stages in a
TBLT lesson: (a) groups of students engage in real life situations that are similar to the
task they are going to perform in the classroom (pre-task stage), (b) groups of students do
the intended goal or task of the lesson (running the task stage), and (c) groups of students
display or provide an indicator that they have successfully completed the task for the
purposes of assessment and evaluation (task completion stage) (See Appendix K for
lesson plans implemented in this study). The following provides a vignette on TBLT and
Treatment vignette: The case of Ali. The following shows how Ali, an English
language teacher of third grade in intermediate school in Saudi Arabia, has implemented
TBLT method while teaching English as a second language for the students. The
emphasis in that class was on the reading skill (particularly reading comprehension). The
reading passage in that lesson was about the Advantages and Disadvantages of Watching
TV.
As Ali entered the classroom, he and the students rearranged tables and chairs to
form circles for groups that suite from three to four students. When the students joined
their groups, Ali aimed first at engaging the students in the reading topic of the lesson
opinion survey that contained ten statements. Those statements represented different
point of views about watching TV. For each statement, groups of students were to select
either “Strongly Agree,” “Agree,” “Neutral,” or “Disagree”) and justify their choice.
Students spent fifteen minutes to complete the survey, discuss it, and justify their
opinions in their groups. The students were highly interested in the topic; when they had
completed the survey, each group enthusiastically reported and justified their opinions to
The students then moved to a reading task (running the task). Ali told them that
they were going to read an opinion about the advantages and disadvantages of watching
TV and do a retelling for the passage they had read. Groups of students were provided
with sheets of paper to restate or retell the author’s opinion on their own words followed
by their opinions whether they agreed or did not agree with author justifying their
decisions. The teacher explained few new vocabularies existing in the author’s opinion.
Groups of students spent fifteen minutes to complete this task. After groups of students
had finished reading, they took turns to share their retellings and their opinions (task
completion). Each group of students was strongly engaged as they were sharing with
At the end of class, Ali gave the students instructions for that night’s homework,
which was to create two lists of words—one with words that were likely to be found in
opinions about the advantages of watching TV, and the second, with words about the
disadvantages.
60
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Eiffel Tower
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading passage
about Eiffel Tower.
Indicators for pupils’
achievement of the main
Task Sequence Materials &
Content goal of the lesson
(Procedures) Equipment
(Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and Students show interests
Together the teacher and the students are groups are going to suggest chairs are when engaging in the
going to rearrange tables and chairs to landmarks and label the formed into lesson topic.
form circles for groups of three to four pictures of some famous circles for
students. landmarks around the world groups. Groups enthusiastically
with their countries such as compete in suggesting
For 3 min, the teacher introduces the Pyramids in Egypt, Petra in Pupil’s and labeling the pictures
topic of the lesson (what they are going Jordon, Liberty Status in the textbook of famous landmarks
to do). United States, Saleh’s (it has the within their countries
Cities in Saudi Arabia. passage and others.
Students involve in a group about Eiffel
(competition) discussion for suggesting Students are going to read a Tower). Students complete
landmarks for their families to visit for passage about Eiffel Tower reading the passage and
10 min. The winning group is a) the in the pupil’s textbook on Sheets for discuss in groups the
first one that manages to correctly label pages 39-40. groups’ basic details or
names of countries to the provided work. information about Eiffel
pictures of famous landmarks around the Through the reading Tower.
world b) suggest landmarks other than passage, students are going PowerPoint
presented for their families. to get introduced to the slides Teacher passes around
following new words: groups of students to
Running the task tower, popular, tourist, Pens or evaluate whether or not
The teacher instructs students to begin festival. pencils. the students have
reading the provided passage about accomplished the task
Eiffel Tower for 5-8 min. of comprehending the
Students are then to discuss on their reading passage through
groups some of the basic information telling their families
they learned about Eiffel Tower (such as about the tower in their
(height, location, dates of construction) own words in written
for 5-10 min. and/or oral format.
Task Completion
The teacher asks groups to imagine that
they decided to suggest Eiffel Tower for
their families to visit and their task is to
tell their families as much as they could
about the tower on a sheet of paper in
their own words for 10-15 min.
having students work independently and passively. The following provides a vignette on
language to his students. The emphasis of that class was on reading comprehension and
As Khalid entered the classroom, students were seated in rows at their individual
tables. Khalid began writing on the board the topic of the lesson he was going to teach
the students. He told them that they were going to deal with an important and an
interesting topic about great little inventions. He said that he expected them to remain
quiet and concentrate on the reading topic. Then, he instructed them to open their
textbooks to the reading passage and carefully follow along as he read. When Khalid
came across a word that he thought the students might not understand, he would raise his
head and ask the students, “Do you know the meaning of this word?” Sometimes they
responded “yes we do” and other times “no, we do not,” but most of the time they
remained silent. Khalid read the passage three times, while explaining the meaning of
certain words; this took about twenty minutes. The students’ reaction or attitude towards
the lesson varied. Three of the twenty students were concentrating and responding to the
Ali and ten were talking to each other quietly so Khalid would not hear them. The rest of
the students were busy doing things that were unrelated to the lesson at hand. Khalid
62
then asked the students whether they had understood the passage or not and if anyone had
questions. When there was no response, Khalid exclaimed, “That is great.” For the next
fifteen minutes, five different students took turns reading the passage in a loud voice
while their classmates were supposed to follow along. For the rest of the class, Khalid
and the students did the exercises or activities provided by the book. Khalid read the
exercise question and asked if anyone could do it. When a student knew the answer and
did it right, Khalid praised the student for being good, “unlike his classmates,” and said
that he would add a bonus to that student’s score record. When none of the students
knew the answer, Khalid gave it to them or wrote it on the board and the students copied
it into their notebooks. At the end of the class, Khalid explained that, for homework, the
students were to complete the remaining exercises for the reading passage and that, if
they did not do so correctly, they would lose the score specified for that homework.
There are a number of permissions and regulations that the researcher is required
to have for the application of the study. Those permissions and regulations include:
permission for the use of human subjects from Institutional Review Board
correspondence with the Saudi Cultural Mission in the United States, to allow
Permissions from the two schools that are involved in the study (See
- the parents of the students to have their children (to obtain this, the
During and after the research trip, the researcher is to contact his committee
members for advice and update them about his progress. At the end of the study, Qassim
University issues a letter about what the researcher did during the research trip and how
long it took.
This study needs four weeks to obtain the above permissions. The study starts at
the beginning of the school year on Saturday3 Jan. 19, 2013 and end on Wednesday Mar.
27, 2013. The first week of the study is used for setting the stage and administering the
pretest on the students. The treatment lasts for ten weeks. At the end of every two
weeks, this study involves administering the two formats of the posttest. To ensure
3School days in Saudi Arabia are Saturday through Wednesday; weekend days are
Thursday and Friday.
64
fidelity of treatment (i.e., teaching with the TBLT method), the researcher administers the
treatment part of the study (teaching with TBLT) as well as monitors the control group
The study is administered by the researcher (as the data collector and the
Distribute tasks;
Logs into the researcher log by the end of each day he teaches the treatment
With the control group English language teacher, administer and grade the pre
Host regular meetings with the control group teacher, to discuss any
difficulties or problems;
Do the teaching part as outlined by the study for the control group;
65
Together with the researcher, grade the pre and post tests; and
Ask for advice from the researcher for any problem or difficulty he might
encounter.
Internal Validity
Wallen, & Hyun, 2012). Many of the possible threats to the internal validity of the study
are controlled by its design. However, there are a few other threats to internal validity,
including:
location;
implementation;
maturation.
To reduce or eliminate such threats, this study takes steps to maintain internal
validity—for example; the subjects’ characteristics are captured and controlled through
the pretest, which provides a base line to eliminate the threat of subjects’ characteristics
The effect of the study’s location is minimized by selecting two schools that share
similar characteristics and are from the most common neighborhoods of the city. Similar
conditions and environments are created for both treatment and control groups to help
minimal and at its lowest level. Data collection bias is reduced greatly by a number of
procedural details, and multiple data sources. For instance, as discussed under “Data
Collection Tools,” there are three processes that should ensure unbiased data collection:
(a) data collection is done through multiple collectors (visions) rather than a solo vision
(the control group teacher, the checker, and the researcher), (b) the design of the study
greatly participates in eliminating the data collection bias by providing two groups for the
treatment and two groups for the control, (c) the researcher teaches students in the
treatment group using the TBLT method and another teacher teaches the students in the
control group using the traditional method. The four instruments of data collection (pre,
post tests, observation, researcher log) are administered in a controlled environment with
The adoption of pre and post tests also helps eliminate bias that is attributed to the
pre- existing differences among the students. The pre test shows the levels of language
proficiency of the students before they receive the treatment, otherwise, an increase or
by the researcher helps reduce the test administration bias. Administering and grading
the pre and post tests by the researcher and the control group teacher eliminates the
researcher’s bias when analyzing the results. The researcher’s doing the teaching part for
the treatment group and observation of the control group ensure the fidelity of the study
and offer insights and issues that the pre and post tests cannot provide about
The lengthy description of procedural details ensures the validity of the study.
For example, the sample selection (four groups of students from two schools and two
English language teachers) follows strict criteria to maintain unbiased data. The selection
of the two schools is done by the researcher and the school district of Buraydah pursuant
to the criteria set forth in this proposal under “Procedural Details.” Complying with the
required permissions and regulations includes monitoring from the researcher’s sponsor
steps and certain tools for instrumentation. To ensure internal validity when
implementing the study, the treatment group is taught by the researcher, as he is the most
familiar with the treatment method of instruction and the only one who can teach with
this new method. During the implementation of the study, the treatment teacher
(researcher) works closely with the control group teacher and monitors his instruction
through regular visits and meetings hosted by the treatment teacher outside of school.
The treatment and the control teachers work together as a team to administer and grade
the pre and post tests. For tests threat effect, this study is controlling this threat by using
68
different pretest form from the posttest forms, which will assess different content. The
posttest is about the unit/s the students have studied or covered while receiving the
Maturation threat to internal validity is at its lowest levels and that is due to the
duration of the study (ten weeks) is short enough to not to see any maturation over time
on the one hand and the fact that the design of the study involves testing students every
two weeks controls for or extremely minimizes the threat of maturation on the other.
Sharing between the treatment and control groups is also minimized by the design of the
study since it involves two schools in different but similar neighborhoods. This means
that students from the treatment (school) most likely do not interact with students from
the control (school). Attitudes of the subjects, often defined by Hawthorne effect can be
reduced by acknowledging all the students and their participation in the study without
identifying their group membership. All students in the treatment group (who are
participating in the experiment) and the control group (who are taught through the regular
or traditional method) have the same pre and post tests, and all students provide the
Data Analysis
To answer the two research questions for this study, data are collected from three
Analysis involves entering the collected pre and post tests data into an SPSS data
file with multiple accuracy checks. Analysis will also provide descriptive statistics, such
as frequency tables, means, and standard deviations for all the variables in the study. The
descriptive statistics helps identify any abnormalities in the collected data, such as
missing values and outliers and help assess some of the assumptions needed for testing
As a primary tool to analyze the data for this study, a Two-Factor Split Plot
ANOVA with a covariate involves one between subjects factor (Teaching method) and
one within subjects factor; the repeated measure of the subjects five times over the
70
duration of the study (more details about the Two-Factor Split Plot are discussed under
Chapter IV). Using the pretest as a covariate in the analysis properly provides two
benefits (Howell, 2002). The first is to control for the effects of the students’ prior
knowledge of the English language reading comprehension and which could be related to
the outcome variable. This control helps level the ground for the two groups we are
outcome variable before comparing the effectiveness of the treatment group to the control
group. This process helps boost the internal validity of the study by eliminating some
feasible alternatives to the results. The second benefit is to achieve higher power when
comparing the treatment and control groups. Introducing the pre test as a covariate to the
model helps explain some of the inconsistencies in the outcome variable that otherwise
summed under the error variance. Thus, reducing the error variance leads to a more
To address the research question stated earlier in the chapter, the analysis will test
the following:
achievement between the TBLT teaching method of the English language and
In addition to the above main hypothesis, the following are also tested:
The null hypothesis: there is no interaction effect between treatment type and
The above hypotheses are tested with a probability of controlling type one error
(alpha level of significance) at .05. Previous research such as Gass, Mackey, and Ross-
Feldman (2005) have shown that the chosen alpha level of significance (.05) with the
given sample size and study design, provides an acceptable level of power.
researcher log. Hence, data analysis of observational data gathered from classroom
observations (from the control group) and from researcher log (from the treatment group)
includes categorization, description, and synthesis. This process of data reduction is vital
for the description and interpretation of the phenomenon under study (Wiersma & Jurs,
2009). Analysis will first involve making a base on repetitions or themes across the data.
This process of organization should reduce the data and is often described as coding
72
(Wiersma & Jurs, 2009). Analysis then involves a description of the categories using
little technical language. Both observational data from classroom visits and from
researcher log are presented to a peer to read and get his thoughts and impressions about
the observed data. To retain the confidentiality of the schools and participants,
participants are anonymous and data are reported collectively. Results or interpretation of
data are presented with thick description that strives to make meaning and interprets how
participants (teachers and students) behave during the application of the study. To ensure
the validity of the findings of the data collected via observation, this study presents a
As the scope of this dissertation does not allow for a comprehensive and in-depth
analysis of the targeted curriculum, this study, though they are considered among the
most crucial components, does not and will not assume that instructional practices and
methods of English language teaching are, by themselves, the only reason for the
dissatisfaction with English language teaching and learning in Saudi public schools.
However, for research purposes, this study focuses on examining the effectiveness of
this study involves a constructivist practice (TBLT) that is applied to an existing highly
TBLT method by the researcher can contaminate the true effects of the TBLT method.
At last but not least, the sample selection limits the generalization of the findings to only
schools similar in nature to those used in the study. At last, comprehensive change in the
73
targeted curriculum needs to take its course; hopefully, this study leads to a transitional
phase—away from highly standardized curriculum and towards a more constructivist best
practice curriculum.
Summary
1. Is using the TBLT method for teaching English as a second language for male
2. What insights and issues can be gained about implementing TBLT in this research
setting?
TBLT in two intermediate schools in Saudi Arabia. The study compares the treatment
group to the control group on the outcome after controlling for the students’ pre-existing
students, the investigator as the treatment group teacher, and an English language teacher
for the control group participates in this study. This study has a mixed-design design
(quantitative and qualitative) where quasi-experimental analysis with pre and post tests
represent the quantitative part and synthesis of observational data represent the
qualitative part. The treatment is the application of the TBLT method through a time
frame of ten weeks. The regulation and permission procedures include dissertation
committee members’ approval for the study and a number of permissions from the IRB at
74
Kent State University, the sponsoring agency (Qassim University), the host of the study,
and participants and their parents in the study. Quantitative data are analyzed through
using a Two-Factor Split Plot analysis; qualitative data are analyzed through
Introduction
This chapter presents the results of the analyses adopted to answer the following
1 Is using the TBLT method for teaching English as a second language for male,
2. What insights and issues can be gained about implementing TBLT in this research
setting?
two research questions above. Three major sections will cover the discussion of the
findings. The first section will cover the results of the quantitative analysis for the
first research question. The second section will present the findings from the
observed data that address the second question. The third section will integrate the
findings from both of the first and second sections to give a complete picture of the
75
76
1. Is using the TBLT method for teaching English as a second language for male,
The statistical analysis needed to address this research question was the Two-
Factor Spilt-Plot design. The Two-Factor Spilt-Plot design is often called a mixed design
and that is due to the combination of the characteristics of the One-Factor Repeated
Measures and the Two-Factor Fixed-Effects models (Lomax, 2007). In this study the
repeated measures (within-subject factor) is the posttest and the treatment (i.e., TBLT and
Traditional teaching method) represents the between-subject factor (see Figure 1).
language. The covariate will also increase the power of the analysis by explaining
students’ initial level of the English language rather than the TBLT treatment
effect.
77
2- Treatment factor with two groups. The treatment group consists of students
using the TBLT method. The control group consists of students taught the
design.
3- Each student will be tested over time using five sets of posttests measures
administered two weeks apart after introducing the two treatments (teaching with
TBLT and traditional methods). Each set of the tests consists of one standardized
test and one researcher-prepared assessment. Both tests are intended to measure
two weeks. Standardized posttests are the traditional tests used in all the
teaching method of the English language, this study recognizes the need to
Pretest summary statistics. The average score on the pretest for all the 122
students who took the test was 19.885 with minimum and maximum scores of 11.00 and
30.00 respectively. The standard deviation for the pretest scores was 4.03. Table 2
presents summary statistics for the pretest broken down by the two groups of the
treatment.
78
Treatment Groups n M SD
TBLT Group 66 19.561 4.218
Control Group 56 20.268 3.802
Note: TBLT= Task-Based Language Teaching
significant difference in the pretest score between the TBLT and the traditional teaching
.336) between students taught by the TBLT method and students taught by the traditional
method of teaching on their pretest score suggesting that the two groups’ initial
Posttests summary statistics. There are five sets of posttests. Each set consists
measure students’ level of learning the English language material covered in the segment
preceding the tests. Standardized posttests were developed and being used to assess
students’ achievement of the reading passages before the introduction of the TBLT
comprehension, whether they were taught with TBLT method or the traditional method,
the researcher prepared posttests that help complement standardized posttest in the
All five standardized posttests have a scale that ranges from zero to eight. The
other five researcher-prepared assessment posttests are measured on a scale ranges from
79
zero to four. Table 3 provides summary statistics for the five standardized posttests
Table 3 shows that there are pronounced differences between TBLT and control
groups across all the five posttests measures, with the exception of the third posttest. The
largest difference, (MTBLT – MControl = 5.907) between the two groups was on the first
posttest. The smallest difference (MTBLT – MControl = 1.015) between the two groups was
Summary statistics for the five researcher-prepared posttests broken down by the
two treatment groups are presented in Table 4. Similar to standardized posttests there
are sizable differences between the TBLT and control groups on the five researcher-
prepared posttests with the exception of the third posttest. The largest difference (MTBLT
– MControl = 1.014) between the two groups was on the fourth posttest. The smallest
difference (MTBLT – MControl = - 0.119) between the two groups was on the third posttest.
80
Results for treatment effect. Treatment effect makes up the major part of the
quantitative analysis of this study in addressing the first general question. The adopted
Split-Plot design for this analysis allows for answering several sub-questions that
collectively address the general research question. These sub questions are.
1- Does the pretest have a significant effect across all the five posttests? If so, does
Having the pretest in the design helps remove some of the variability in the
posttests that can be attributed to the pretest, reduce the error term in the design, and,
thus, increase the power of the analysis. Answering this question helps in examining the
effect of the pretest on the posttests and in assessing its contribution to the model before
examining the main effect of the treatment. It furthers examine whether or not the effect
2- Is there a significant treatment effect across all the five posttests after controlling
for the pretest? If so, does the treatment effect on the posttests vary across the
different posttests?
The first part of the second question simply examines the difference between the
two groups (TBLT versus traditional teaching methods) on all the posttests
simultaneously. The second part of the question helps us examine if the differences
between the two groups (TBLT versus traditional teaching methods) varies across the
five different posttests. That is simply checking the interaction between the two levels of
3- Are there significant differences across the posttests? If so, do these differences
The third question investigates the differences among the posttests. Further, it
standardized posttests were used to assess students’ reading comprehension and another
groups (TBLT teaching method versus traditional teaching method) factor and one
answer the three sub-questions above. A check of the required assumptions for the
analysis revealed that the assumption of Sphericity was violated where Mauchly’s test of
assumption of Sphericity can lead to invalid F-tests ratio, which can result in a loss of
power (Lomax, 2007). Several corrections have been proposed, most notably the
corrections. These do not affect the computed F-statistic, but instead raise the critical F
value needed to reject the null hypothesis by adjusting the degrees of freedom.
Greenhouse-Geisser F-test adjusted is reported with the adjusted degrees of freedom for
Pretest effect. A between-subjects test for the pretest (F (1, 101) = 25.260,
p=.000) revealed that there is a significant effect of the pretest across the five posttests
2
with a large effect size (partial = .200). From this test, we can infer that having the
pretest in the model contributed significantly to the model and any derived conclusion
from the treatment effect is adjusted for this significant contribution of the pretest.
Further look at the within-subjects test for examining whether the effect of the
pretest varies significantly across the five posttests, (F (3.411, 344.509) = 2.269, p=.072)
revealed no statistical significant for this variation. This test infers that the pretest effect
on the posttests does not vary significantly across the five posttests. Both of the between
and within-subjects tests indicate that the pretest effect on the posttests is invariant across
Treatment effect. The between-subjects test for examining the treatment effect
indicates that there is a significant treatment effect on the posttests scores (F (1,101) =
518.311, p= .000) with a relatively large effect size ( 2= .837). Students taught with
83
TBLT method on average scored (M=6.373, SE=0.108) higher across the posttests than
students taught with the traditional teaching method (M=2.694, SE= .119).
Looking at the treatment effect within the five standardized posttests (within-
subjects effect) showed a significant interaction with the five posttests (F (3.411,
344.509) = 45.701, p= .000) with a large effect size ( 2= .312). Based on the estimated
model Table 5 shows that the largest difference between TBLT (M = 7.050, SE = .160)
and control (M = 1.110, SE = .176) groups occurred on the first standardized posttest.
The smallest difference was found on the third posttest where TBLT students (M = 6.667,
SE = .178) on average scored a bit higher than control group students (M = 5.574, SE =
.196).
Figure 5 depicts the estimated means in Table 5. The graph shows that TBLT
students, on average, performed better than control group students on all the five posttests
Figure 5. Estimated Means of Standardized Posttests for TBLT and Control Groups
Posttest effect. One aspect of the analysis is examining the pattern of the
differences among the posttests regardless of the group (TBLT vs. control) membership.
The within-subjects effect for testing the differences between the five posttests is
students’ posttests scores do differ significantly from one posttest to another with a
2
medium effect size (partial = .058). Table 6 presents the five standardized posttests
estimated means, their standard errors of estimation, and the 95% confidence interval
Table 6. Standardized Posttests Estimated Means with Their Standard Errors and 95%
Confidence Interval
The 95% confidence intervals for the posttests’ means show that all of the
posttests means are significantly different from zero. Figure 6 displays the estimated
means of the five posttests. Students’ highest score was on the third posttest when
The fact that the five posttests were conducted over a period of 10 weeks with two
weeks apart, allows for further investigation for the presence of possible significant
trends in students’ scores over time. There was a significant quadratic trend (F (1, 101) =
5.107, p = .026) and Order 4 trend (F (1, 101) = 19.264, p = .000). While both trends are
feasibly possible to represent the fluctuation in the posttests means, Order 4 appears to be
the representation of that fluctuation (i.e., note the p value). The posttest means tend to
decline on the second posttest, incline sharply on the third, decline again on the fourth,
then moderately incline on the fifth posttest giving us the significant Order 4 trend.
closer look at the posttests means’ fluctuation. Table 7 presents the ten pairwise
comparisons among the posttest scores with their statistical significance. Eight out of the
ten pairwise comparisons were large enough to be statistically significant. The largest
significant difference in posttests scores was between the second and the third posttests (-
2.550, with p= .000). Out of the two insignificant pair wise comparisons, the smallest
difference was between the second and the fourth posttests scores (-.145, with p= 1.000).
Posttest 2 3 4 5
1 .509* -2.041*** .364 -1.102***
3 2.405*** .939***
4 -1.466***
The tests were prepared by the researcher to accommodate the TBLT method of teaching,
capture, and assess any aspect of students’ English reading comprehension that cannot be
addressed with standardized posttests. Administrating RPA tests is at the same time of
the order of the tests (standardized vs. researcher-prepared) administration was applied
To answer the three sub-questions stated earlier, similar analysis for standardized
questions examine the effects of the three factors in the split-plot design, which are the
between-groups (TBLT teaching method versus traditional teaching method) factor and
a pretest as a covariate in the model. Mauchly’s test of Sphericity was not statistically
2
significant (Mauchly’s W= .873, (9) = 13.542, p= .140). This test infers that the
assumption of Sphericity was not violated and, hence, there is no need for adjustments to
the F-tests.
Pretest effect. A between-subjects test of the pretest revealed that there was a
significant effect of the pretest across the five researcher-prepared posttests (F (1, 101) =
2
13.611, p= .000) and effect size ( = .119) This test infers that having the pretest in the
model contributed significantly to the model and any derived conclusion from the
88
A within-subjects test for examining if the effect of the pretest varies significantly
within the five researcher-prepared posttests revealed no statistical significant for this
variation (F (4, 404) = .106, p= .980) with a small effect size ( 2= .001). This test
indicates that the pretest effect on the posttests does not vary significantly across the five
posttests. Both of the between and within-subjects tests suggest that the pretest
significant effect on the posttests is invariant across the five posttests. These findings are
similar to those obtained when using standardized posttests scores. That is the pretest
does have about the same significant effect on the five posttests.
Treatment effect. The between-subjects test for examining the treatment effect
indicated that there is a significant treatment effect on the posttests scores (F (1,101) =
24.483, p= .000) with relatively small to moderate effect size ( 2=0.195). Students
taught with TBLT method on average scored (M=2.768, SE= .101) higher across
researcher-prepared posttests than students taught with the traditional teaching method
(within-subjects effect) revealed a significant interaction of the treatment with the five
posttests (F (4, 404) = 9.061, p= .000) with a medium to a large effect size ( 2= .082).
Based on the estimated model, Table 8 shows that the largest difference between TBLT
(M = 3.261, SE = .127) and control (M = 2.088, SE = .140) groups occurred on the fifth
researcher-prepared assessment. The smallest difference was found on the third posttest
89
where TBLT students (M = 2.382, SE = .164) on average scored a bit lower than control
Figure 7 below depicts the estimated means in Table 8. The graph shows that
TBLT students, on average, performed better than control group students did on four of
the five posttests. Students from both groups scored about the same with slightly higher
regardless of the group (TBLT vs. control) membership. The within-subjects test for
examining the differences between the five posttests is not statistically significant
indicating that, on average, students’ posttests scores did not differ significantly from one
posttest to another (F (4, 404)= .341, p= .850) and a small effect size ( 2= .003). Table
9 presents the five researcher-prepared posttests estimated means, their standard errors of
estimation and the 95% confidence interval associated with each estimated mean.
The 95% confidence intervals for the posttests mean show that all of the posttests
means are significantly different from zero. Figure 8 displays the estimated means of the
five posttests. Students’ highest score was on the third posttest when compared to the
posttests scores with their statistical significance. Five out of the ten pairwise
difference in posttests scores was between the first and the fourth posttests (-.743, with
p= .000). Out of the remaining five insignificant pairwise comparisons, the smallest
difference was between the fourth and the fifth posttests scores (.053, with p= 1.000).
Interestingly enough when the five significant contrasts depicted on the graph in Figure 8,
Differences between the posttests start to be significant as we move from the first to the
third posttests and gradually continue to be significant all the way to the fifth posttest.
Difference between the first and the second posttests was not large enough to be
statistically significant. Similar pattern inhibited in the second row of Table 10, where
the significant differences started in comparing the second posttest with the fourth and
92
the fifth posttests. Comparison between the second and the third posttests were deemed
not to be significant. Such pattern does not exist when comparing the third posttest to the
fourth or the fifth posttests as the means in these comparisons are from posttests either
next to each other or very close. This is also true for the last comparison between the
fourth and the fifth posttests. Furthermore, all differences have a negative values
indicating that there is a gradual improvement in students’ performances over time except
between the fourth and the fifth posttests where that difference was very small in
magnitude yet positive value. This difference is not significant and could be an artifact of
Posttest 2 3 4 5
1 -.192 -.432* -.743*** -.690***
3 -.311 -.258
4 .053
Note. *p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.
93
2. What insights and issues can be gained about implementing TBLT in this research
setting?
Data for this research question were gathered through two data collection
techniques. The first one was observation for both of the control and the treatment
groups. This data collection provides observational data about the control and TBLT
groups. The second data collection technique was researcher log where notes were
written down as recalled after each time the treatment teacher (researcher) taught the
treatment group. Data from both types of data collection techniques took the form of
written notes. The following presents the analysis and results for the second research
With reference to Figure 2 in Chapter III, the study focused on nine categories to
be considered when writing down observational notes. The first one was (1) setting the
stage which described what the teacher mainly did to create a desired atmosphere for
starting the lesson he had planned such as having the students sit on groups or pairs and
also introducing the lesson at hand. The second category of observational notes, (2)
engaging the students, were interested in showing how the teacher and the students got
involved in the main goal of the lesson such as linking the content of the lesson to
something the students already knew in their daily lives. The third one, (3) running the
94
task, described how and what both of the teacher and the students did to learn the targeted
content (achieve the main goal of the lesson). The fourth one, (4) task completion,
provided notes that describe how both of the teacher and students ensured achieving the
main goal or content of the lesson. The fifth and the sixth categories of observational
notes described the attitudes of both of (5) the students and (6) the teacher throughout the
entire the lesson. The seventh category of observational notes emphasized (7) the
difficulties that faced both of the teacher and the students for achieving the main goal of
the lesson. The eighth and ninth categories of notes stated (8) the advantages and (9)
disadvantages of the teaching method used while teaching the lesson. Table 11 (for the
control group) and Table 12 (for the treatment group) represent a comparison, using the
above categories of observational notes, between the control group, which had been
taught using the traditional teaching method, and the treatment group, which had been
taught using the TBLT method. Each column in Table 11 and Table 12 represents an
observational visit.
Observational visits to the control group. Data were gathered upon classroom
visits to the control group. Analysis of data out of those observational visits was through
a process of reading written notes multiple times. This process of reading helped in
forming trends. These trends aim at describing, making meaning, and explaining the
nature of the teaching and learning situations that accompanied teaching for reading
‘prompting’ teaching method (see Appendix I for observational data sample about the
control group).
Table 11. Observational Visits to the Control Group
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method
SS= students
(Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group)
At the request T starts with
of T, writing the
T asks ss to T enters the T asks ss to T takes about T asks ss to T asks ss to
T asks ss to researcher topic of the
T asks ss to sit down and classroom be seated and five minutes be seated on be seated and
Setting the be quiet and reminded ss lesson on the
be seated on get their and instructs their to talk about and have their have their
Stage seated about the board. T asks
their seats materials ss to get materials the midterm materials materials
properly. importance of ss to
ready. ready. ready. exam. ready. ready.
what they are concentrate
doing. with him.
T instructs ss T instructs ss T instructs ss
T instructs ss T instructs ss T instructs ss T instructs ss
Engaging the T instructs ss to open their to open their T instructs ss to open their T instructs ss
to open their to open their to open their to open their
Student to open their textbooks on textbooks on to open their textbooks on to open their
textbooks on textbooks on textbooks on textbooks on
(Control) = textbooks on Different Sherlock textbooks on Brooklyn textbooks on
Bill Gates Calvin Hutt the reading Eating Habits
Pre Task Stage the reading customs Holmes the reading Bridge the reading
reading reading passage reading
(Treatment) passage. reading reading passage. reading passage.
passage. passage. (story). passage.
passage. passage. passage.
T reads T reads T reads
T reads T reads
T reads Bill T reads the Different T reads the Sherlock T reads the Brooklyn T reads the
Calvin Hutt Eating Habit
Gates passage passage and customs passage and Holmes passage and Bridge passage and
The way the passage and passage and
and explains explains the passage and explains the passage and explains the passage and explains the
main goal is explains the explains the
the meaning meaning of explains meaning of explains the meaning of explains the meaning of
learned meaning of meaning of
of the new the new meaning of the new meaning of the new meaning of the new
(control) = the new the new
vocabularies. vocabularies. the new vocabularies. the new vocabularies. the new vocabularies.
Running the vocabularies. vocabularies.
Three ss take Three ss take vocabularies. Three ss take vocabularies. Three ss take vocabularies. Three ss take
Task Three ss take Three ss take
turns to read turns to read Three ss take turns to read Three ss take turns to read Three ss take turns to read
(Treatment) turns to read turns to read
the passage the passage turns to read the passage turns to read the passage turns to read the passage
the passage the passage
loudly for the loudly for the the passage loudly for the the passage loudly for the the passage loudly for the
loudly for the loudly for the
class. class. loudly for the class. loudly for the class. loudly for the class.
class. class.
class. class. class.
Note. T= teacher/ SS= students
95
Table11 (Continued)
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
SS= Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method
students (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group)
T asks ss to T asks ss to T asks ss to T asks ss to T asks ss to
T asks ss to T asks ss to
do the do the do the do the T asks ss to do do the T asks ss to do T asks ss to do
Assessment do the do the
provided provided provided provided the provided provided the provided the provided
(Control) = provided provided
exercises exercises exercises exercises exercises and exercises exercises and exercises and
Task exercises and exercises and
and and and and complete the and complete the complete the
Completion complete the complete the
complete the complete the complete the complete the remaining as complete the remaining as remaining as
(Treatment) remaining as remaining as
remaining as remaining as remaining as remaining as homework. remaining as homework. homework.
homework. homework.
homework. homework. homework. homework. homework.
SS show lack
of interest in
Ss are Some students Easily sensed
the lesson as
distracted. SS show more want to bother the discomfort
they asked
E.g. one s enthusiasm. themselves with of ss. Some ss
SS do not Few SS about topic not
plays with his E.g. about six anything to avoid blew breath
like the want to related to the SS show
cell phone, SS are ss show following with strongly out of
SS are very reading complete lesson. Two ss better
two ss are reluctant to interest while the reader. E.g. their mouths/
quiet and lesson. E.g. writing math have a battle of attention
Student chatting volunteer T is reading a eyes wandering, dropping the
few of them one s says notes on the words for a with the T
Attitudes secretly. The for reading story (the playing with textbook
are quietly to his board from reason I do not as he reads
front line of the passage reading pens, using body strongly on a
yawning. neighbor “do previous know. SS with the passage
the class loudly. passage) e.g. languages to table. One s
we have to lesson. SS lower abilities than before.
seemed to be They asked communicate said “yea it is
study this?” are tired. have trouble
following some with other ss so going to be the
doing the
greatly with questions. as not to be last time to do
reading
T. overheard. this”
exercises/ few
ss give up.
96
Table 11 (Continued)
T= Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
Teacher Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
SS= Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method
students (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group)
T is more
T has a hard T is keeping relaxed this T does not show
T gives a
time making control of the time. T shows care whether ss
general T looks
T is tensed. E.g ss active and class. Ss T has control Probably due concentration while liked the lesson
T promises to warning at the inconvenient
he repeatedly follow with needed a over the class. T to the reading the or no. T
give extra beginning of at the
asks ss to pay him as he is verbal is earnest. T interesting passage. T is continues to do
Teacher points for the lesson that situation. T
attention and reading. E.g. permission directed ss who story he is prompting the ss what he usually
Attitudes those who he is going to Uses some
follow with him T raises his from T to do asked unrelated teaching or with all info. E.g. T does (reading).
volunteer to take points off humor to
as he was voice and anything i.e questions to see maybe says something and T picks three ss
read. of those who do withdraw ss
reading. asks ss to read, write, him after class. because ss asks ss to repeat to take turns to
not pay attention.
pay leave the are interested after him. read loudly for
attention.
attention. class. and the class.
enthusiastic.
Keeping track of
Ss at the The atmosphere
time as the time
back of the of the class is
Having ss SS do not SS are elapsed before
Having ss class are not No SS do not show tensed. I doubt
concentrated want to read No difficulties concentrating completing the
Difficulties concentrate on sure what to difficulties care about the topic of the ss
on the loudly for the are observed. on another lesson. Having
the lesson. do with the observed. at hand. benefited from
lesson. class. lesson. all students
passage the reading
concentrated on
exercises. passage.
the lesson.
97
Table 11 (Continued)
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method Traditional Method
SS= students
(Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group) (Control Group)
The topic of
the reading
helped T and
T’s promise
ss to be
of extra points T is Easy for the
involved
The class is encouraged intelligent No T. E.g T sits
Easy for T to A very Easy control greatly in the No advantages
Advantages extremely few five for using his advantages on his chair
control the class. quiet class. for the class. lesson. SS observed.
quiet. students to sense of observed. and monitors
needed more
volunteer for humor. the class.
motivation. SS
reading.
participated
more than
usual.
Ss are
passive i.e
could not
find any
T cannot
token of Boring/
give ss all
enthusiasm. T centered. T is prompting/ no
T centered. SS what he T uses about
T centered. SS E.g. T asks a Boring class. T centered. SS prompting SS. active
T centered. are passive. planned to 80% of time.
Disadvantages seemed to be question no Passive ss. T are mostly A great deal of involvement
Passive SS. Individual give due to Passive
board. one centered. listeners. drills and in the reading/
work. elapse of students.
volunteered repetition. and T
time. T
to answer. Ss centered.
centered.
never ask
questions.
So T has to
pick one.
98
Table 12. Observational Visits to the Task-Based Language Teaching TBLT Group
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT
SS= students
(Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment)
SS have prepared SS have prepared
SS have prepared SS have prepared
themselves and set in themselves and set in SS have prepared SS have prepared
themselves and set in themselves and set in
groups of four to five groups of four to five themselves and set in themselves and set in
groups of four to five ss. groups of four to five ss. 2
ss. 2 ss help the T hock ss. 2 ss help the T hock groups of four to five ss. 2 groups of four to five ss. 2
2 ss help the T hock the ss help the T hock the
the computer and the computer and ss help the T hock the ss help the T hock the
Setting the computer and projector. T computer and projector. T
projector. T provides a projector. T provides a computer and projector. T computer and projector. T
Stage provides a road map to provides a road map to
road map to the ss/ road map to the ss/ provides a road map to the provides a road map to the
the ss/ what they are the ss/ what they are
what they are going to what they are going to ss/ what they are going to ss/ what they are going to
going to do/ and what is going to do/ and what is
do/ and what is do/ and what is do/ and what is expected out do/ and what is expected
expected out of the expected out of the
expected out of the expected out of the of the lesson. out of the lesson.
lesson. lesson.
lesson. lesson.
T runs PowerPoint
T runs PowerPoint slides T runs PowerPoint slides
T runs PowerPoint slides Ss are involved into slides (exercise) about T runs PowerPoint slides
(exercise) about rich (exercise) about types of
(exercise) about video group discussion to famous TV & movie (exercise) about nursery
people whom ss know in food that ss are familiar
games that ss are familiar provide some of the stars that ss are stories that ss are familiar
their real lives. This with and from their real
Engaging the with in their daily lives recent stereotypes they familiar. This exercise with and from their real
exercise is related to the lives and which are related
Student and which are related to see in their daily lives. is related to the main lives and which are related
main goal of the lesson. T to the main goal of the
the main goal of the This activity is related goal of the lesson. The to the main goal of the
accepts almost all lesson. Due to time
lesson. T provides a to the main goal of the slides work in perfect lesson. Little interruption
participation from constraint, groups have to
catchy task for ss to do. lesson. harmony with groups of from the counselor.
groups. share answers fast.
ss.
Ss begin reading a story
Ss read Bill Gates reading Ss read Sherlock
about the Man Who Sold In groups, ss read Eating
passage in groups. SS Ss are engaged in reading Groups of Ss are Holmes reading passage
Brooklyn Bridge in groups. Habits reading passage in
within each group help East Coast Games involved in reading in groups. Each group
Running the Each group shares with groups. Ss within each
each other understand the passage in groups. After Different Customs. shares with other
Task (TBLT) other groups what they have group discuss with each
passage. Each group they finished reading they Every group tells the groups what they have
The way the learned from the story. T other the ideas presented in
shares with other groups share with other groups other groups what they learned. T reads the
main goal is reads the passage and the passage. Groups share
what they have learned. T what they have learned. T understood from passage and provides
learned explains anything the with others what they have
reads the passage and facilitates the work of passage. T reads the further explanation.
(control students have missed. Ss learned. T reads the passage
explains anything the groups. T reads the passage loudly and Few ss asked about
Group) ask T about the reading and for all class. Ss gave
students have missed. Ss passage for all groups explains it to all the things they did not
passage. Some ss gave their comments about the
ask T about the reading with explanation. class. understood from the
opinions about the main passage.
passage. passage.
character of the story.
99
Table 12 (Continued)
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT
SS= students
(Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment)
SS do the provided SS do the provided
SS do the provided SS do the provided SS do the provided SS do the provided
exercises in groups exercises in groups and
exercises in groups and exercises in groups and exercises in groups and exercises in groups and
Task and share what and share what and how
share what and how they share what and how they share what and how they share what and how they
Completion how they answered the they answered the
answered the questions. answered the questions. answered the questions. answered the questions.
(assessment) questions. Each S does questions. Each S does
Each S does the narrative Each S does the narrative Each S does the narrative Each S does the narrative
the narrative question the narrative question
question by himself. question by himself. question by himself. question by himself.
by himself. by himself.
Ss are interested in the
Ss are very active in
lesson. SS like the idea of Ss show great
participation. They speak
being in groups. E.g. one enthusiasm. E.g. it Ss are attentive and Ss are very encouraged to
Ss showed concentration far more than the T.
s said “we are studying looks like groups are excited which is shown participate and share what
while reading the passage. However, there is slightly
Student differently”. Group work competing against through their sharing they have learned from the
SS seem to enjoy being in side chat that is not relevant
Attitudes is new to them. This each other i.e which with other groups and passage. This appears in
groups, which appears in to the story. However, ss
provided extra burden on one can give more through their questions their comments on the
their serious discussions. gave wonderful point of
T to explain groups’ information about the to their T reading passage.
views about the main
duties over and over passage.
character of the story.
again.
T is more relaxed this
T is anxious about the time. T gives ss a great T models a facilitator T gives clear
time. T gives clear deal of encouragement as he passes among instruction. T is anxious T is a little annoyed from T is relaxed and frequently
Teacher instruction. T gives ss a and praise to ss. T is groups. T always about the time. T give the counselor who uses humor. T encourages
Attitudes great deal of tolerant. E.g. he accepts praises the groups ss a great deal of interrupted the class. T is and praises the groups as
encouragement and praise almost all participation i.e stating that they are encouragement and very anxious about the time. they working.
to ss. not picking on ss, which doing wonderful job. praise to ss.
is right or wrong.
Keeping track of time as the
Ss lack the knowledge of
time elapsed before
the meaning of group T continuously passes
T is standing all the completing the lesson. This
work. Time is elapsing through groups and T keeps attention to all T’s breath shows that he is
Difficulties duration of the lesson and is due to the interruption
quickly. Side chats provides attention to groups. fainted.
passes through groups. made by the counselor.
among few ss. Hard for all groups.
Time is not sufficient. Side
the teacher
chat among few ss.
100
Table 12 (Continued)
Weeks 1&2 Weeks 3&4 Weeks 5&6 Weeks 7&8 Weeks 9&10
T= Teacher
Jan 19- Jan 30 Feb 02- Feb 13 Feb 16- Feb 27 Mar 02- March 13 Mar 16- March 27
Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT Teaching with TBLT
SS= students
(Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment) (Treatment)
101
102
One of these trends, as interpreted from Table 11, is that teaching via the
traditional method is monotonous. In other words, the way the lessons were introduced,
run, and assessed, students and teacher’s attitudes, difficulties, advantages, and
disadvantages were pretty much similar across most of the observational visits. For
instance, teacher’s asking students to be seated with their textbooks opened on the
reading passage was a mundane introduction to almost all reading lessons observed.
Also, reading the passage solely by the teacher and a couple of students took turns to read
aloud for the whole class, and had, afterwards, all students individually do the
providedexercises were common themes among running the lesson and assessing students
for achieving the main goal of the lesson. The monotonous nature of the traditional
teaching method yielded almost similar observational notes for the students and teacher’s
Analyzing data related to students’ attitude showed that students lacked interest in
the reading lessons. This interpretation is obtained from a number of responses and
actions done by the students across the several visits. For instance, eyes wandering in the
celling and sometimes yawning of students were pretty much common across most of the
observational visits. In earlier visits, students in the control group would remain quite
and not take the initiative to ask questions, provide answers to questions asked by the
teacher or, even volunteer to read the passage for the class. Later on, when the presence
of the investigator in the classroom became a regular matter, students started to show
more courage to display their attitudes towards the learning situations taking place. For
example, in the third week, one student said quietly to his neighbor, “do we have to study
103
this?” showing little care to be overheard by the investigator who was sitting next to
them. Also, in the seventh week, students asked about things that were totally unrelated
to the reading lesson. They wanted to do anything but not reading. The last week
provided a valuable insight about the students’ lack of interest in the reading lesson;
almost all students exclaimed with happiness that it was their last time in the semester to
do reading.
of the traditional teaching method. In other words, teacher was tensed with the situation
that students were not paying the expected attention across most of the observed reading
lessons and, hence, repeatedly asked students, in a tune that showed inconvenience, to
follow with him and concentrate at the reading passage. The teacher even pointed out in
the eighth week that he would take off points of students who did not follow with him as
he was reading the passage. Also, it was obvious that the teacher was annoyed of the
students being passive and not volunteering to ask questions or respond to questions he
asked. To overcome this problem, the teacher promised to give extra credit points for
Consistent difficulties across most of the observed lessons can be classified into
two main categories. The first and most important difficulty the teacher faced was
having students involve and concentrate on the reading lesson. For example, the teacher
repeatedly and with louder voice asked students to pay attention to what he was reading
and students were almost always reluctant to participate through reading, asking, or
responding to questions. The second category of difficulties was emerging from the solo
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work of students. In other words, the nature of the implemented traditional teaching
who did not know what or how to do those exercises found themselves left alone and
The advantages of the traditional teaching method seemed to be far less than the
observed disadvantages. One advantage of the traditional teaching method was that it
was easy for the teacher to teach and enabled him to have control over class the entire
duration of the lesson. Another controversial advantage was that students were quiet
Disadvantages, on the other hand, could be seen from three main perspectives.
The first one was that the traditional teaching method was highly teacher-centered. In
other words, it was the teacher who did most of the work in the reading lesson. The
teacher would read the passage, explain the reading passage, assign two or three students
to read, give instructions to students, and read exercises and ask students to do them. The
teacher alone used about 70 to 80% of time of the duration of the reading lesson. The
second perspective was that the students were bored with the English language reading
class. Students used from 70 to 80% of time listening to their teacher while speaking.
Students did not have any types of activities to do during the reading lesson except the
one they do individually towards the end of the lesson. The third perspective of
disadvantages was that the traditional teaching method heavily relied on prompting
practices. In other words, instruction and explanation were always orally by the teacher.
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Students also did several drills to memorize the correct pronunciations of some English
words.
Observational visits to the TBLT group. Observational data gathered about the
TBLT to the treatment teacher (researcher) who was teaching English with emphasis on
reading comprehension via the TBLT method to the treatment group. Analysis of those
observational data was through a process of reading written notes multiple times. This
process of reading helped in forming trends. These trends aim at describing and
explaining the nature of the teaching and learning situations that accompanied teaching
reading in an English as a second language classroom via the TBLT method (see
One of the trends, as interpreted from Table 12, was that teaching via the TBLT
method took longer time to describe. In other words, written notes about the teaching
and learning situations while implementing TBLT had more descriptive details. The
reason behind that is that the nature of the TBLT method consists of various elements
that lead to more actions to take place in classroom from all parties involved in the lesson
being taught. In essence, there were more things that took place while running the lesson
other words, the skeleton of the reading lesson taught via TBLT consisted of three main
stages. The first one, pre-task, aimed at engaging students into the main goal of the
lesson. The second stage, running the task, described students while they were actually
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doing what they were intended to do. In the third stage, task completion, students
provided their teacher with a product for the purposes of assessing to what extent students
Having said that the observational data suggested consistency following the three
stages of the TBLT method, teaching and learning were also characterized by having a
great deal of variety. In other words, various activities took place during the three fixed
stages of the TBLT method. For example, in a reading lesson in the second week about
Calvin Hutt’s Career Life, students in the pre-task stage provided their classmates with
lists of video games they were playing at home and read a passage about Calvin Hutt’s
Career Life in the running task stage. Students in the task completion stage imagined
they were participating in a live competition show to answer a question asked by the
interviewer where they told the audience (their teacher and other groups of students) as
The most prevailing trend across most of the nine observational data categories in
Table 12 was that learning via the TBLT method was learner-centered. Learner-centered
meant here that that the students were the central focus of instruction and students
investigation is bestowed to the nine observational data categories in Table 12. Students
were described or mentioned by the observer almost in every cell across all columns
unlike the teacher whom the observer mentioned fewer times and described in roles of
being a facilitator rather than a source of instruction. In other words, students were active
learners (i.e., they were discussing, negotiating, reading, and displaying their
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understanding of what they had been learning). This meant the learning situation via the
Students had realized in the first week of the study the difference occurred in the
way they were taught and which appeared in one student’s comment to his group, “we are
enhanced students’ verbal responses towards the learning situation, and which was
revealed in multiple occasions across the following weeks of the study. For instances,
students tended to organize themselves at the beginning of each lesson, join their groups,
and show readiness to start the reading lessons without much efforts or further notices
from the treatment teacher (researcher). Also, the students always showed engagement in
group works and enthusiastically shared their responses with their classmates.
Difficulties as observed when adopting the TBLT method could be seen from
three perspectives. One difficulty was related to the design of the lesson plan. The
design of lesson plan was compound involving three interrelated stages (pre-task,
running the task, and task completion). The interrelation among those three stages meant
that they all strived to accomplish the intended goal of the lesson. This interrelation
required a kind of coherence or unity in the mechanism of those three stages where each
stage was derived from or built upon the other stages. In other words, the pre-task stage
primarily introduced the running task stage and the task completion stage investigated or
showed to what extent the task was run and learned. To visually see how the unity of
The second difficulty about implementing the TBLT method was the factor of
time. Since there were multiple activities to be carried out by students across the three
stages of the lesson, keeping track of time seemed to be the most challenging difficulty
that the treatment teacher. Upon designing the lesson plan, each one of the three stages
of the lesson was allotted a certain amount of time of the duration of the lesson. The
occurrence of unintended loss of time or spending more time than planned in one stage
might lead to not achieving the main goal of the lesson as hoped or planned. The
problem of the time factor happened in the seventh week when there was an interruption
by the counselor, who took about ten minutes from the time of the class, a failure to
comply with the designed lesson plan took place. The students did not have time to go
The third difficulty was pretty much related to the teacher role in the classroom.
Mental and physical attendance needed to be present by the teacher. In other words, the
teacher needed to physically pass through all groups of students who were discussing or
responding to any group questions, the teacher needed to even engage or participate with
every group as a sign of paying attention to what students were saying in groups and
value their inputs. The absence of appropriate physical and mental attendance of the
teacher might lead to a deviation of groups of students from the intended group work to
unrelated lesson talks. This suggests that teacher’s role can be described by being a
facilitator in the TBLT method and which is even more demanding on the teacher
showed that the advantages and disadvantages went along with or supported by the
students were very active in terms of asking questions and sharing responses, negotiation
of meaning was always present among groups of students while reading passages, focus
was on students since they tended to speak far more than their teacher, presence of peer
or collegial learning as students learned more details about the reading passage from
always the ultimate aim targeted by the practices involved in the TBLT lesson.
Interpreted advantages related to the work of the teacher were much less than the
observed ones about the students. The reason was that the teacher was not the central
focus or the main source of information and, hence, focus was more on the students who
were making action. Among the advantages that described the work of the teacher
included that he was modeling the role of a facilitator as he was passing among groups
providing them with guidance, monitoring group works, relaxed, and frequently used his
sense of humor.
Disadvantages were minimal and related to the work of the teacher in the
classroom rather than that of students. The most prevailing disadvantage about the
implementation of the TBLT method was that it was demanding on the teacher and
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required mental and physical attendance by the teacher.4 At last but not least,
implementing TBLT required more time and, hence, any unintended loss of time might
easily lead to failure to achieve the main goal of the lesson as planned. At last, teaching
via the TBLT method was not easy work for the teacher and required certain skills and
background about the TBLT method before implementing it on the classroom, and which
Researcher Log
With reference to researcher log in Chapter III, data gathered under this data
collection tool were the observed data by the treatment teacher (researcher) as he
recalled them after each time he taught the TBLT group. In other words, analyzed data
under this tool were restricted to the TBLT group and not the control group. Analysis of
Theory. The reason for using Grounded Theory is that the observed data under
researcher log primarily serve most of the five interrelated jobs of a theory which
1973). In essence, Grounded Theory works in reverse to the function of the regular
4This notion is elaborately explained under the observed difficulties that accompanied the
implementation of the TBLT method earlier in this chapter.
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theory. Whereas the regular theory starts with a hypothesis and then strives to gather
examples or data to support the theoretical hypothesis, in Grounded Theory data are first
gathered and based upon which a hypothesis emerges through a systematic process. This
systematic process includes first collecting data, drawing a base line of repeated data,
assigning codes for the repeated data, grouping these codes into similar concepts from
which categories are formed. Categories become the basis for the creation of a theory.
systematic process. After the data were collected, they were read many times. During
reading, some collected data were repeated and which enabled to start assigning codes for
those repeated data. As this process was repeated many times, a base line was developed
for repeated data. This process yielded a number of codes that represented the repeated
data. These codes were grouped into similar categories. This analysis also included
thoughts and understanding of the meaning of the collected data of a peer who read the
The analysis of data collected via researcher log showed that they revolved
around four categories. Not surprisingly, the two most prevailing categories were about
the students’ roles and attitudes in the classroom. The collected data under those two
categories support the observational data interpreted under Table 12 and which adds
further strength to the findings. The third category was very much related to running
a second language classroom in this research setting. The fourth category of data was
related to the role and impression of the teacher (researcher) in the classroom while he
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was teaching via the TBLT method in this research setting. Figure 9 shows the numbers
400
Number of Key words Per Category
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
Students' Roles Students' Method of Teacher
Attitudes Teaching
Researcher Log Data Categories
The reasons that made students’ roles and attitudes be the two most prevailing
categories in a reading lesson taught via the TBLT method could be linked to the reality
that they had played a central role or were the action makers during the flow of the
reading lesson. Data out of researcher log repeatedly described the roles of students they
had been playing in the classroom. The three most frequent roles included reading,
discussing, and sharing. Collected data also tended to report what students had been
doing in the classroom. Students started every reading lesson with a group discussion,
the pre-task stage, involving an activity that imitated students’ daily lives and which
5
Figure 9 includes counted numbers of key words under each category and excludes neutral
words such as articles, prepositions, and verbs to be.
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helped engage the students in the intended reading content. Every group of students
extended its work after the engaging activity to read the reading passage, group members
discussed their understanding of what they had read, and formulated an agreed-upon
The second half of the prevailing data was a description of students’ attitudes
towards the reading lesson. The two most common words used to describe the students’
attitudes were enthusiasm and involvement. Enthusiasm and involvement in this setting
referred to the manner in which the students were performing the aforementioned roles
(reading, discussing, and sharing). Two examples derived from the raw data could give a
picture of enthusiasm and involvement of students in the reading lesson. In the third
week, two groups of students had an argument about who should have the turn first to
start sharing their responses with other groups. The group that started first usually had
the opportunity to share another time as long as the time allotted for group sharing was
not consumed. The second example was about a student who actually broke the
boundaries of group work in the fifth week. When the turn was for his group to share
with a response, that student enthusiastically stood up and orally narrated the whole of
the reading passage consuming more than the time allotted for his group. In the
meantime, the teacher (researcher) tried to politely give the chance to another group but
the student would not stop and continued all the way to the end of his long response.
Students’ attitude towards the reading lesson taught via the TBLT method was
positive. Interpreted data showed that they even loved and enjoyed what they were doing
in the reading lesson. Beside the never observed complain or lack of interests tokens that
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universally accompany any an undesired class by students at the age of the students
participating in the study, the treatment teacher (researcher) considered an incident that
had happened in the fourth week as an evidence or at least an indicator that the students
It was Wednesday (the last day of school week days in Saudi Arabia) when the
teacher (researcher), as usual after teaching students the reading class, headed towards the
teachers’ office room. The counselor stopped the treatment teacher and asked him if he
gave his instructions to five of the students not to participate in a tour outside the school
hosted by an outsider organization. The treatment teacher told the counselor that he had
not given any instructions in this regards. In the middle of that conversation, the
treatment teacher was shocked out of surprise and wondered about the reason that
prevented the five students from going on the tour as he knew that every student wished
to participate in similar tours. The treatment teacher asked the counselor about the reason
that made the students opted not participate in the tour. The counselor replied that the
students said that they had had an English reading class and they did not want go on the
tour. That incident was complemented by a phone call after the end of the study by the
original teacher to the treatment teacher (researcher) stating that some students asked him
to teach them the way the treatment teacher (researcher) was teaching them.
The third category was related to the application of the TBLT method in this
research setting. Interpreted data out of researcher log suggested some difficulties that
the treatment teacher had faced when implementing the TBLT method. One of those
difficulties was that the students did not know the meaning or not used to group work. At
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the beginning, students were sitting in groups but working individually which made the
treatment teacher correct that at once explaining duties and expectations out of group
work. Another difficulty, which might be a consequence of the first one, was the
existence of minimal side talks (not related to the lesson at hand) among some students at
the beginning of the study. However, as the study progressed and students understood
the meaning of group work, those minimal side talks started to vanish. The last difficulty
was related to the challenge of time. Time was congesting and reading lessons taught in
this study tended to finish exactly by the end of the allotted duration of time and
sometime a minute or two minutes were to be borrowed from the breaks following the
lessons. That warned that any unintended loss of time might severely prevent students
The fourth category was related to the teacher’s (researcher) role and impression
in this research setting. Interpreted data out of researcher log showed that the treatment
teacher (researcher) had described what he was doing in every class he had taught. The
way he was teaching was consistent across all lessons and strictly followed the principles
of the TBLT method he was implementing including the three stages of a TBLT lesson
(pre-task, running the task, and task completion). The treatment teacher precisely
followed the lesson plans he designed for every reading lesson class. To engage students
in the main task of the lesson, those lessons tended to start with group activities that were
derived from students’ daily lives while ensuring the achievement of the main goal of the
lesson (running the task) was through a retelling activity that too imitated students’ real
lives. The teacher’s (researcher) impression showed always satisfaction about the way he
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taught and the way students were working in the classroom. However, a couple of times
the TBLT teacher mentioned that he was exhausted and that might be linked to the
continuous physical motion the treatment teacher was doing while passing among groups
Each of the previous two sections (quantitative & qualitative analyses) provided
detailed description of the analysis and the findings of the study. While each analysis
revealed specific findings that were related to the nature of the data collection tools used
to answer one of the two research questions, this section attempts to combine findings of
both quantitatively and qualitatively collected data to provide a full or complete picture
about the findings of the study. The two research questions were:
1. Is using the TBLT method for teaching English as a second language for male,
2. What insights and issues can be gained about implementing TBLT in this research
setting?
The overall of the statistical analyses of the quantitatively collected data provided
valuable findings to answer the first research question. The major finding that explicitly
answered this question was: yes, the application of the TBLT method for teaching
Saudi Arabia was more effective in the acquisition of the English language, in terms of
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method. In other words, the application of TBLT method in this research setting helped
increase the students’ achievement scores in reading comprehension. That major finding
standardized text-established tests), and which even increased the validity of the findings.
The pretest results also showed that students were equal across the control and treatment
groups eliminating the possibility for effect of initial level of the English language
reading comprehension before the application of the TBLT method. The average scores
established tests) of the control and treatment groups were highly significant in favor of
Qualitatively collected data on the other hand greatly helped describe and explain
the surroundings of the application of the TBLT method in this research setting. Because
neither group knew their group identification (treatment or control) nor knew the way
they were going to be taught before the beginning of the study, this study assumes that
students in both groups have a very low level of possibility to form a prejudice that might
interact with their attitudes towards the learning situations. Hence, the interpreted
qualitative data showed that teaching via the TBLT method in this research setting helped
students develop a desired attitudes towards the learning situations, unlike the traditional
teaching method that showed that students had developed undesired attitudes towards the
learning situations as elaborately explained under the analyses of the qualitative data.
Another vital finding interpreted from the qualitative data was that teaching via the TBLT
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method required both of the students and their teacher to play roles or involve in practices
that went along with the practices of the constructivist learning theory, unlike the
traditional teaching method which involved practices and roles of students and their
teacher that went along with the behaviorist learning theory as elaborated in Chapter Two
Interpreted quantitative and qualitative data when combined showed that they had
provided support and evidences for the findings suggested by each set of data. In other
words, qualitative findings that suggested that the TBLT method had helped the students
in the treatment group develop desired attitudes towards the learning situations were
supported by the quantitative findings that showed that the TBLT method had also helped
language. Also, the quantitative findings that showed that the traditional teaching method
did not help students in the control group increase their achievement scores in reading
qualitative findings that showed that the traditional teaching method also did not help the
students develop desired attitudes towards the learning situations as that of the TBLT
method.
Summary
Chapter IV presented the analyses and results of this study. The chapter had
begun with an introduction that warned in advance that the analyses and results will be
organized or divided into three main sections. The first section was related to the results
of the quantitative analysis of the first research question. This section had shown that the
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statistical analysis addressed the first research question was the Two-Factor Spilt-Plot
design. Interpreted quantitative results from the pre-test showed that students in both of
the treatment and control groups were equal in terms of their prior knowledge of reading
students’ posttests scores for the treatment group were higher and statistically significant
The second section was related to the results of the qualitative analysis of the
second research question. This section had shown that observational data were
distributed into two tables (Table 11 and Table 12) for the purposes of comparison and
contrast between the traditional teaching method and the TBLT method. This section had
also shown that analysis of data out of researcher log were via Grounded Theory.
Interpreted results out of the qualitative data showed that the TBLT method helped
students develop desired attitudes towards the learning situations and involved practices
and roles of students and their teacher that went along with the constructivist learning
theory. Interpreted results out of the qualitative data showed that the traditional teaching
method did not help students develop desired attitudes towards the learning situations and
involved practices and roles of students and their teacher that went along with the
behaviorist learning theory. The Third section focused on combining both of the
quantitative and qualitative findings. This section had shown that they had provided
support and evidences for the findings suggested by each set of data.
CHAPTER V
Introduction
Chapter V discusses the findings of the study and aims at linking them to some of
the existing educational issues. For the purposes of organization, this chapter consists of
three main parts. The first part, Discussion, addresses the major quantitative and
qualitative findings of the study. Discussion of these findings provides the opportunity to
methodological limitations of the quantitative and qualitative findings of this study. The
second part, Implications, mainly addresses how the reported findings speak to the related
educational context of the study. Benefited educational issues from this context include
English language teaching method in Saudi Arabia, English language teacher education,
recommendations for future research. The third part, Conclusion, summarizes Chapter V
Discussion
qualitative data collection techniques), it is easier for the reader to discuss each type of
findings by itself. The discussion of the findings attempts to make connections to some
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instruction and classroom communication. The discussion will begin with the
Quantitative Findings
Quantitative findings were mainly obtained from two data collection tools that
included conducting a pretest and five posttests for 122 students divided into two groups
(i.e., control and treatment). The pretest primarily aimed at measuring students’ initial
level of the English language reading comprehension. Pretest scores showed that there
were no statistically significant differences between the treatment group (students taught
by the TBLT method) and control group (students taught by the traditional teaching
method) suggesting that the two groups’ initial level of the English language reading
comprehension before administering the treatment was about the same. The finding of
equivalence between the control and treatment groups prior to the application of the
experiment validates attributing any positive or negative change that occurs on the
method of teaching (TBLT vs. Traditional), especially when known that similar learning
conditions were ensured for both of the treatment and control groups.
Posttests aimed at testing students over time using five measures administered
two weeks apart after introducing the two treatments (teaching with TBLT and traditional
methods). Each set of the tests consisted of one standardized test and one researcher-
prepared assessment resulting in ten sub-tests (five standardized and five researcher-
prepared assessment tests). Both sets of tests intended to measure students’ reading
comprehension in the materials covered during the preceding two weeks. Reasons for
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The treatment teacher (researcher) as well as the control group teacher graded both types
of posttests. The grading process showed a very low level of disagreement (i.e., less than
.03%).
Posttest scores showed that there were differences between treatment and
control groups across all the posttest measures in favor of the treatment group, with the
exception of the third posttest. Across the first, second, fourth, and fifth posttests,
students in the treatment group significantly scored higher than students in the control
group. In the third posttest, neither group scored significantly higher than the other one.
That is, the control group scored a little bit higher than the treatment group in researcher-
prepared assessment part while the treatment group similarly scored a little bit higher
One reason that might help explain why students’ test scores did not have
significant differences in the third posttest between the treatment and control groups is
history. History in this context refers to the situation when unanticipated events occur
while the treatment is being conducted and participate in changing participants’ behavior
(Wiersma & Jurs, 2009). Those events become alternative explanations for the changes
in participants’ behavior rather than treatment. During the third posttest time for the
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treatment group, it happened that the school had had an open day.6 Students in the
treatment group had to finish their third posttest before they could join their colleagues
Knowing some of the common characteristics and needs of students at this age
may explain why students in the treatment group did not score significantly higher than
students in the control one as they had done in the first, second, fourth, and fifth posttests.
During the application of the third posttest, some students in the treatment group were
most likely thinking of their colleagues who were having fun outside of the class. Other
students might have wanted to finish as soon as they could so as not to miss much fun of
the open day. Thus, it is possible that the effect of history interacted with the third
posttest had led to nonsignificant differences. This is to say that students in the treatment
group could have done better and might have scored significantly higher than students in
the control group if there were no open day during the time of the third posttest. This
means that students in the treatment group’s not scoring significantly higher than that of
students in the control group should not be attributed to the treatment effect but to the
effect of an outside event (the open day) known quantitatively as history. This claim is
supported by the other four posttests in which students in the treatment group have scored
The findings of the pretest and posttest scores together answered the first
students’ initial level of the English language reading comprehension before the
6
In an open day, the school cancels all classes, gathers all students in one place, and do fun
activities.
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application of any of the two teaching methods (i.e., TBLT vs. traditional) in both groups.
standardized text-established tests) of the control and treatment groups were significant in
favor of the treatment group. That finding meant that the application of TBLT method in
this research setting helped increase the students’ achievement scores in English language
reading comprehension more than that of the traditional teaching method. Equivalence of
both groups attained prior to the application of the treatment and reporting significant
differences from two data sources (researcher-prepared assessment and standardized text-
results (posttest scores) in favor of the TBLT group. These data hypothesize that
quantitatively, increase their reading comprehension achievement scores more than those
associated with the traditional teaching method. TBLT procedures and characteristics
include teacher’s role as a facilitator, group work, students’ roles within group work, the
type of activities in which students are involved, complexity of tasks, and lesson plan.
Yet all these procedures and characteristics of TBLT work in harmony and
complement the work of each other, three elements of TBLT seem to make the greater
difference from the traditional teaching method. First, the structure of the lesson that
divides the duration of the lesson into three phases (pre task, running the task, task
completion) accompanied by what this study would describe as a unity of mechanism that
requires interrelation of these three phases where every phase is built upon the other.
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Second, the type of activities in which students are involved does imitate their daily lives.
Third, the greater amount of space (time) that students have in groups to discuss,
negotiate meaning, and share responses. (More details about how these elements work in
achieved when applying the TBLT method. Better learning is always a primary common
aim of learning theories and which strive to describe how learning occurs and,
consequently, what practitioners and learners should do towards having better learning
and teaching. Careful examination of the TBLT principles and characteristics and those
of the constructivist learning theory reveals strong connections between the constructivist
learning theory and the TBLT Practice. These connections are addressed later on this
Quantitative findings emerging out of the application of TBLT in this study are
supported by findings of other studies that implemented TBLT in other teaching and
learning settings (Aljarf, 2007; De Bot, 2001; Ellis & Fotos, 1991; Lopez, 2004; Stevens,
1983; Swain, & Lapkin, 2000). Connection between the findings of those studies and the
findings of this study is seen through the significant results of the positive effect of TBLT
when it is applied in various teaching and learning settings. For examples, students who
were taught via task-based instruction learned more than those who were taught via
(acquisition of language) and the use of task in teaching (De Bot, 2001; Swain & Lapkin,
2000). TBLT helped students know far more language through activities (tasks) than
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what they exhibit in response to classroom drills (Stevens, 1983). The application of
TBLT has motivated students, improved their speaking skills, and helped them use
grammar and pronunciation correctly (Aljarf, 2007). Teaching students via TBLT helped
them increase their knowledge of advanced grammatical rules (Fotos & Ellis, 1991).
Such positive findings about TBLT in other research settings provide further validity and
Qualitative Findings
Qualitative findings were mainly obtained from two data collection sources that
included observation and researcher log. Qualitative findings helped explain or visualize
the surroundings of the application of the traditional and TBLT teaching methods in this
research setting. Discussion of the qualitative and quantitative findings shows that they
are in agreement; both types of findings suggest that when emphasis is placed on English
language reading comprehension, TBLT is a better way of instruction than the traditional
teaching methods. Characteristics and trends associated with the traditional teaching
method were mostly undesired in an educational setting. For examples, teaching via the
traditional teaching method lacked variety and was almost always monotonous. Students
lacked interest in reading lessons and which was reflected on the teacher’s attitudes who
was tensed during most of those lessons. Students’ repeated solo work across all lessons
resulted in a very weak participation by students who preferred to remain passive most of
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the time. The flow of the lesson was highly teacher-centered as a natural result of
repetition and the prompting way of instruction run by the teacher.7 Two controversial
advantages were observed about the traditional teaching method. Those advantages
included that the traditional method helped the teacher have control over students and the
class was quite most of the time. These undesired characteristics of the traditional
teaching method are not surprising, and can, further, be described by being a natural
scenario for a teaching practice that is built on some assumptions of the behaviorist
earlier in Chapter II) is the emphasis of the external workings of humans and animals
where learning takes place through a structure or pattern of behavior that the learner must
go through for learning to occur (Guthrie, 1935; Hull, 1935; Pavlov, 1927/1960; Skinner,
behaviorist learning theories reveals excessive emphasis on the way an individual learns
as an isolated unit from culture. This is to say that interaction with culture is hardly given
attention as a powerful means of or even a cause for learning. Such assumption informs
solo working in classroom and which is the case of the traditional teaching method where
students work individually to read the reading passages and do attached exercises.
The behaviorist learning theory further informs the traditional teaching practice
in this study setting with the assumption that learning happens due to the accumulation of
7 More details will be discussed later on this chapter about student=centered vs. teacher-
centered.
More details about the assumptions of the behaviorist learning theory are elaborately
8
seen in the drillings of students and the way the teacher repeatedly reads the reading
passage for the students. Another vital assumption of behaviorism that informs the
traditional teaching method in this setting is the positive and negative reinforcement
(Skinner, 1935) which is seen through the given extra points or taken off points from
students depending on their participation quality in classroom when teaching via the
However, characteristics and trends associated with the TBLT method were
characteristics could be classified into four themes. The first theme was related to the
nature of the TBLT method. The findings showed that teaching via TBLT had a great
deal of variety since it used more words and time to describe what had been taking place
during observation. Taught lessons via TBLT were consistent to have the three main
The second theme of trends and characteristics was related to the roles and
attitudes of students. In contrast to the solo work, lack of interests, weak participation of
students, and highly teacher-centered instruction when learning and teaching via the
traditional method, the findings showed that group work and imitation of students’ real
lives were common themes among all lessons taught via the TBLT method. The flow of
the lesson was mostly student-centered of lessons taught via TBLT as constructivist
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instructional practice.9 Students were active learners in ways that they were discussing,
negotiating, reading, and displaying their understanding of what they had been learning.
Students showed positive attitudes orally and verbally towards the English language
reading class; they had the initiative to volunteer to organize the settings of the classroom
to form groups prior to the beginning of each lesson and the students’ request by the end
of the study to continue learning in the same way with their original English language
teacher. The third theme of trends and characteristics was related to the roles and
attitudes of the teacher. The findings showed that the teacher modeled the facilitator role
rather than the source of information while teaching via the TBLT method. These
desired findings so far about the TBLT method as an instructional practice imply a
One issue is that teaching via TBLT, due to the great deal of variety involved,
helps in providing teachers and learners with rich lessons. When lessons are rich, several
good qualities of teaching come along the way. These qualities include students and
teachers’ high motivation and interest in the lesson, absorbing knowledge through
multiple dimensions, experience sharing, and providing teachers and learners with
Another issue inferred from the findings is that learners are key participants
along with their teacher in creating the learning situations as the mainstream of the lesson
9 More details will be discussed later on this chapter about where TBLT falls in a pedagogical
context and when addressing issues related student=centered vs. teacher-centered.
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beneficial to students (as will be discussed later on this chapter), this is also beneficial for
facilitating the work of the teacher; a teacher will be working with partners who are
interested on what the teacher is saying and doing. To clarify this notion, when an
individual shares a personal story or any topic with someone and the latter shows lack of
interest, the speaker tends to finalize the topic fast and which might lead to deletion of
important details. However, the speaker tends to provide more details and even includes
personal thoughts as long as the listener is showing interest on what is being said.
A further issue inferred from these findings is that the teacher is not the source
of knowledge in classroom, but a component that facilitate the work of students who are
learning. It is vital that teachers understand that their primary job in classroom is not
making students learn but helping them learn (as will be addressed shortly). In other
words, once a teacher attempts to make students learn, s/he unintentionally plays the role
of learning cause or creator. Such way of teaching prevents students from playing a vital
role of the learning process, which is the creation of their learning. Learning should not
be considered an outcome package to obtain but a process run through. Teachers in the
Saudi context and in other contexts need to facilitate their students learning (where
students participate in the process of learning) rather than making students learn (where
students do not participate in the process of learning, but get a pre-packed learning
The fourth theme of trends and characteristics was related to the difficulties and
challenges associated with teaching via the TBLT method. The findings showed that the
path was not paved all the way when implementing the TBLT method in this research
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setting. Application of the TBLT method had a few difficulties some of which were
unavoidable. One of those difficulties was related to the compound design of the lesson
plan; it required a kind of coherence or unity in the mechanism of the three interrelated
stages (pre task, running the task, and task completion) as each stage was derived from or
built upon the other stages. This challenge urges teachers in the Saudi context and other
contexts to have a solid background and understanding about the TBLT method before
Another challenge was keeping track of time; due to the multiple activities and
roles played by students during the three stages of the lesson, any unintended loss of time
could result in failure to achieve the main goal of the lesson as planned. This challenge is
difficult to control for and, hence, teachers need to be cautious about the factor of time
when implementing the TBLT method. An idea that might help reduce the challenge of
time effect is to try it out first and see if extending the time of lesson or combining two
A further difficulty was related to the excessive mental and physical efforts by
the teacher; teaching via TBLT required a careful design of the lesson plan, a continuous
movement inside the class, and being available physically and mentally to cope up with
the demands of groups of students. This suggests that teaching via the TBLT method is
more work on the teacher than when teaching via the traditional teaching method.
Although the teacher tends to talk a lot more in the traditional teaching method than that
in the TBLT one, teacher’s mental work that precedes the class through planning and
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designing the lesson, and the continuous physical and mental presence with groups of
students when teaching via TBLT far exceed the work of the teacher in the traditional
teaching method. This means that good language teaching as represented by TBLT in
this study requires far more work than in traditional way of language teaching. Some
teachers might say that TBLT is more work on teachers and adds further burden to their
work. Response to this point of view is seen from two perspectives. First, teaching is a
very complex. Second, the outcome associated with this time consuming work (teaching
understanding about the application of the TBLT method in this research setting.
Findings out of researcher log about the TBLT method went along with those obtained
from classroom observation. An outer look showed that findings out of researcher log
were classified into four categories. Two of those categories were related to the students,
one was related to the teaching method, and the last one was related to the teacher.
The first category of findings was related to the students’ roles they had been
playing in the classroom. The three most frequent roles showed that groups of students
were reading, discussing, and sharing. The second category of findings was related to the
students’ attitudes towards the reading lesson. The two most common words used to
describe the students’ attitudes were enthusiasm and involvement while they were
motivation to their teacher. The students’ attitudes were positive towards the reading
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lessons taught via the TBLT method and which can be concluded from the never
class of students. The students recognized that they were unwilling to miss any reading
classes.
Plural verbal and non-verbal responses derived from the raw data show the
positive attitudes of students taught via TBLT towards the reading lesson. For examples,
a student excitedly exclaimed, “ We are studying differently” in the first week of the
implementation of TBLT. Another one enthusiastically stood up and orally narrated his
understanding of the entire reading passage consuming more than the time allotted for his
group. Two short stories observed while teaching students via TBLT could expresses far
more than what words could do about how students loved the way they were learning.
The first story is about five students who refused to participate in a tour outside of
the school and preferred to attend the reading class. It was Wednesday (the last day of
school week days in Saudi Arabia) when the treatment teacher (researcher), as usual after
the end of the reading class, headed towards the teachers’ office room. The counselor
stopped the treatment teacher and asked him if he gave his instructions to five of the
students not to participate in a tour outside the school hosted by an outsider organization.
The treatment teacher had neither known about the tour nor given any instructions in this
regards. To the treatment teacher and consoler surprise, they found out that those five
students preferred to attend the English language reading class rather than joining the trip.
The second story is about two groups of students who were having an argument
about who would have the first turn to start sharing responses with other groups. With
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efforts to calm the arguing groups, the teacher told them that there is no need for this
argument as every group is going to have the chance to share its responses with other
groups. The arguing groups justified their argument with fact they observed across
previous lessons; that the group that usually starts first tends to have the opportunity to
share one more time as long as time allows. All these examples and stories are
complemented by students’ request to their original teacher to teach them the way the
The third category of findings was related to the application of the TBLT method
in this research setting. The application of TBLT involved some difficulties that are
associated with students’ adaptation to the new teaching method, TBLT. These
difficulties included students’ lack of knowledge and training about how group work was
done. At the beginning students were sitting in groups but working individually in
addition to the existence of minimal side talks that were unrelated to the lesson.
However, when expectations and duties of group work were explained, students started to
The fourth category of findings was related to the teacher’s role and impression
while he was implementing TBLT in this research setting. The teacher (researcher)
frequently described himself being careful to follow the principles of TBLT in every
reading lesson. His impression always showed satisfaction about the way he was
teaching and the way students were working in the classroom. A couple of times the
teacher (researcher) mentioned that he was exhausted and linked that to the continuous
physical motion he was doing while passing among groups and paying attention to
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classroom observation, researcher log, and quantitative tests had shown that teaching via
TBLT had promoted learning far more than that of the traditional teaching method. This
is to say that qualitative findings have presented TBLT as a teaching method that helps
students develop desired attitudes towards learning situations and which are also
supported by the quantitative findings that have presented TBLT as a teaching method
that helps students increase their achievement scores in reading comprehension of the
English language.
Involvement and data collection in the setting of this study have provided the
treatment teacher (researcher) with valuable experiences about teaching the English
language with emphasis on reading comprehension through the two implemented ways in
this study (the TBLT and the traditional teaching methods). One experience is that better
learning occurs when learners are given the chance to learn (i.e., students in the TBLT
group have learned more because they are given more time to participate in creating their
learning through discussion, negotiation, sharing, and working in groups, unlike students
in the traditional group who are mostly listening to what their teacher wants them to
learn). This suggests that a teacher who talks more and has control over every element in
classroom does not necessarily provide students with more knowledge and experience.
Another experience is that a very quiet class (such as that of the control group) is not a
positive sign for students’ learning. It could be quite the opposite; it might indicate that
students are either not interested in what is being offered or are not sure what to do.
Action and sound of classroom (such as that of the TBLT group) refer to engaged
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students who are interested in what is being offered. A final valuable experience is that
the fastest way to have students engage in the lesson is through providing them with intro
activities (tasks) that imitate their daily lives and which are related to the main goal of the
lesson.
As the major focus of this study was on the application of TBLT in an educational
Knowing that the quantitative findings showed that TBLT had promoted growth in
some of the principles and characteristics of TBLT in its pedagogical context. TBLT, as
an instructional practice, falls under or goes along with the principles of the constructivist
under Chapter II, the following discusses several linking ties of TBLT found throughout
One of these ties is that teaching via TBLT involved practices that promote the
principle of TBLT (Lee, 2000). For instance, the findings of this study show that
students have been learning through group work where students interact with their
colleagues and their teacher through self-thinking, discussion within group members, and
sharing with other groups. The design of a TBLT lesson that involves three stages (pre-
task, running task, and task completion) all of which help facilitate the process of group
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learning presented by the sociocultural theory and which, in essence, suggests that
the role of social interaction in cognitive development is seen in the way the tasks work
which requires students to have a reciprocal interaction of language with their colleagues
through production (within the self) and reception (from the environment). The function
of tasks is, then, consistent with the cognitive vision that sees learning to be neither
totally external nor totally internal, but a result of interaction between heredity (internal)
and environment (external) (Piaget, 1969), and which group work has served as described
earlier.
Another tie of TBLT to the constructivist learning theory is seen in the process of
those three stages of a TBLT lesson that is consistent with the implications of Vygotsky’s
(1978) theory of the Zone Proximal Development ZPD. In essence, ZPD refers to what
the learner can do without the help of others and what the learner cannot do alone, but
with the help of others. ZPD guides task-based learning from two dimensions. The first
one is that in ZPD, “learning is oriented toward developmental levels already reached by
the learner and it does not aim for a new stage of the developmental process but rather
lags behind this process” (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 89). The second perspective is that the
nature of the ZPD requires the presence of self and others so as to provide the necessary
10 More details about how those three stages work are discussed a couple of times under Chapters I
and IV.
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The first perspective implies that learning advances development where the
learner builds new knowledge (the things that she/he needed help from others to learn)
upon the already known knowledge (the learner’s actual knowledge). Similarly, when
adopting tasks, it is important to emerge from the known (in the pre-task stage) to the
unknown or intended to be learned (in the running and post task stages). Also, task-based
The second perspective is similar to the case in TBLT since it requires the
presence of the learner (the one who has the limited knowledge) and the presence of the
more knowledgeable others (these could be the more knowledgeable peers or most likely
their teacher who models the facilitator role). The interaction required by the ZPD is
present in the TBLT and which can be seen by the roles played by students in groups
work while performing tasks and the role of their teacher as a facilitator.11
Another tie this study shows is that the application of TBLT highly emphasizes
imitation of students’ daily lives during learning. This characteristic exactly matches the
need to present imitation of real life in curricula (Friere, 2009). For example, in a reading
lesson about “Calvin Hutt’s Career Life,” groups of students have begun engaging in the
lesson by sharing lists of video games they have at home. After reading the passage
students have imagined they that they have been participating in a live competition show
to answer a question asked by the interviewer where they are to tell the audience (their
11 Further details about TBLT principles in literature and linkage to the Vygotsky’s learning
perspectives are elaborately discussed under Chapter II.
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teacher and other groups of students) as much details as they can about “Calvin Hutt’s
Career Life.” The findings of this study has also shown that during the application of
TBLT, the teacher facilitates learning rather than being the source of knowledge, and
which is consistent with the roles of the facilitator teacher (Barrows & Tamblyn, 1980).
For instance, the findings show that the teacher has been the least one in the classroom
who speaks; students have been the ones who have been creating their learning while the
teacher has been monitoring group works and providing assistance when needed.
At last but not least, ties to constructivism extend to show that teaching and
be carried out in groups as discussed earlier. This way of learning is informed by the
notion of learning through activities (Dewey, 2009) and learning through the exercises of
problem solving (Bruner, 1961). At last, it is concluded from the reviewed literature and
the findings of this study that the TBLT practice from the field of second language
acquisition shares some principles and characteristics with other constructivist practices
from other disciplines of knowledge such as Whole Language from Literacy Education,
Progress from Educational Leadership (Kasten, Lolli, & Van der Wilt, 1998).12 The
practices.
12 More details about the connections between Whole language, Developmentally Appropriate
Practice, Continuous Progress, and TBLT are presented under Chapter II.
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Two findings involved classroom communication13 in this study were about the
teacher-centered teaching when learning via the traditional teaching method and about
lecturing by the teacher is the primary means of instruction, the teacher decides how the
class is run, what is to be studied and tested, and involves little input from students
(Brown, 2007; Guaverra, 2010). Literature has shown advocacy of replacing teacher-
centered instruction with student-centered learning (Kain, 2002; Keengwe, Onchwari, &
criticized for involving judgments about what to be studied, how to be studied, and what
Excluding learners from roles related to how the class is run and what is to be
studied and tested shows that teacher-centered approach does not go along with “the
learning is achieved through students’ engagement with activities in which they are
invested” (Kain, 2002, p. 104). Teacher-centered instruction in the context of this study
is presented through the description of how the teacher has been teaching and how the
students have been learning in the control group. For instance, the findings show that the
teacher has been the action maker during the reading class. It has been the teacher who
has been doing most of the work in the reading lesson; the teacher has tended to read the
13 More details about classroom communication will be addressed later on this chapter.
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passage, explain the reading passage, assign two or three students to read, give
instructions to students, read exercises, and ask students to do them. The teacher alone
has used about 70 to 80% of time of the duration of the reading lesson. Students have
been mostly listeners and have not had any types of activities to do during the reading
lesson except the one they used to do individually towards the end of the lesson.
This type of instruction enables passive learning and has the least amount of
presented by the findings of this study, other logical reasons for this judgment include
that it is actually the teacher who is primarily targeted by learning when instruction in
This is definitely not the primary goal for a classroom; classrooms are there to educate
children in the first place and then other parties involved. Therefore, this study argues for
minimizing teacher’s control of everything taking place in classroom and shifting more
broad teaching approach that includes replacing the teacher-oriented instruction with
active learning where students integrate self-paced learning with cooperative group
learning, and holds up that the student be responsible for his own learning (Felder &
Brant, 1996). Literature has positively recognized student-centered learning over the
traditional ways of teaching such as that of the teacher-centered (Bonwell & Eisen, 1991;
Johnson, Johnson, & Smith, 1991; McKeachie, 1994; Meyers & Jones 1993; Nanney,
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those of the traditional ways of learning as the case of teacher-centered (Nanney, 2004).
creating their own learning interests and needs, and which all lead to increase of
context of this study was presented through the description of how the teacher was
teaching and how students were learning in the TBLT group. The students were the
central focus of instruction and participated in creating their own learning situations.
Students in groups were active learners (i.e., they were discussing, negotiating, reading,
and displaying their understanding of what they had been learning). Reported findings
from this study showed that students tended to use about 70-80% of the time of the class.
This meant that the learning situation via the TBLT method revolved around the learners.
The teacher modeled the role of a facilitator rather than the source of instruction. For
instance, the findings show that the TBLT teacher’s roles have facilitated students
learning through organizing group works, giving students most of the time to learn,
providing students with challenging tasks that imitate their daily lives, and providing
That is all to say that the quantitative and qualitative findings of this study showed
had done far better than students in the control group (characterized by having teacher-
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higher scores than the control group. Qualitatively, students in the TBLT group had
developed positive attitudes and played roles that are desired in modern educational
continuous process of sending and receiving messages that help communicators share
knowledge, attitudes, and skills (Miller, 1988). This suggests that through
classroom communication is taking place. The following intends to present some aspects
of classroom communication.
Zoric, Smid, & Pandzic, 2007). Verbal communication includes the use of words for
sending and receiving messages while in nonverbal communication messages are sent
and received without the use of words such as facial expressions, touching, and body
suitable environment that is guided by four guidelines (Miller, 1988). The first guideline
is the presence of a variety of stimuli. The second one is that communicators should feel
secure. The third one is that the classroom should be suitable for communicators to make
14 Due to the broadness of the topic of classroom communication, this section focuses on some
aspects of classroom communication that interacts with the study at hand.
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activities. The last guideline is that the classroom should provide privacy. These
classroom climate is present; community members rely and depend on each other through
working alone and together and sharing responsibilities of daily life (Kasten & Lolli,
1998).
Synthesis of these guidelines of communication and the findings of this study help
identify some facets about classroom communication when teaching via the TBLT and
traditional teaching methods in this study setting. Teaching via TBLT explicitly goes in
accordance to the first guideline in way that includes great variety of stimuli. The
presence of wide variety of stimuli is a result of the nature of TBLT that includes group
work, imitation of students’ real lives, and active involvement in the lesson through
discussing, questioning, and sharing. However, findings of this study showed very
limited stimuli for students in the control group who were studying via the traditional
teaching method.
can be found in learning via TBLT more than that in the traditional way of teaching. The
reason is that when all students communicate in groups the student’s inner feeling of
being afraid of making a mistake gets vanished; a reluctant student would most likely be
definitely not the case for students in the control group. A student needed to be brave and
very sure that he would not make a mistake before he participated as everyone in the
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classroom was listening to him. This nature of classroom does not provide students with
the third guideline mentioned earlier, is more found in the settings of the TBLT
classroom rather than that of the traditional classroom. A TBLT classroom required
group members. However, the traditional classroom showed that students were sitting in
rows on individual chairs and tables. When every student sits isolated on his own chair
and table, he most likely communicates much less than when he sits with a group of
students.
Goldberg, McTighe, 1995; Ibad, 2013; Johnson, 1999; McCroskey, Richmond, &
McCroskey, 2005; Miller, 2005; Suinn, 2006) show several roles and characteristics of
contrasting these roles to the findings of this study, it becomes obvious that teaching via
the traditional teaching method lacks most of these roles of communication in classroom.
Some of these roles have mostly been part of the teacher’s role, but not the students’. For
instance, students have been mainly receptors while the teacher has been the dominant
producer of communication when teaching and learning via the traditional teaching
method. Students have been barely communicating with each other and with their
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teacher, which made even hard for them to have influence on each other, acquire
However, the findings have shown that teaching via TBLT involved most of these
roles of good classroom communication as part of the students’. For example, students
who have been working in groups have shown a high level of gaining affinity, as they
have been very comfortable communicating with each other and with their teacher. Also,
students have managed to influence each other through group discussion and response
sharing with other groups and with their teacher. Further, students have been able to
arrive at decisions which can be seen through the agreed upon response that each group
parties involved (Ferrara, Goldberg, McTighe, 1995; Ibad, 2013). This characteristic is
reflected by the observed data that show that both of the control and treatment teachers
have explained in advance expectations and duties to students. Synthesis of these data
has shown that this characteristic of communication has been clearer to students taught
via TBLT. Together the teacher and students have created the learning situation
situations through sharing and switching roles. For example, some students tend to
explain during group work to their classmates things that they have not understood from
their teacher. This suggests that there are multiple sources of explanation, and which
yields further clarity of communication. In the contrary, the teacher of the traditional
teaching method has been alone the source of knowledge and has been striving to create a
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learning atmosphere for students to learn. Students’ role is to wait for their teacher to
make them learn. If a student had not understood something from their teacher, this
would mean that the student had missed that point. This solo source of explanation might
yield to unclear communication for some students who could not cope up with the
teacher.
ways of sending and receiving (Barry, 2011; Johnson, 1999; Suinn, 2006). These ways
are sending and receiving messages by the teacher and sending and receiving messages
by students. Teachers will find that communicating effectively begins with the
environment. Findings out of this study have shown that classroom communication in
the traditional teaching method has involved mostly a one-way of communication; the
teacher has been sending messages and students have been receiving those messages.
present when teaching via TBLT; students have been sending and receiving messages
during group works and during sharing responses with their teacher and other groups, and
teacher has been sending and receiving messages while modeling the role of a facilitator.
Limitations
The careful design of the study and the accuracy of implementing the design
helped reduce several limitations that exist when conducting research in educational
settings. However, the nature of this study and similar studies yield few unavoidable
limitations. The following presents these limitations and what has been done to reduce
their effects.
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example, in the quantitative portion, there was only one control variable included in the
design and analysis of the study that determined equivalence of the two groups – the
pretest. However, the nature of quasi-experimental studies helps reduce the effect of this
sample of the study, the random assignment of classrooms to treatment and control
groups, and creating similar learning conditions during the implementation of the study.
sample, which has an impact on the external validity (i.e., generalizability) of the
findings. In other words, the non-random selection of sample limits the generalization of
the findings to only schools similar in nature to those used in the study. Randomization
research situations (Wiersma & Jurs, 2009), which is the case for this study. In addition
to the expensive costs and difficult access to schools in various cities, the large size of the
country that hosts the study, Saudi Arabia, prevents from maintaining randomization in
sample selection. However, in contrast to the lower level of external validity, this study
The duration of data collection for the study (10 weeks) was an unavoidable
methodological limitation for the qualitative portion of the study. Qualitative data
collection requires longer time demanded by the primary purpose of qualitative research
15
Further details about the internal validity are elaborately discussed under Chapter III.
149
2006). That limitation was due to restrictions and regulations of data collections imposed
by the researcher’s sponsoring agency. This study used the maximum amount of time
allowed for data collection. The limited access of this study to only male schools was
also unavoidable limitation and beyond the abilities of the investigator. Another
limitation was that the study involved a constructivist practice (TBLT) that was applied
That limitation was determined by the scope of this dissertation which did not allow for a
the TBLT method by the treatment teacher (researcher) could contaminate the true effects
of the TBLT method, and might in some cases yield biased data. To reduce the effect of
this limitation, a number of factors were considered in the design of the study including
adopting multiple data sources. For instance, there were three processes that should
ensure unbiased data collection: (a) data collection and analysis involved multiple visions
rather than a solo vision (the researcher, the control group teacher, and a knowledgeable
colleague of TBLT), (b) the design of the study greatly participated in eliminating the
data collection bias attributed to pre-existing differences among participants, (c) the
researcher teaches students in the treatment group using the TBLT method and another
teacher teaches the students in the control group using the traditional method. The four
Implications
This section of the chapter discusses how the reported findings speak to the
related educational context of the study. Benefited educational issues from this context
include English language teaching method in Saudi Arabia, English language teacher
education, educational policies related to designing the English language curriculum, and
recommendations for future research. Before discussing any of these educational issues,
it is crucial to remind the reader that continuous development, some of which have
become effective during data analysis of this study, has been taking place since the past
the chances that implications out of this study find parties involved directly and indirectly
in the educational process who will appreciate these implications and work towards
English Language Teaching Method Saudi Arabia (the Existing and the Expected)
English language instructional practices need further study and more development
so as to cope up with the other rapidly developing aspects of curriculum in Saudi Arabia.
The dominant English language way of teaching is highly teacher-centered which implies
practices involve lecturing by teachers and listening by students, teaching to the test,
drilling, memorization, passive students who work individually and lack interests, and
teachers are the sources of knowledge. Development of this traditional way of teaching
clashes with the need for effective cooperation of the human factor. In other words, great
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teaching practices are available in books and in some policies; however, implementing
exercises) by students, students are motivated active learners who play several roles in
the classroom, imitation of students’ daily lives, focus is on comprehension, and the
teacher facilitates learning. Those practices greatly help learners be fluent and accurate
Teacher Education
levels has undergone through several plans of development recently. Although some
aspects of teacher education development have reached an acceptable level such as the
legislation and application of evaluation for new teachers before hiring them as will be
teaching license. Regardless of the satisfaction and dissatisfaction about the past and
education is promising. Implications out of this study partially aim at helping move the
wheel forward towards more developed teacher education. The following discusses the
16
More details about the expected roles and qualifications of teachers are discussed later on this
chapter.
152
Newly hired secondary and intermediate English language teachers can start
teaching English at an early age right away after their graduation from the university
around the age of 22-23 years old.17 Actual teacher education begins preparing teachers
college, new English language teachers are bachelor’s degrees holders in English
language and Translation. In the four to five years of the bachelor’s degree, English
language teachers are exposed to English grammar, listening, reading, writing, some
pieces of English literature, phonetics, some linguistic theories, few and brief courses in
psychology, curriculum, and teaching skills, and translation from English into Arabic and
It is assumed that teachers are then qualified to teach and there are no
and instruction. The only training that teachers receive before going to teach is a one-
semester practicum during their last year of study of their bachelor’s degree. However,
there is a great new plan that will be effective starting from next year by some
universities to add a fifth year to their bachelor’s degree programs for students who are
interested in teaching where they mainly do practicum and study advanced educational
17
It should be noted that hiring teachers are determined by the needs, vacancies, and recently
qualifications of applicants suggesting that if there were no need, a teacher could get older before he/she
becomes a teacher.
18
In new bachelor’s program, student-teachers neither study any courses in curriculum, teaching,
nor have any teaching practicum during their university courses of study, but can purse a diploma in
education for a fifth year which involves advanced courses in curriculum, teaching, and practicum.
153
courses related to curriculum and various aspects of the teaching profession. Teachers
who complete the fifth year will be awarded with a diploma in education. The teachers
are assumed, then, to have the abilities to teach all the levels of the English language
courses starting from the fifth grade in the elementary level to the third and last grade in
the secondary level. Therefore, new teachers have no opportunity to think about what it
means to teach, how to be a teacher, how to think about learning and student growth, and
There are no obvious criteria or a set of qualifications that a teacher should obtain
to teach a certain level. There is a general test, imposed recently, for all teachers
interested in teaching all levels called in Arabic Kefayat or Teachers’ Test that teachers
need to pass before they can enroll to the teaching profession. This test primarily
assesses whether or not the minimum set of qualifications are met for those who are
applying for teaching jobs (National Center for Assessment in Higher Education, 2013).
The test has major sections that include general information, science, and basic teaching
skills.
mentioned above. Existing development involved enforcing some regulations that new
teachers had to go through before enrolling to the teaching profession. One of those
regulations that greatly reduced hiring extremely unqualified teachers was enforcing
Kefayat Examination Teachers’ Test by both of the Ministry of Education and the
Ministry of Civil Service with the cooperation of National Center for Assessment in
the purposes of teaching development that has started with a sample of schools from over
the country. This developmental experiment targets already hired English language
teachers in the sampled schools. This experiment involves having a more experienced
English language teacher (First Teacher) in a school and who gets a reduced teaching
load. In return, the First Teacher supervises and collegially helps other English language
teachers in the same school. Other developmental efforts are seen through the numerous
teaching workshops organized by school directorates over the country for English
language teachers. However, enrolment and attendance of those workshops are optional.
to the efforts paid by English language supervisors whose primary job is to foster English
However, several obstacles prevent from having an acceptable level of satisfaction about
efforts spent in supervision which include and not limited to the fewer number of
and administrational work that keep supervisors busy from doing their major roles, and
teacher education forward several steps if organized and applied properly. This
classifies English language teachers into four levels depending on their experience,
qualifications, and readiness to develop professionally. This plan suggests that teachers
are to be hierarchically classified into teacher, first teacher, supervisor teacher, and
155
expert teacher. A set of procedures, responsibilities, and benefits are attached to each
level. Hopefully, this promising plan sees the light soon as it could represent a turning
implications out of this study, partially, provides some recommendations for teacher
education development. For development in the medium to long term, this study highly
all existing and new teachers. Enrollment to this Continuous Professional Development
Plan involves courses, workshops, seminars, and assignments that provide teachers with
the necessary exposure to knowledge and modern practices in the field and which could
help them develop professionally. A set of regulations and procedures should accompany
the Continuous Professional Development Plan that organizes its work, processes,
benefits for enrollment, penalties for non-enrollment, and knowledge and expertise
sharing by educators from Saudi Arabia and from around the world. This study highly
recommends the presence of license to practice teaching and which could be based on
success and valid enrolment to the suggested Continuous Professional Development Plan.
This study also recommends attaching the new-promised developmental regulation that
classifies teachers into four levels as discussed earlier to the recommended Continuous
For development in the short to medium term, this study recommends offering
instruction investigated by this study, the TBLT method. The workshop should provide
156
theory), the way a TBLT lesson is planned, the way TBLT lesson is run in class,
practice of modern instructional practices could help English language teachers develop
professionally and, accordingly, students would learn more and even be more accurate
Educational Policies
education have some great policies while some need to be created or developed. For
revising and developing the content introduced to students (textbooks). This policy urges
having more authentic textbooks and which participates in serving the general aims of
education in Saudi Arabia. Even policies related to teaching and learning practices are to
some extent great in words, as they exist in the policy guide. However, implementation
of those instructional practices policies seems to be below expectations. Due to the vast
scope of the topic of educational policies and the limited scope of this study, the
makers in the country to consider for implementing constructivist practices such as that
Revision, evaluation of the existing educational policies, and adding new policies.
in those processes. This policy should be done on continuous and regular bases.
157
meaning (textbook) to its wide scope where the textbook is a part of it.
and teaching.
constructivist curriculum.
Curriculum needs to emphasize the purpose of learning for students and the
Creation of policies that participate in changing the vision of teaching from a job
of those policies. The new plan suggested by the Ministry of Education related to
classifying teachers into four levels is greatly desired and can effectively
Revision and evaluation of the policies related to the unified curricula across the
country. How about providing standards and having each school directorate
creates its own curricula. This would create an atmosphere of competition among
Education is to evaluate the products of all school directorates based on the given
standards.
by educators from Saudi Arabia and from around the world. This is could be
and periodicals.
For development in short term, this study recommends offering existing English
considered, especially after future replication of this study in different groups and
contexts, by curriculum decision makers when creating and revising educational policies.
application of one policy or recommendation will necessarily imply the application of the
At this point of a study, typical researchers would look back at what they have
found, learned, and make decisions on what they would want to do differently in future
studies. This critical phase in research often implies a researcher’s self-critique, can
certain topic, and can provide hints about a researcher’s line of inquiry. The following
application of TBLT in other aspects related to English language teaching and learning
such as and not limited to listening comprehension and writing quality (semantically and
syntactically). It is going to add greater value to the major theme of this study (TBLT)
when finding out whether or not the findings out the study would be similar if applied on
girls rather than boys or when the study is applied in different parts of Saudi Arabia.
Replication of this study in different settings will increase the reliability of the findings.
Due to the tremendous work involved, one recommendation for colleagues who would
like to further investigate this study in different settings or any of the above suggested
research topics related to the application of TBLT in educational settings is to have more
than one investigator in the design of the study. This is also going to enhance the quality
of work and increase the validity of the findings. This should be true in most research
A very rich research topic would be about the extent English language teachers in
Saudi schools are satisfied with their current teaching practices and current teaching and
160
learning policies. Another beneficial research idea suggested for future research, which
can also provide researchers with a great number of research topics and research
questions, is to survey and interview English language teachers, students, and families
about issues related to teaching and learning the English language in schools. Some of
these issues include what they want out of learning and teaching English, how they want
to learn or teach English in schools, what is missing in learning and teaching English, and
what should be done differently while learning and teaching the English language in
schools.
Conclusion
This study has taken place in Buraydah, Saudi Arabia, where education, in
general, and the teaching of English, in particular, receives considerable attention from
the Ministry of Education, business leaders, and families. This study has involved the
application of Task-Based Language Teaching TBLT into the existing curriculum. The
study has strived to find out whether or not the TBLT method can help the students better
acquire the English language through increasing their achievement scores on reading
comprehension and also seek for insights or issues that can be gained about implementing
Literature reviewed has shown that the TBLT method is theoretically framed by
the constructivist learning theory, which emphasizes the role of social interaction in
cognitive development (Piaget, 1970; Vygotsky, 1978) and is also informed by Dewey’s
(2009) notion of learning through activities. Tasks in language learning and teaching
have developed across time. Literature has also presented other practices in other
161
disciplines of knowledge that share similar characteristics and principles of TBLT which
The study has examined the effect of TBLT on reading comprehension in two
intermediate schools in Saudi Arabia through a time frame of ten weeks. The treatment
group is compared to the control group on the outcome after controlling for the students’
pre-existing knowledge of the English language as a covariate. The study has had a
and posttests represent the quantitative part and synthesis of observational data from
The statistical analysis that has addressed the quantitative part (the first research
question) is the Two-Factor Spilt-Plot design. Findings out of the pre-test have shown
that students in both of the treatment and control groups are equal in terms of their prior
posttests have shown that students in the treatment group have scored significantly higher
than students in the control group suggesting that the TBLT method has helped students
increase their reading comprehension more than that of the traditional teaching method.
Qualitative analyses for the second research question have been through
Grounded Theory for data obtained from researcher log and through a set of procedures
to compare and contrast data obtained from classroom observation. Findings out of the
qualitative data have shown that the TBLT method has helped students develop desired
attitudes towards the learning situations and has involved practices and roles of students
162
and their teacher that go along with the constructivist learning theory. Qualitative
findings have also shown that the traditional teaching method has not helped students
develop desired attitudes towards the learning situations and involved practices and roles
of students and their teacher that went along with the behaviorist learning theory. Both of
the quantitative and qualitative findings have provided support and evidences for the
Discussion of the findings of the study has shown that the major theme of this
study (TBLT) falls in a constructivist pedagogical context. Discussion of the findings has
also shown that learning and teaching via TBLT is student-centered while learning and
literature of classroom communication has even provided further merits to teaching and
learning via TBLT over that of the traditional teaching method suggesting that the
application of TBLT encourages or goes along with most of the desired characteristics of
presence of only one (statistically) controlling variable for determining equivalence of the
control and treatment groups, the non-random selection of sample, the duration of data
standardized curriculum.
At last but not least, implications have addressed some aspects related to how the
study’s educational context can benefit from the findings presented by the study.
Benefited educational issues in this context have included English language teaching
recommendations for future research. At last, efforts invested in this study are rewarded
with findings discovered and, hopefully, help interested educators in Saudi Arabia and
around the world to pursue beneficial education for themselves, students, and their
societies.
APPENDICES
APPENDIX A
166
167
APPENDIX B
169
APPENDIX C
171
APPENDIX D
TO PARTICIPATING SCHOOLS
Appendix D
173
APPENDIX E
175
APPENDIX F
177
APPENDIX G
PRETEST
Appendix G
Pretest
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
APPENDIX H
POSTTESTS
Appendix H
Posttests
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
APPENDIX I
204
APPENDIX J
206
APPENDIX K
LESSON PLANS
Appendix K
Lesson Plans
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Business People
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about Business People.
Indicators for pupils’
Task Sequence Materials & achievement of the main
Content
(Procedures) Equipment goal of the lesson
(Application & Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, groups Tables and
- Together the teacher and the students are are going to name business chairs are - Students show
going to rearrange tables and chairs to form people around the world and formed into interests when engaging in
circles for groups of three to four students. some photos of famous circles for the lesson topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher introduces the business people to their names groups.
topic of the lesson (what they are going to do). such as Carlos Slim, Alwaleed - Groups
- Students involve in group discussion for bin Talal, Saleh Alrajhi, Saleh Pupil’s enthusiastically compete in
naming famous business people in Saudi Arabia Alsalman, Fahad textbook suggesting and labeling
and around the world for 10 min. The Almuhaimeed. (it has the names of famous business
distinguished group is a) the one that manages passage about people in Saudi Arabia and
to correctly label names of business people to Students are going to read a Business around the world to their
the provided photos b) suggest business people provided passage about People). photos.
other than presented by the teacher. Business People.
Sheets for - Students
Running the task Through the reading passage, groups’ work. complete reading the
- The teacher instructs students to begin students are going to get passage and discuss in
reading the provided passage about Business introduced to the following new PowerPoint groups the basic details or
People for 5-8 min. words: slides information about Business
- Students are then to discuss on their charity, poor, natural, disaster, People.
groups some of the basic information they earthquake, healthcare. Pens or
learned about Business People (such as the pencils. - Teacher passes
major character of the passage, charity, etc) for around groups of students
5-10 min. to evaluate whether or not
the students have
Task Completion accomplished the task of
- The teacher asks groups to nominate Bill comprehending the reading
Gates to win a campaign run by a local news passage through
paper. Students’ task is tell the news paper as nominating Bill Gates and
much as they could about Bill Gates on a sheet his work in charity for the
of paper in their own words for 10-15 min. local news paper in their
own words in written
and/or oral format.
208
209
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: East Coast Games
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about East Coast Games.
Indicators for pupils’
achievement of the
Task Sequence Materials &
Content main goal of the
(Procedures) Equipment
lesson (Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going to chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables name famous video formed into interests when
and chairs to form circles for groups games they have ever circles for engaging in the lesson
of three to four students. played. groups. topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher
introduces the topic of the lesson Students are going to Pupil’s - Groups
(what they are going to do). read a provided passage textbook enthusiastically
- Students involve in group about East Coast (it has the compete in suggesting
discussion for naming famous video Games. passage video games they have
games they have played ever for 6 about East played in the past.
min. The distinguished group is the Through the reading Coast
one that manages to provide as many passage, students are Games). - Students complete
video games as they could. going to get introduced reading the passage
to the following new Sheets for and discuss in groups
Running the task words: groups’ the basic details or
- The teacher instructs students to Career, engineering, work. information about East
begin reading the provided passage medicine, director, Coast Games.
about East Coast Games for 5-8 min. industry, designer, PowerPoint
- Students are then to discuss on programmer, and slides - Teacher passes
their groups some of the basic inventor. around groups of
information they learned about East Pens or students to evaluate
Coast Games (such as the major pencils. whether or not the
character of the passage) for 5-10 students have
min. accomplished the task
of comprehending the
Task Completion reading passage
- The teacher asks groups to tell through telling the
the audience in a competition of a live audience in a
show as much as they can about competition of a live
Calvin Hutt. Students’ task is to tell show as much as they
the live show interviewer as much as could about Calvin
they could about Calvin Hutt on a Hutt in their own
sheet of paper in their own words for words in written and/or
10-15 min. oral format.
210
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Different Customs
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about Different Customs.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials achievement of the
Task Sequence
Content & main goal of the lesson
(Procedures)
Equipment (Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going to share chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables some different customs formed interests when
and chairs to form circles for groups around the world such as into engaging in the lesson
of three to four students. some of those in the circles for topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher Middle East, groups.
introduces the topic of the lesson Afghanistan, Britain, - Groups
(what they are going to do). USA etc. Pupil’s enthusiastically share
- Students involve in group textbook different customs in
discussion sharing different customs Students are going to (it has the Saudi Arabia and
they know in Saudi Arabia and around read a provided passage passage around the world with
the world for 10 min. The about Different Customs. about other groups.
distinguished group is the one that Different
manages to share more customs with Through the reading Customs). - Students complete
other groups. Running the task passage, students are reading the passage and
- The teacher instructs students to going to get introduced to Sheets for discuss in groups the
begin reading the provided passage the following new words: groups’ basic details or
about Different Customs for 5-8 custom, society, beliefs, work. information about
min. behavior, communicate, Different Customs.
- Students are then to discuss on foreign, porcelain, bride,
their groups some of the basic and groom. Pens or - Teacher passes
information they learned about pencils. around groups of
Different Customs (such as some of students to evaluate
the customs in the Middle East, whether or not the
Afghanistan, Britain, USA etc) for 5- students have
10 min. accomplished the task
of comprehending the
Task Completion reading passage
- The teacher asks groups to through telling the
imagine being a tour guide for tourists. customs to do and/or to
Students’ task is tell the customs to avoid with different
do and/or to avoid with different tourists on a sheet of
people on a sheet of paper in their paper in their own
own words for 10-15 min. words in written and/or
oral format.
211
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: The Train
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about The Train.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials achievement of the
Task Sequence
Content & main goal of the
(Procedures)
Equipment lesson (Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going talk chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables about how beneficial formed interests when
and chairs to form circles for groups listening to their parents into circles engaging in the lesson
of three to four students. and older brothers and for groups. topic.
sisters supported by
- For 3 min, the teacher example from their daily Pupil’s - Groups
introduces the topic of the lesson lives. textbook enthusiastically
(what they are going to do). (it has the compete in talking
Students are going to passage about how beneficial
read a provided passage about The listening to their
- Students involve in group about a story titled with Train). parents and older
discussion about how beneficial The Train. brothers and sisters
listening to their parents and older Sheets for supported by example
brothers and sisters supported by Through the reading groups’ from their daily lives.
example from their daily lives for 8 passage, students are work.
min. going to get introduced - Students complete
to the following new PowerPoint reading the passage
Running the task words: slides and discuss in groups
outside, bridge, river, the basic details of the
- The teacher instructs students to walk, loud, noise, yell, Pens or story of The Train.
begin reading the provided passage track, and scream. pencils.
about the Train 5-8 min. - Teacher passes
around groups of
- Students are then to discuss on students to evaluate
their groups some of the basic whether or not the
information they learned about The students have
Train (such as aim of the story, plot, accomplished the task
etc) for 5-10 min. of comprehending the
reading passage
Task Completion through retelling the
story of The Train
- The teacher asks groups to retell stressing what happens
the story of The Train stressing what to those who do not
happens to those who do not listen to listen to their parents in
their parents. Students’ task is to retell written and/or oral
their younger brothers or sisters about format.
the story of The Train on a sheet of
paper in their own words for 10-15
min.
212
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Your ID, Please
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about Your ID, Please.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials
Task Sequence achievement of the main
Content &
(Procedures) goal of the lesson
Equipment
(Application & Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the Tables and
- Together the teacher and the lesson, groups are chairs are - Students show interests
students are going to rearrange suggesting what new formed when engaging in the lesson
tables and chairs to form circles for stereo-types that into circles topic.
groups of three to four students. started to take place in for groups.
- For 3 min, the teacher Saudi Arabia - Groups enthusiastically
introduces the topic of the lesson Pupil’s compete in suggesting new
(what they are going to do). Students are going to textbook stereo-types that started to
- Students involve in group read a provided (it has the take place in Saudi Arabia .
discussion for suggesting what passage about Your passage
new stereo-types that started to ID, Please. about Your - Students complete
take place in Saudi Arabia for 5 ID, reading the passage and
min. The distinguished group is a) Through the reading Please). discuss in groups the basic
the one that manages to list more passage, students are details or information about
stereo-types b) make decisions going to get Sheets for Your ID, Please.
whether or not they agree with introduced to the groups’
these new stereo-types. following new words: work. - Teacher passes around
ID, culture, figures, groups of students to evaluate
Running the task nowadays, teenagers, PowerPoint whether or not the students
- The teacher instructs students lifestyle, generations, slides have accomplished the task of
to begin reading the provided sociologists, society, comprehending the reading
passage about Your ID, Please for follower, leader, Pens or passage through telling other
5-8 min. individuality, pencils. friends the author’s point of
- Students are then to discuss freedom, slave, and view supported by examples
on their groups some of the basic proud. regarding copying other
information they learned about culture’s stereo-types in their
Your ID, Please (such as main own words in written and/or
idea, author’s point of view, etc) oral format.
for 5-10 min.
Task Completion
- The teacher asks groups to tell
the author’s point of view
regarding supported by examples
copying other culture’s stereo-
types. Students’ task is to tell other
friends the author’s point of view
supported by examples regarding
copying other culture’s stereo-
types for 10-15 min.
213
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Sherlock Holmes
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about Sherlock Holmes.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials achievement of the
Task Sequence
Content & main goal of the
(Procedures)
Equipment lesson (Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going to label chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables famous movie and TV formed interests when
and chairs to form circles for groups characters with their into circles engaging in the lesson
of three to four students. names. Those characters for groups. topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher include Abdulmajeed
introduces the topic of the lesson Alymni, Suhail Alonizi, Pupil’s - Groups
(what they are going to do). Aqbal, Hani Megbil, textbook enthusiastically
- Students involve in group Hamid Aldhabaan. (it has the compete in labeling
discussion for labeling famous movie passage names of famous
or TV characters to their names for 6 Students are going to Sherlock movie and TV
min. The distinguished group is the read a provided passage Holmes). characters with their
one that manages to correctly label the about Sherlock Holmes. names.
famous movie or TV characters with Sheets for
their names. Through the reading groups’ - Students complete
passage, students are work. reading the passage
Running the task going to get introduced and discuss in groups
- The teacher instructs students to to the following new PowerPoint the basic details or
begin reading the provided passage words: slides information about
about Sherlock Holmes for 5-8 min. Although, crime, Sherlock Holmes.
- Students are then to discuss on detective, mysteries, Pens or
their groups some of the basic enjoy, cases, footprints, pencils. - Teacher passes
information they learned about disorganized, admire, around groups of
Sherlock Holmes (such as the major and elementary. students to evaluate
character of the passage, number of whether or not the
stories, etc) for 5-10 min. students have
accomplished the task
Task Completion of comprehending the
- The teacher asks groups to tell a reading passage
friend as many details as they could through telling a friend
about Sherlock Holmes. Students’ as many details as they
task is to tell a friend as much as they could about Sherlock
could about Sherlock Holmes on a Holmes in their own
sheet of paper in their own words for words in written and/or
10-15 min. oral format.
214
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: the Man Who Sold the Brooklyn Bridge
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a reading
passage about the Man Who Sold the Brooklyn Bridge.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials achievement of the
Task Sequence
Content & main goal of the lesson
(Procedures)
Equipment (Application &
Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going to name chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables famous stories that their formed interests when
and chairs to form circles for groups parents used to tell them into engaging in the lesson
of three to four students. before going to bed when circles for topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher they were young. groups.
introduces the topic of the lesson Students are going to - Groups
(what they are going to do). read a provided passage Pupil’s enthusiastically
- Students involve in group about the Man Who Sold textbook compete in suggesting
discussion for naming famous stories the Brooklyn Bridge. (it has the famous stories that
that their parents used to tell them passage their parents used to
before going to bed when they were Through the reading about the tell them before going
young for 10 min. The distinguished passage, students are Man Who to bed when they were
group is the one that manages to name going to get introduced to Sold the young
more than what the other groups did. the following new words: Brooklyn
Belong, pay, jail, for sale, Bridge). - Students complete
Running the task document, complain. reading the passage and
- The teacher instructs students to Sheets for discuss in groups the
begin reading the provided passage groups’ basic details or
about the Man Who Sold the work. information about the
Brooklyn Bridge for 5-8 min. Man Who Sold the
- Students are then to discuss on Brooklyn Bridge.
their groups some of the basic Pens or
information they learned about the pencils. - Teacher passes
Man Who Sold the Brooklyn Bridge around groups of
(such as the major character of the students to evaluate
passage, lessons learned, etc) for 5-10 whether or not the
min. students have
accomplished the task
Task Completion of comprehending the
- The teacher asks groups to retell reading passage
the story they studied in their own through retelling the
words to their younger brothers and story they studied in
sisters. Students’ task is to tell their their own words to
brothers and sisters a story about the their younger brothers
Man Who Sold the Brooklyn Bridge and sisters in their own
on a sheet of paper in their own words words in written and/or
for 10-15 min. oral format.
215
Subject: English / Grade: 3rd I. Class / Duration: 45 min. / Topic: Four Eating Advice
The aim or main goal of the lesson: Pupils are expected by the end of the lesson to comprehend a
reading passage about Four Eating Advice.
Indicators for pupils’
Materials achievement of the
Task Sequence
Content & main goal of the
(Procedures)
Equipment lesson (Application
& Assessment)
Task engagement Throughout the lesson, Tables and
- Together the teacher and the groups are going to chairs are - Students show
students are going to rearrange tables and make decision about formed interests when
chairs to form circles for groups of three pictures presented that into circles engaging in the
to four students. either resembles bad for groups. lesson topic.
- For 3 min, the teacher introduces or food. Types of food
the topic of the lesson (what they are included: French fries, Pupil’s - Groups
going to do). burgers, fruit, salad, textbook enthusiastically
- Students involve in group rice, ice cream, and (it has the compete in making
discussion for deciding which food chocolate. passage decision about
resembles good or bad for 6 min. The about Four pictures presented
distinguished group is a) the one that Students are going to Eating that either resembles
manages to correctly give the right read a provided Advice). bad or food.
decisions. passage about Four
Eating Advice. Sheets for - Students
Running the task groups’ complete reading the
- The teacher instructs students to Through the reading work. passage and discuss
begin reading the provided passage about passage, students are in groups the basic
Four Eating Advice for 5-8 min. going to get PowerPoint details or
- Students are then to discuss on their introduced to the slides information about
groups some of the basic information following new words: the Four Eating
they learned about Four Eating Advice Load, topping, diet, Pens or Advice.
(such as the four eating Advices or definitely, balanced, pencils.
advice) for 5-10 min. snack, overeat, - Teacher passes
attention, pretzels, around groups of
Task Completion cookies, portion, students to evaluate
- The teacher asks groups to retell the digestion, and whether or not the
four eating advice to their families. consume. students have
Students’ task is to tell their families the accomplished the
four eating advice they have learned on a task of
sheet of paper in their own words for 10- comprehending the
15 min. reading passage
through retelling the
four eating advice to
their families in their
own words in
written and/or oral
format.
APPENDIX L
POWERPOINT SLIDES
Appendix L
PowerPoint Slides
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
APPENDIX M
CONSENT FORMS
Appendix M
Consent Forms
230
231
232
233
234
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