ELT Journal Advance Access published online on January 29, 2007
ELT Journal, doi:10.1093/elt/ccl052
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press; all rights reserved.
Meaningful form: transitivity and intentionality
Mario Saraceni is a Senior Lecturer in English and Applied Linguistics in the School of Languages and Area Studies at the University of Portsmouth. He has been involved in ELT for over ten years and has taught in Italy, Thailand, and the UK. He has recently co-edited the volume English in the World: Global Rules, Global Roles (Continuum 2006)
Email: mario.saraceni{at}port.ac.uk
| Abstract |
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Grammar has often found itself at the centre of innovations in English language teaching. In the last forty years the role of grammar has gone through three main stages: absolute prominence, exclusion, re-introduction with caution. These three stages have been associated respectively to three different approaches to instruction: focus on forms, focus on meaning, and focus on form. In the third stage, the teaching of grammar is meant to take place as the need arises during communicative activities. Even in such cases, however, there appears to remain a fundamental distinction between form and meaning. This paper suggests that such a distinction is unnecessary, given that form has its own semantic value. A practical task is proposed which analyses the semantic value of the grammatical system of transitivity, showing how it expresses the idea of intentionality.