Autonomous Learning
Table of
content
Page
Introduction
The Importance
of Autonomous Learning
Background
Introduction
Autonomous Learning means that
the person is responsible for its own learning process. The learning depends on
the person and the responsibility for
learning what he or she wants to accomplish. We cannot say that there is a
special way of learning because each person has his or her own style. It
depends on what the person wants to learn and how the goal wants to be achieved.
An example of this is my uncle Manolo. He learned English on his own. He just
wanted to learn because he started in Costa Rica an agency called Manolo´s
Tour. What is important about this? The first thing is that he needed English
for his agency. This means that the person needs to have an interest to learn
something or about something. Then he started having his benefits with his
business.it was nice
What is autonomous learning?
When people get in charge of their own learning is what is known as autonomous
learning. To achieve the goal, people need to be responsible of their own learning.
This means that the person who has decided to learn something without help needs to have a
big desire to do it. The learners will have to study , investigate, set goals chooses
materials, methods and tasks. After doing all these , the learner need to have
enough criteria to evaluate themselves.
For a definition of autonomy, we might quote Holec (1981: 3, cited in
Benson & Voller, 1997: 1) who describes it as ‘the ability to take charge
of one’s learning’. On a general note, the term autonomy has come to be used in
at least five ways (see Benson & Voller, 1997: 2):
a) for situations in which learners study entirely on their own;
b) for a set of skills which can be learned and applied
in self-directed learning;
c) for an inborn capacity which is suppressed by institutional
education;
d) for the exercise of learners’ responsibility for their own
learning;
e) for the right of learners to determine the
direction of their own learning.
The Rise of
Autonomy in Language Education
A Brief History
The early
history of autonomy in language education is well documented (Gremmo &
Riley 1995; Little1991, 2000a; Benson 2001; Holec 2007). In brief,it begins
with the Council of Europe’s Modern Languages Project, which led to the
publication of Holec’s (1981), in which autonomy was defined as ‘the ability to
take charge of one’s own learning’ (p. 3). Important work from this period can also
be found in early issues of the journal Melanges Pedagogiques
and in
papers presented at a 1976 seminar at the University of Cambridge (Harding-Esch
1977).
Early
pedagogical experiments related to autonomy were inspired by humanistic
expectations aroused by the political turmoil and “counter-cultures” of late-1960s
Europe (Holec 1981; Gremmo & Riley1995).
Practical
applications focused on self-directed learning and led to the development of
self-access centres and learner training as focal points forexperimentation.
Although Holec (1981) treated autonomy as an attribute of the learner, the term
was also used to describe learning situations. In his book on self-instruction,
Dickinson (1987: 11), for example, described autonomy as “the
situation in which the learner is totally responsible for all of the decisions
concerned with his learning and the implementation of those decisions”. As
Allwright (1988: 35) put it, the idea of learner autonomy was for a long time “associated
with a estructuring of language pedagogy” that involved “the rejection of the
traditional classroom and the introduction of new ways of working”.
In other
words many of the early experiments were designed for adults who did not necessarily
have the time, inclination or opportunity to attend classroom based courses.
For Allwright, however, autonomy needed to be re-conceptualized if it was to be
applied to the classroom.
Autonomy
could, for example, be recognized in students “ unpredictable contributions to
classroom activities that could temporarily throw the teacher’s plans. In his
book on learner training, Dickinson (1992) also argued that learners often
acted independently, both cognitively
and behaviourally, in the classroom, while Dam (1995) demonstrated how
principles of autonomy could be integrated into secondary school classrooms
without self-access or formal learner training. This turn towards classroom
applications led a second wave of interest in autonomy in the 1990s, with important theoretical implications.
Little’s (1991) book on
learner in autonomy,
for example, emphasized the psychological attributes of autonomous learners and
prioritized
‘interdependence’ over ‘independence’ in learning. In an early paper on teacher
autonomy, Little (1995) argued that learner autonomy did not imply any
particular mode of practice, but was instead dependent upon the quality of the pedagogical
dialogue’ between teachers and learners.
First, learners need to become aware of the ways they learn best, which involves their learning styles and strategies (Brazis, Kavaliauskienë, 2000). Naturally, it takes time for learners to find out what are the most effective techniques and activities for each person.
Second, learners have to change their passive attitude to learning to a more active attitude, i.e. to become less dependent on the teacher and take charge of their own learning (Wilga M. Rivers, 1992). Teacher's role is to involve students in search for interesting materials, e.g. surfing the Internet, or finding pen-friends on the Internet, taking part in competitions, chat-clubs, encouraging to read English books, newspapers, magazines, etc.
Finally, learners have to be given a chance to gain experience in 'swapping places' with a teacher, which means changing the traditional role of a teacher, developing the art of negotiation, emphasizing the importance of self-assessment, etc. (Grudzinska, 2000). This involves tasks and activities designed and administered by the learners themselves. The diversity of tasks may cover grammar, games, written work, audio- and video- recordings, news items, translation -- you name it -- anything that interests learners will benefit them.