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Digilec 10 (2023), pp. 115-131
in general. In this new vision of language, the adding of new communicative situations
and tasks opens the way to performing new speech acts and thus leading language learners
to proficiency in the language. Besides, this new approach added a fifth dimension to
speaking, involving both linguistic and social activity, two indivisible components. Thus,
what this approach suggests is that we must work on the linguistic part supported by social
activity by creating meaningful learning and seeing learners as social agents, who develop
social skills inside the classroom.
Whereas in the CLT Krashen, S. & Terrel (1988) talk about learning being an
individual process, with the AoA, students complete the task as a group, not only making
communication more effective, but also task completion more meaningful. As North and
Piccardo explain, the AoA is more like a comprehensive philosophy that relates
curriculum planning, teaching and assessment in a coherent way that has inspired
practices influenced by context-related factors, and the CEFR is therefore proving that
updated methodologies are not to be totally discarded, they can always be revisited and
replaced (Piccardo & North, 2019). By presenting its view of language use and learning
as action-oriented, the CEFR provides the perfect scenario where individuals are actually
related to the social context, suggesting real-life situations with their implications and
inputs.
All in all, it is worth mentioning that the AoA, contrary to other second/foreign
language methodologies, has shaped itself through practice rather than being first
theorized and then applied. The entire point of the AoA is to equip users/learners for real
life language use, and part of that process must involve experience of tasks are as
authentic as possible. Having analyzed the main tenets of the AoA, we present now the
action-oriented scenarios we will use to contextualize mediation strategies within tasks.
3.1. Towards action-oriented scenarios
Considering the notions of competence and language as socialization, it is necessary
to bear in mind how the paradigm shift has affected this generation’s notion of
competence. Despite the fact that the methodology the CEFR suggests in the AoA, which
encourages learners to mobilize not only their linguistic repertoire but different
sociocultural competences, this generation of learners feels more comfortable with the
old notion of competence in the language, which was mainly memorizing a linguistic
repertoire and using it, not connected to real-life scenarios.
To cover the former and many other potential difficulties and weaknesses in the
practical implementation of linguistic mediation in centres, the Council of Europe, in the
LINDICRE project, among many others to help implement the CEFR, offers templates
of action-oriented scenarions. We will adapt one of those models to elaborate the scenario
in which we will show how to teach linguistic mediation strategies using H5P content.
These scenarios aim at helping teachers organize their teaching and calibrate the scales
of descriptors for mediation strategies and activities to make them seem less dense and
overwhelming to put together in a descriptor-balanced way.