Abstract
Abstract
This chapter addresses the link between activity in the task-based classroom and target language
use outside the classroom. It starts from the observation that needs analyses, constituting an essential part of
task-based curriculum design, serve to identify the target language tasks that additional language learners are
expected to perform in “real life,” more particularly in relevant situations that require the comprehension of input
or production of output in the target language. To prepare students for the latter, task-based language teaching
builds on a series of gradually more complex pedagogic tasks. But how “real” are those, and how real do they need to
be? In which ways are links between pedagogical tasks and outside-school language use established to foster students’
competences to use the target language for real-life purposes and to participate in interactions outside the
classroom? To answer these questions, I will explore the notion of task authenticity in this chapter. Deconstructing
that notion into different layers of authenticity will allow me to describe different ways in which links between
task-based classroom activity and real-life language use can be established. The different types of links will be
illustrated with examples taken from authentic (no pun intended) classrooms.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company