1988
DOI: 10.2307/3587290
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Creative Automatization: Principles for Promoting Fluency within a Communicative Framework

Abstract: In this article we discuss the theory and practice of a “creative automatization” process by which learners can develop the automaticity component of fluency in second language production in a classroom setting. The techniques for this approach are designed to provide students with ample opportunities for repetition and practice within a wholly communicative context, without the shortcomings usually characteristic of pattern drills or other more traditional methods. Five specific design criteria are presented … Show more

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Cited by 127 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…For SLA, Widdowson (1989) has argued that the ability to use linguistic knowledge for communication depends less on the use of rules to assemble utterances from scratch than it does on having available a stock of partially pre-assembled patterns and formulaic frameworks, using rules primarily to make those adjustments to formulae that are necessary according to contextual demands. Gatbonton and Segalowitz (1988) and Arevart and Nation (1991) have advocated a number of classroom teaching techniques in harmony with instance theory, procedures designed to promote the automatization of specific utterances and utterance frames rather than the routinization of structures or rules.…”
Section: Instance Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For SLA, Widdowson (1989) has argued that the ability to use linguistic knowledge for communication depends less on the use of rules to assemble utterances from scratch than it does on having available a stock of partially pre-assembled patterns and formulaic frameworks, using rules primarily to make those adjustments to formulae that are necessary according to contextual demands. Gatbonton and Segalowitz (1988) and Arevart and Nation (1991) have advocated a number of classroom teaching techniques in harmony with instance theory, procedures designed to promote the automatization of specific utterances and utterance frames rather than the routinization of structures or rules.…”
Section: Instance Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It also shows all phases aiming to promote both components of fluency: selection fluency and automatic production fluency (Gatbonton & Segalowitz, 1988). Selection fluency is the ability to select the right thing to say, to whom, and when.…”
Section: Elizabern Ga1bonton/guuing Gumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our conclusions have been that pedagogical tasks may sometimes be the same as real world tasks (e.g., to help students write a CV, they are asked to write a CV in the classroom) but there is no inherent need for them to be always so, as long as certain conditions are met. These conditions are 1) the participants themselves have real control of the flow, direction, and nature of the conversations; create their own intentions; and select the means with which to express them; 2) that the participants experience the tensions and pressures of real communications such as those arising from not knowing what their interlocutors would say or from having to make sense of their interlocutor's utterances under time pressure (See also Gatbonton & Segalowitz, 1988).…”
Section: Putting the Cclc Curriculum Development Experiences In Perspmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In all conditions, sentences were presented in meaningful textual contexts, (Gatbonton & Segalowitz, 1988;Hulstijn, 2001). Students were instructed to read texts thematically organized in the following way.…”
Section: Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%