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Implicit Teaching of English Grammar and its Implications forthe Building of Communicative Competence in Tanzania
Abstract
There have been various paradigms in the teaching of grammar globally and in Tanzania in particular. In Tanzania, English grammar teaching was previously done using a content-based approach whereby grammar was taught directly by explaining explicitly the pertinent rules and principles. Currently, following the adoption of the communicative language teaching approach, grammar is taught implicitly by subjecting students into various communicative tasks. This paper examines teachers’ instructional practices in teaching English grammar using the communicative language teaching approach. The paper discusses the findings of a study which adopted a qualitative approach and which involved eight teachers from four public secondary schools in southern Tanzania. The paper shows that many teachers still use traditional instructional practices in teaching English grammar which involve memorising grammatical rules and facts, instead of teaching the language in a communicative manner. There are also certain challenges in teaching English grammar using CLT. They include questioning the place of grammar in the EFL context, the discrepancy between the syllabus and assessment, a lack of grammar-teaching materials and teachers’ incompetence in grammar