Skip to main content

Early exam entry in MFL

There are schools who enter pupils for GCSE exams before the end of Y11. There may be several reasons for this. Some schools with pupils of very high academic ability may feel that the GCSE exam is not challenging enough by Y11 and prefer to take on more challenging, or different work. Other schools may wish to enter pupil very early, even in Y9, so that their students get some accreditation before they drop the subject at KS4. In the days of O-levels, "academic" schools would allow pupils to sit exams at the end of Y10, taking on an "AO" qualification in Y11, for example business French or language and literature.

In general I am against early exam entry. Let me explain why.

Firstly, early entry requires teachers and students to focus too much on exam technique in Y10. With the current system of controlled assessment, squeezing exam work into Y10 becomes even more of a challenge. With new linear courses with terminal exams coming in June 2018 it may require more time to embed the skills needed to cope with the level of speaking and writing needed in the final exam. When you focus on exam preparation you severely limit the amount of comprehension work needed to build long term acquisition. You end up taking short-cuts, focusing too much on grammatical explanations, spoon feeding model answers and techniques.

Secondly, it is wrong to assume that, because a pupil can cope with early entry (and even get very good grades) this is the right thing to challenge them. Early entry means many pupils will get reduced grades (bad news for them and probably for school value-added figures). In addition, the problem with early entry has always been: what do you do in Y11? If you start AS level or A-level work you have to deal with the situation whereby any non-accelerated students will join in at the start of Y12. Another possible avenue, Asset Languages, has now gone. Many students will not be mature enough to deal with some of the topics covered at A-level. If AS level is decoupled from A-level and pitched at the level of A-level (as opposed to post GCSE, which it is now) this may become an even greater issue.

Even if you assume that the GCSE specification is too easy for some pupils (I doubt this, with very few exceptions), this does not mean that lessons need to be too easy. Skilled teachers will always know where to pitch work with their classes, challenging them just enough to make further progress. There is nothing wrong in having classes of motivated, confident classes, all getting A* at GCSE. The challenge at that point for a few is whether they can achieve maximum UMS point scores. Teachers can always create a sense of challenge.

For well embedded acquisition to take place, a long period of drip-feed structured target language input is the best solution in a school setting. Five years of little and often practice will produce the best outcomes and students well prepared to move to higher levels. It works for many students if the timetabling is right and the teaching effective.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is the natural order hypothesis?

The natural order hypothesis states that all learners acquire the grammatical structures of a language in roughly the same order. This applies to both first and second language acquisition. This order is not dependent on the ease with which a particular language feature can be taught; in English, some features, such as third-person "-s" ("he runs") are easy to teach in a classroom setting, but are not typically fully acquired until the later stages of language acquisition. The hypothesis was based on morpheme studies by Heidi Dulay and Marina Burt, which found that certain morphemes were predictably learned before others during the course of second language acquisition. The hypothesis was picked up by Stephen Krashen who incorporated it in his very well known input model of second language learning. Furthermore, according to the natural order hypothesis, the order of acquisition remains the same regardless of the teacher's explicit instruction; in other words,

What is skill acquisition theory?

For this post, I am drawing on a section from the excellent book by Rod Ellis and Natsuko Shintani called Exploring Language Pedagogy through Second Language Acquisition Research (Routledge, 2014). Skill acquisition is one of several competing theories of how we learn new languages. It’s a theory based on the idea that skilled behaviour in any area can become routinised and even automatic under certain conditions through repeated pairing of stimuli and responses. When put like that, it looks a bit like the behaviourist view of stimulus-response learning which went out of fashion from the late 1950s. Skill acquisition draws on John Anderson’s ACT theory, which he called a cognitivist stimulus-response theory. ACT stands for Adaptive Control of Thought.  ACT theory distinguishes declarative knowledge (knowledge of facts and concepts, such as the fact that adjectives agree) from procedural knowledge (knowing how to do things in certain situations, such as understand and speak a language).

12 principles of second language teaching

This is a short, adapted extract from our book The Language Teacher Toolkit . "We could not possibly recommend a single overall method for second language teaching, but the growing body of research we now have points to certain provisional broad principles which might guide teachers. Canadian professors Patsy Lightbown and Nina Spada (2013), after reviewing a number of studies over the years to see whether it is better to just use meaning-based approaches or to include elements of explicit grammar teaching and practice, conclude: Classroom data from a number of studies offer support for the view that form-focused instruction and corrective feedback provided within the context of communicative and content-based programmes are more effective in promoting second language learning than programmes that are limited to a virtually exclusive emphasis on comprehension. As teachers Gianfranco and I would go along with that general view and would like to suggest our own set of g