The goal of this project is to develop learners’
overall communicative competence
in the target language by focusing specifically on the
four skills, as
well as to make them aware of cultural differences or
similarities in different
language communities. The project should be conducted
in small
groups so that learners can work collaboratively. It
consists of four different
stages: 1) a preparation stage, in which
learners are provided with
some cultural topics to deal with; 2) a collection
stage, in which learners
are asked to collect materials for these topics; 3)
an implementation stage,
in which learners work in the classroom with all the
materials they have
brought along; and 4) a reflection stage,
in which the teacher guides feedback
and encourages cross-cultural class discussion. Each
stage is described
in detail in what follows:
As a preliminary step, teachers should provide
learners with a brief introduction
about the nature of intercultural competence in order
to make them
aware of the importance of paying attention to
different cultural frameworks.
This explanation could be carried out by following
Byram (1997).
Once the concept of intercultural competence has been
introduced in class,
the teacher explains to the learners that they are
going to explore the English
target culture in the language classroom. They are
then presented with
a list of cultural topics which may offer entry points
to the English culture
in order to focus on learners’ intercultural
competence. The topics could be:
Family, Education, the World of Work, Regional
Identity, Power and Politics
or Law and Order. The selection of topics follows the
ideas suggested
in other projects dealing with how best to explore
another culture (Duffy
and Mayes 2001; Morgan 2001). In order to help
learners with the topic
20 Esther Usó-Juan and Alicia Martínez-Flor
orientation, the five-word technique (Cain
1990) can be used. This technique
consists in asking students to note down the first
five words they
think of in relation to each topic presented by the
teacher. In fact, making
learners provide such words may be a useful technique
to activate their
background knowledge on the cultural topics to be
covered. Once learners
have selected the topic they are going to focus on,
the next stage of the
project is explained to them.
In this stage, it would be tempting for the teacher to
make the collection of
materials him/herself about a particular cultural
topic and bring them to the
classroom along with prepared activities for the
learners. However, we
agree with Morgan (2001) that doing this would block
one of the major
aims of the project, which consists in raising
learners’ cultural awareness
through having to question themselves what is
culturally important and
representative of the target language.
Taking this assumption into account, learners are
given the task to collect
materials in the English target culture in relation to
the particular topic
they have agreed to work with. Here, they are
recommended to look for a
variety of sources, including photocopied information
from different
printed materials; photo-documentaries, video or DVD
scenes; recorded
material, like conversations with Erasmus learners or
English native speakers;
excerpts from the Internet or the hard copy of
conversations after having
contacted English-speaking partners through e-mail
exchanges or CMC
telecollaborative tasks. During the process of
collecting such material,
learners are required to meet the teacher at appointed
office hours so that
the teacher can provide any help they might need. Once
learners have collected
all the material they are asked to hand it in to the
teacher in order to
prepare the next stage of the project.
This stage involves several class sessions devoted to
developing learners’
communicative competence through the four skills while
working on the
cultural topics it was agreed they would deal with in
the first stage. Here,
learners are presented with structured activities on
the four skills in order to
increase their cultural awareness, intercultural
imagination and context
Towards acquiring communicative competence
through the four skills 21
sensitivity on that particular topic (Meier 2003). A
detailed explanation of
these activities would be provided in the four
introductory chapters of each
section dealing with each skill, that is, Section II
(listening skill), Section
III (speaking skill), Section IV (reading skill) and
Section V (writing skill).
After learners have worked on all the activities
prepared by the teacher in
each of the four skills, a cross-cultural class
discussion follows in order to
elicit learners’ opinions about the topics being dealt
with. This discussion
will allow them to take a critical and evaluative
position in relation to the
cultural awareness activities already carried out.
In short, by engaging learners in a project such as
the one described above,
they become active participants in their own process
of language learning.
They are provided with opportunities to develop their
overall communicative
competence in the target language by increasing their
ability to communicate
in each of the four language skills: listening,
speaking, reading
and writing. Additionally, they become aware of the
importance of understanding
how cultural issues influence our perception of the
world (Cortazzi
and Jin 1999). This development of learners’
intercultural competence,
thus, turns out to be an essential part of foreign
language teaching.