Course Syllabus Design
Units of Design
Syllabi are classified according to the units of analysis in their design of language courses (Long & Crookes, 1993; Rahimpour, 2010; Robinson, 2009, 2013). For example, units of analysis can be structures, notions and functions, situations, words or tasks, projects, and genres. Robinson (2009) underscores that these units and the way in which they are sequenced are essential components of a syllabus (p. 294). The unit of analysis chosen will clearly reflect the designer’s views on the nature of language and language learning (Nunan, 1988). Central to language syllabus design are the following questions: “Is the language best learned explicitly, by understanding and practicing a series of formal units of language, however characterized, or is it best learned incidentally from exposure to the L2 during communicative activities and tasks” (Robinson, 2009, p. 295)?
Synthetic syllabi are built on the components of the target language’s linguistic system that “are taught separately and step by step so that acquisition is a process of gradual accumulation of parts until the whole structure of language has been built” (Wilkins, 1976, p. 2). It is thus the responsibility of the learner to synthesize these discrete elements of the language into meaningful utterances. Synthetic syllabi support a pedagogy in which L2 learning is the result of a form-focused, linear, systematic, and cumulative process.
Whereas synthetic syllabi use the target language grammatical system as their starting point for design, analytic syllabi start with the communicative purpose for which language is used. Nunan (1988) explains that “analytic syllabi are organized in terms of the purposes for which people are learning the language and the kinds of language performance that are necessary to meet those purposes” (p. 28). Analytic syllabi support a pedagogy in which L2 learning is understood as a meaning-driven, non-linear, and recurrent process.
In the United States, it is well documented that this debate around synthetic and analytic syllabus informs syllabus design and determines the nature of the units of classroom activity and the order in which they are presented over the course of an academic term. Examples of syllabi on both ends of the spectrum can be found in postsecondary language programs; however, we must also acknowledge that mixed or layered syllabi, sometimes referred to as proportional syllabi, which incorporate, to a greater or lesser degree, elements from both the synthetic and analytic syllabi, also exist. Mixed or layered syllabi have a semantic grammatical organizational base, a linguistic component based on language functions, and themes that play a linking role through the units.
Learning Activity
Below are examples of activity schedules that are typically included in syllabi.
- Review each activity schedule.
- Decide under which category they each belong: synthetic, analytic, or mixed syllabus.
Review Example 1
Week: W1
Focus: Transactional conversations
Topic: At the convenience store
Text: Video of conversations in convenience stores in the US and Spanish-speaking countries
Culture:
- Purpose of simple conversations in convenience stores in the U.S. and Spanish-speaking countries
- Turn taking and relationship between turns in simple conversations related to buying food items in the US and Spanish -speaking countries
Register: Level of formality based on context and relationship between shoppers and merchants
Grammar / Vocabulary / Phonology:
- Numeratives and expressions and vocabulary related to food
- Expressions and structures related to shopping
- Intonation of questions vs. statements
Final Tasks:
- Students go shopping in Nogales, Mexico
- Students write a reflection on their shopping experiences
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Example 1 would be found in an analytic syllabus.
Review Example 2
Week: W1
Ch: 7
Grammar:
- Review of который
- Review of adjectival case endings
- Formation and use of active participles: present tense
Vocabulary / Topic: Russian theatre
Homework / Reading: Alexander Ostrovsky – p. 169
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Example 2 would be found in a synthetic syllabus.
Review Example 3
Week: W1
Ch: 1
Theme: My family and friends
Topic: My family members
Grammar:
- Subject pronouns
- Possessive adjectives
- Adjectives
- The verb to have
- Negation
Vocabulary:
- Expressions to introduce oneself
- Family members
Family relations
Final Task: Go to Flipgrid, introduce yourself and your family to your peers using the vocabulary and grammar learned
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Example 3 would be found in a mixed syllabus.
Although choices about syllabus type might be determined by L2 research, most often they are a matter of preference based on the approach the LPD is most familiar with, the approach used in the selected course textbook, or the approach recommended by the institution (Herschensohn, 1990; Scida & Jones, 2017). Few empirical studies have examined the outcomes of specific syllabus choices; those that do exist have been conducted outside the United States in English as a Foreign Language contexts. The picture that emerges from these studies is one that supports analytic over synthetic syllabi (Cubillos & Ilvento, 2019).
Reflective Question:
- A mixed or layered syllabus is often the syllabus of choice in many foreign language programs. What would be the advantages and disadvantages of that choice for your instructional context?
Choosing Among Course Syllabus Types
Scholars who have been interested in language syllabus design Breen, 1987; Feez, 1999; Krahnke, 1987; Long & Crookes, 1993; Nunan, 1988, 2001; Rabbini, 2002; Rahimpour, 2010; Robinson, 2009, 2013) have outlined several primary syllabus types that are commonly used in postsecondary language programs in the United States. Table 1 lists these syllabus types, which fall on a form-meaning continuum.
As you look at this table, you probably notice that the form-meaning continuum is reflective of a chronology with structural/synthetic approaches considered to be older and more traditional and communication/analytic approaches considered to be newer. As our understanding of L2 language learning processes has grown so has the number of conceptual frameworks that support language course syllabus design.
Reflective Questions:
- Looking at Table 1 can you identify the type of syllabus used in your language program? How easy was it for you to decide? Why?
- What role did the textbook play, if any, in adopting a particular syllabus type for your language program? How?