B. KUMARAVADIVELU
San José State University
San José, California, United States
As a consequence of repeatedly articulated dissatisfaction with the
limitations of the concept of method and the transmission model of
teacher education, the L2 profession is faced with an imperative need
to construct a postmethod pedagogy. In this article, I conceptualize the
parameters of a postmethod pedagogy, offer suggestions for implementing
it, and then raise questions and concerns that might come up in
implementing it. Visualizing a three-dimensional system consisting of
the parameters of particularity, practicality, and possibility, I argue that
a postmethod pedagogy must (a) facilitate the advancement of a
context-sensitive language education based on a true understanding of
local linguistic, sociocultural, and political particularities; (b) rupture
the rei. ed role relationship between theorists and practitioners by
enabling teachers to construct their own theory of practice; and (c) tap
the sociopolitical consciousness that participants bring with them in
order to aid their quest for identity formation and social transformation.
Treating learners, teachers, and teacher educators as coexplorers,
I discuss their roles and functions in a postmethod pedagogy. I
conclude by raising the prospect of replacing the limited concept of
method with the three pedagogic parameters of particularity, practicality,
and possibility as organizing principles for L2 teaching and teacher
education
.
The 1990s witnessed a rare congruence of refreshingly new ideas that
can fundamentally restructure second/foreign language teaching
and teacher education. Among them are two mutually informing currents
of thought: One emphasizes the need to go beyond the limitations
of the concept of method with a call to . nd an alternative way of
designing effective teaching strategies (Clarke, 1994; Kumaravadivelu,
1994; Prabhu, 1990), and another emphasizes the need to go beyond the
limitations of the transmission model of teacher education with a call to
.nd an alternative way of creating ef. cient teaching professionals
(Freeman & Johnson, 1998; Johnson, 2000; Woods, 1996). The result has
been a greater awareness of issues such as teacher beliefs, teacher
reasoning, and teacher cognition. A common thread that runs through
538 TESOL QUARTERLY
the works cited above is a long-felt dissatisfaction with the concept of
method as the organizing principle for L2 teaching and teacher education.
These works can therefore be seen as heralding the development of
what might be called a postmethod pedagogy.
Continuing and consolidating the recent explorations, and taking my
TESOL Quarterly article on the postmethod condition (Kumaravadivelu,
1994) as a point of departure, in this article I attempt to provide the
fundamentals of a postmethod pedagogy. In the . rst section, I conceptualize
the parameters of a postmethod pedagogy. In the second, I offer
suggestions for actualizing it in terms of the anticipated roles and
functions of learners, teachers, and teacher educators. In the third, I
problematize it by raising questions and concerns that might come up in
the process of actualizing it. I conclude by raising the prospect of the
parameters of a postmethod pedagogy replacing the concept of method
as an organizing principle for L2 learning, teaching, and teacher
education.
CONCEPTUALIZING POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY
I use the term pedagogy in a broad sense to include not only issues
pertaining to classroom strategies, instructional materials, curricular
objectives, and evaluation measures, but also a wide range of historical,
political, and sociocultural experiences that directly or indirectly in� uence
L2 education. Within such a broad-based de. nition, I visualize a
postmethod pedagogy as a three-dimensional system consisting of three
pedagogic parameters: particularity, practicality, and possibility. I discuss
below the salient features of each of these parameters, indicating how
they interweave and interact with each other.
A Pedagogy of Particularity
First and foremost, any postmethod pedagogy has to be a pedagogy of
particularity. That is to say, language pedagogy, to be relevant, must be
sensitive to a particular group of teachers teaching a particular group of
learners pursuing a particular set of goals within a particular institutional
context embedded in a particular sociocultural milieu. A pedagogy of
particularity, then, is antithetical to the notion that there can be one set
of pedagogic aims and objectives realizable through one set of pedagogic
principles and procedures. At its core, the idea of pedagogic particularity
is consistent with the hermeneutic perspective of situational understanding
(Elliott, 1993), which claims that a meaningful pedagogy cannot be
constructed without a holistic interpretation of particular situations and
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 539
that it cannot be improved without a general improvement of those
particular situations.
All pedagogy, like all politics, is local. To ignore local exigencies is to
ignore lived experiences. Pedagogies that ignore lived experiences will
ultimately prove to be “so disturbing for those affected by them—so
threatening to their belief systems—that hostility is aroused and learning
becomes impossible” (Coleman, 1996, p. 11). A case in point is the sense
of disillusionment that accompanied the spread of communicative
language teaching. From South Africa, Chick (1996) wonders whether
“our choice of communicative language teaching as a goal was possibly a
sort of naive ethnocentrism prompted by the thought that what is good
for Europe or the USA had to be good for KwaZulu” (p. 22). From
Pakistan, Shamim (1996) reports that her attempt to introduce communicative
language teaching into her classroom met with a great deal of
resistance from her learners, making her “terribly exhausted” and
leading her to realize that, by introducing this methodology, she was
actually “creating psychological barriers to learning” (p. 109). From
India, Tickoo (1996) points out that even locally initiated pedagogic
innovations have failed because they merely tinkered with the methodological
framework inherited from abroad, without fully taking into
account local linguistic, sociocultural, and political particularities.
An interesting and intriguing aspect of particularity is that it is not a
thing out there to be searched and rescued. Nor is it a chimera that lives
in the fantasy world of fertile imagination, unreal and unrealized.
Particularity, as Becker (1986) succinctly puts it,
is not something we begin with; particularity is something we arrive at, by
repeating. Particularity is something we learn. We don’t distinguish birds
until we learn their names and hear their songs. Up to that point we hear
“bird” around us and then we begin to pick up their particularity along with
the language. Particularity is something we achieve. (p. 29)
From a pedagogic point of view, particularity is at once a goal and a
process. One simultaneously works for and through particularity. It is a
progressive advancement of means and ends. That is to say, it is the
critical awareness of local exigencies that trigger the exploration and
achievement of a pedagogy of particularity. It starts with practicing
teachers, either individually or collectively, observing their teaching acts,
evaluating their outcomes, identifying problems, .nding solutions, and
trying them out to see once again what works and what does not. Such a
continual cycle of observation, re� ection, and action is a prerequisite for
the development of context-sensitive pedagogic knowledge. To appropriate
and extend Becker’s (1986) analogy, the generic professional knowledge
teachers gain from teacher education programs can help them
540 TESOL QUARTERLY
hear “bird” around them, but it is their lived experience in the classroom
and their pursuit of a pedagogy of particularity that will help them
distinguish birds, learn their names, and hear their songs. In other
words, context-sensitive pedagogic knowledge can emerge only from the
practice of particularity. Because the particular is so deeply embedded in
the practical, and cannot be achieved or understood without it, a
pedagogy of particularity becomes in essence a pedagogy of practicality
as well.
A Pedagogy of Practicality
A pedagogy of practicality does not pertain merely to the everyday
practice of classroom teaching. It pertains to a much larger issue that has
a direct impact on the practice of classroom teaching, namely, the
relationship between theory and practice. General educationists (e.g.,
Elliott, 1991) have long recognized the harmful effect of the theory/
practice dichotomy. They af. rm that theory and practice mutually
inform, and together constitute, a dialectical praxis, an af. rmation that
has recently in� uenced L2 teaching and teacher education as well (e.g.,
Freeman, 1998).
One of the ways by which educationists have addressed the theory/
practice dichotomy is by positing a distinction between professional
theories and personal theories. According to O’Hanlon (1993), professional
theories are those that are generated by experts and are generally
transmitted from centers of higher learning. Personal theories, on the
other hand, are those that teachers develop by interpreting and applying
professional theories in practical situations while they are on the job.
Although this distinction sounds eminently sensible, in reality the
expert-generated professional theories are often valued whereas the
teacher-generated personal theories are often ignored. Evidently, in a
well-meaning attempt to cross the borders between theory and practice,
yet another line of demarcation has been drawn, this time between
theorists’ theory and teachers’ theory.
This distinction between theorists’ theory and teachers’ theory has, in
part, in� uenced the emphasis on re� ective teaching and action research.
“The fundamental aim of action research,” as Elliott (1991) makes
crystal clear, “is to improve practice rather than to produce knowledge”
(p. 49). The suggestion that teachers should construct their personal
theories by testing, interpreting, and judging the usefulness of professional
theories proposed by experts creates only a narrow space for
teachers to function fruitfully as re� ective individuals. Indeed, this
suggestion leaves very little room for self-conceptualization and selfconstruction
of pedagogic knowledge, because teachers are treated
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 541
merely as implementors of professional theories (for similar views, see
Giroux, 1988; Kincheloe, 1993). This realization has recently led to some
soul-searching among educationists. Zeichner (1996), one of the pioneering
advocates of re� ective teaching and action research, has some
sobering thoughts on their limitations:
Despite the lofty rhetoric surrounding efforts to help teachers become more
re� ective, in reality re� ective teacher education has done very little to foster
genuine teacher development and to enhance teachers’ roles in educational
reform. Instead, an illusion of teacher development has often been created
that has maintained in more subtle ways the subservient position of the
teacher. (p. 201)
A pedagogy of practicality, as I visualize it, seeks to overcome some of
the de. ciencies inherent in the theory-versus-practice, theorists’-theoryversus-
teachers’-theory dichotomies by encouraging and enabling teachers
themselves to theorize from their practice and practice what they
theorize (Kumaravadivelu, 1999b). If context-sensitive pedagogic knowledge
has to emerge from teachers and their practice of everyday
teaching, then they ought to be assisted in becoming autonomous
individuals. This objective cannot be achieved simply by asking teachers
to put into practice theories conceived and constructed by others. It can
be achieved only by helping teachers develop the knowledge and skill,
attitude, and autonomy necessary to construct their own context-sensitive
pedagogic knowledge that will make their practice of everyday teaching
a worthwhile endeavor.
In short, a pedagogy of practicality aims for a teacher-generated
theory of practice. This assertion is premised on a rather simple and
straightforward proposition: No theory of practice can be useful and
usable unless it is generated through practice. A logical corollary is that
it is the practicing teacher who, given adequate tools for exploration, is
best suited to produce such a practical theory. A theory of practice is
conceived when, to paraphrase van Manen (1991), there is a union of
action and thought or, more precisely, when there is action in thought
and thought in action. It is the result of what he has called pedagogical
thoughtfulness. In the context of deriving a theory of practice, pedagogical
thoughtfulness simultaneously feeds and is fed by re� ective capabilities
of teachers that enable them to understand and identify problems,
analyze and assess information, consider and evaluate alternatives, and
then choose the best available alternative, which is then subjected to
further critical appraisal. In this sense, a theory of practice is “an
on-going, living, working theory” (Chambers, 1992, p. 13) involving
continual re� ection and action.
If teachers’ re� ection and action are seen as constituting one side of
542 TESOL QUARTERLY
the practicality coin, their insights and intuition can be seen as constituting
the other. Sedimented and solidi. ed through prior and ongoing
encounters with learning and teaching is the teacher’s unexplained and
sometimes unexplainable awareness of what constitutes good teaching.
Such an awareness has been variously referred to as the teacher’s
conception of practice (Freeman, 1996), sense of plausibility (Prabhu, 1990),
or beliefs and assumptions (Woods, 1996). Hargreaves (1994) has called it
the ethic of practicality—a phrase he uses to refer to the teacher’s
powerful sense of what works and what doesn’t; of which changes will go and
which will not—not in the abstract, or even as a general rule, but for this
teacher in this context. In this simple yet deeply in� uential sense of practicality
among teachers is the distillation of complex and potent combinations of
purpose, person, politics and workplace constraints. (p. 12)
Nearly a quarter century ago, van Manen (1977) called this awareness
simply sense making.
Teachers’ sense making matures over time as they learn to cope with
competing pulls and pressures representing the content and character of
professional preparation, personal beliefs, institutional constraints, learner
expectations, assessment instruments, and other factors. This seemingly
instinctive and idiosyncratic nature of teachers’ sense making disguises
the fact that it is formed and re-formed by the pedagogic factors
governing the microcosm of the classroom as well as by the sociopolitical
forces emanating from outside. Consequently, sense making requires
that teachers view pedagogy not merely as a mechanism for maximizing
learning opportunities in the classroom, but also as a means for
understanding and transforming possibilities in and outside the classroom.
In this sense, a pedagogy of practicality metamorphoses into a
pedagogy of possibility.
A Pedagogy of Possibility
The idea of a pedagogy of possibility is derived mainly from the works
of the Brazilian educator Paulo Freire. General educationists such as
Simon (1988) and Giroux (1988), and TESOL practitioners such as
Auerbach (1995) and Benesch (2001), take the position that pedagogy,
any pedagogy, is implicated in relations of power and dominance, and is
implemented to create and sustain social inequalities. Acknowledging
and highlighting students’ and teachers’ subject positions—that is, their
class, race, gender, and ethnicity—these authors encourage students and
teachers to question the status quo that keeps them subjugated. They
advocate a pedagogy of possibility that empowers participants and point
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 543
to “the need to develop theories, forms of knowledge, and social
practices that work with the experiences that people bring to the
pedagogical setting” (Giroux, 1988, p. 134).
The experiences participants bring to the pedagogical setting are
shaped not just by the learning/teaching episodes they have encountered
in the past but also by the broader social, economic, and political
environment in which they have grown up. These experiences have the
potential to alter pedagogic practices in ways unintended and unexpected
by policy planners, curriculum designers, or textbook producers.
For instance, Canagarajah (1999) reports how Tamil students of English
in civil war–torn Sri Lanka offered resistance to Western representations
of English language and culture and how they, motivated by their own
cultural and historical backgrounds, appropriated the language and
used it on their own terms according to their own aspirations, needs, and
values. He reports how the Tamil students, through marginal comments
and graphics, actually reframed, reinterpreted, and rewrote the content
of their ESL textbooks, written and produced by Anglo-American
authors. The students’ resistance, Canagarajah concludes, suggests “the
strategic ways by which discourses may be negotiated, intimating the
resilient ability of human subjects to creatively fashion a voice for
themselves from amidst the deafening channels of domination” (p. 197).
Similarly, analyzing L2 classroom data in terms of the ideology and
structures of apartheid South Africa, Chick (1996) found that classroom
talk represented “styles consistent with norms of interaction which
teachers and students constituted as a means of avoiding the oppressive
and demeaning constraints of apartheid educational systems” (p. 37).
Unpublished reports from Palestine (Lamice Abdulla, personal communication,
October 19, 1999) indicate how the teaching of English in the
secondary schools of the West Bank and Gaza during the intifada
movement conditioned and constrained classroom events. Although the
Sri Lankan, South African, and Palestinian cases may be considered by
some as extreme examples of classroom life imitating the sociopolitical
turmoil outside the class, there are numerous instances when race,
gender, class, and other variables directly or indirectly in� uence the
content and character of classroom input and interaction (see Benesch,
2001).
In the process of sensitizing itself to the prevailing sociopolitical
reality, a pedagogy of possibility is also concerned with individual
identity. More than any other educational enterprise, language education
provides its participants with challenges and opportunities for a
continual quest for subjectivity and self-identity, for, as Weedon (1987)
points out, “language is the place where actual and possible forms of
social organization and their likely social and political consequences are
de. ned and contested. Yet it is also the place where our sense of
544 TESOL QUARTERLY
ourselves, our subjectivity, is constructed” (p. 21). This is even more
applicable to L2 education, which brings languages and cultures in
contact. That this contact results in identity con� icts has been convincingly
brought out by Norton’s (2000) study of immigrant women in
Canada. “The historically and socially constructed identity of learners,”
Norton observes, “in� uences the subject position they take up in the
language classroom and the relationship they establish with the language
teacher” (p. 142). In a sense, the classroom behavior of the Sri Lankan,
South African, and Palestinian students mentioned earlier is an unmistakable
manifestation of their struggle to preserve and protect their
individual and collective identity.
What follows from the above discussion is that language teachers can
ill afford to ignore the sociocultural reality that in� uences identity
formation in the classroom, nor can they afford to separate the linguistic
needs of learners from their social needs. In other words, language
teachers cannot hope to fully satisfy their pedagogic obligations without
at the same time satisfying their social obligations. They will be able to
reconcile these seemingly competing forces if they “achieve a deepening
awareness both of the sociocultural reality that shapes their lives and of
their capacity to transform that reality” (van Manen, 1977, p. 222). Such
a deepening awareness has a built-in quality that transforms the life of
the person who adopts it. Studies by Clandinin, Davies, Hogan, and
Kennard (1993) attest to this self-transforming phenomenon:
As we worked together we talked about ways of seeing new possibility in our
practices as teachers, as teacher educators, and with children in our classroom.
As we saw possibilities in our professional lives we also came to see new
possibilities in our personal lives. (p. 209)
Summary
In this section, I have suggested that one way of conceptualizing a
postmethod pedagogy is to look at it three-dimensionally as a pedagogy
of particularity, practicality, and possibility. As a pedagogy of particularity,
postmethod pedagogy rejects the advocacy of a predetermined set of
generic principles and procedures aimed at realizing a predetermined
set of generic aims and objectives. Instead, it seeks to facilitate the
advancement of a context-sensitive, location-speci. c pedagogy that is
based on a true understanding of local linguistic, sociocultural, and
political particularities. As a pedagogy of practicality, postmethod pedagogy
rejects the arti. cial dichotomy between theorists who have been
assigned the role of producers of knowledge and teachers who have been
assigned the role of consumers of knowledge. Instead, it seeks to rupture
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 545
such a rei. ed role relationship by enabling and encouraging teachers to
theorize from their practice and practice what they theorize. As a
pedagogy of possibility, postmethod pedagogy rejects the narrow view of
language education that con. nes itself to the linguistic functional
elements that obtain inside the classroom. Instead, it seeks to branch out
to tap the sociopolitical consciousness that participants bring with them
to the classroom so that it can also function as a catalyst for a continual
quest for identity formation and social transformation. The boundaries
of the particular, the practical, and the possible are inevitably blurred.
They interweave and interact with each other in a synergistic relationship
in which the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
If one assumes that the three pedagogic parameters of particularity,
practicality, and possibility have the potential to form the foundation for
a postmethod pedagogy and propel the language teaching profession
beyond the limited and limiting concept of method, then a crucial
question presents itself: What needs to be done in order to begin to
actualize such a pedagogy? I address this and other related questions in
the following section.
ACTUALIZING POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY
The very nature of a postmethod pedagogy with its emphasis on
context sensitivity demands that various participants actualize it variously
to suit various necessities. Indeed, trying to fabricate a monolithic matrix
of methods for the purpose of actualizing a postmethod pedagogy will be
futile. However, it should be feasible and indeed desirable to chart a
broad road map that indicates the path the actualization process might
pro. tably take. I attempt to visualize such a road map in terms of the
anticipated roles of learners, teachers, and teacher educators. I focus on
these three groups of fellow travelers not merely because they embark
upon a common journey toward a common destination, but also because
postmethod pedagogy demands a re-visioning of their roles as postmethod
practitioners.
The Postmethod Learner
The postmethod learner is an autonomous learner. The literature on
learner autonomy has so far provided two interrelated aspects of
autonomy: academic autonomy and social autonomy. Academic autonomy
is related to learning. Learning becomes autonomous when learners
are willing and able to take charge of their own learning (Holec,
1988). Taking charge has mostly meant teachers giving learners a set of
546 TESOL QUARTERLY
cognitive, metacognitive, and affective techniques that they can use for
successful learning. Research on this aspect of learner autonomy has
produced taxonomies of learning strategies (e.g., Oxford, 1990) and
learning styles (e.g., Reid, 1998) as well as user-friendly manuals (e.g.,
Chamot, Bernhard, El-Dinary, & Robbins, 1999). They have been found
useful in making learners more active participants in their language
learning while at the same time making teachers more sensitive to
learner diversity and learning dif. culties. Efforts have also been made to
plan and implement learner training for language learners and teachers
(Ellis & Sinclair, 1989; Scharle & Szabo, 2000, Wenden, 1991).
The wealth of information now available on learning strategies and
styles opens up opportunities for learners to monitor their learning
process and maximize their learning potential. With the help of their
teachers and their peers, postmethod learners can exploit some of these
opportunities with a view to
. identifying their learning strategies and styles by administering, or
having administered, select portions of strategy inventories and style
surveys, and by writing their own language learning histories
. stretching their strategies and styles by incorporating some of those
employed by successful language learners (For example, if some
learners are global in their learning style, they might have to develop
strategies that are associated with the analytic learning style, such as
breaking down words and sentences in order to . nd meaning.)
. evaluating their ongoing learning outcomes by monitoring language
learning progress through personal journal writings in addition to
taking regular class tests and other standardized tests
. reaching out for opportunities for additional language reception or
production beyond what they get in the classroom, for example,
through library resources and learning centers
Unlike academic autonomy, which is mostly intrapersonal, social
autonomy is interpersonal and is related to learners’ ability and willingness
to function effectively as cooperative members of a classroom
community. It refers to “the fact that among the strategies and activities
associated with increasing metacognitive awareness and learning management
skills are some that involve interaction with others” (Broady &
Kenning, 1996, p. 16). Learners can attempt to develop their social
autonomy by, for instance,
. seeking their teachers’ intervention to get adequate feedback on
areas of dif. culty and to solve problems. Learners do this through
dialogues and conversations in and outside the class.
. collaborating with other learners to pool information on a speci. c
project they are working on. Learners do this by forming small
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 547
groups, dividing the responsibilities of consulting reference materials
(e.g., dictionaries and encyclopedias) to collect information, and
sharing it with the group.
. taking advantage of opportunities to communicate with competent
speakers of the language. Learners can achieve this by participating
in social and cultural events, and engaging in conversations with
other participants.
These activities contribute to at least two noteworthy skills: Learners gain
a sense of responsibility for aiding their own learning and that of their
peers, and they develop a degree of sensitivity and understanding toward
other learners who may be more or less competent than they themselves
are.
Although academic autonomy and social autonomy undoubtedly offer
useful pathways for learners to realize their learning potential, a third
aspect of learner autonomy is necessary to capture the essence of the
postmethod learner: liberatory autonomy. If academic autonomy enables
learners to be effective learners, and social autonomy encourages them
to be collaborative partners, liberatory autonomy empowers them to be
critical thinkers. Thus, liberatory autonomy goes much further than the
other two aspects of learner autonomy by actively seeking to help
learners recognize sociopolitical impediments to realization of their full
human potential and by providing them with the intellectual tools
necessary to overcome those impediments. The sociopolitical impediments
may sometimes take the form of overt political oppression, as
experienced and expressed by the Sri Lankan, South African, and
Palestinian students referred to earlier, or take subtle forms of discrimination
based on race or religion, class or color, gender or sexual
orientation.
More than any other educational enterprise, language pedagogy in
which almost any topic potentially constitutes the content of classroom
activity offers ample opportunities for experimenting with liberatory
autonomy. Teachers can promote meaningful liberatory autonomy in the
language classroom by
. encouraging learners to assume, with the help of their teachers, the
role of miniethnographers so that they can investigate and understand
how language rules and language use are socially structured,
and also explore whose interests these rules serve
. asking learners to write diaries or journal entries about issues that
directly engage their sense of who they are and how they relate to the
social world, and continually re� ect on their observations and the
observations of their peers
548 TESOL QUARTERLY
. helping them form learning communities where learners develop
into uni. ed, socially cohesive, mutually supportive groups seeking
self-awareness and self-improvement
. providing opportunities for learners to explore the unlimited possibilities
offered by on-line services on the World Wide Web and
bringing back to the class their own topics for discussion and their
own perspectives on those topics
The suggestions sketched above, and several others that are implicit in
the professional literature, can easily be modi. ed and made more
relevant to suit the instructional aims/activities and institutional constraints/
resources of various learning/teaching contexts. They may be
treated as foundations for promoting a full range of academic, social,
and liberatory autonomy for the bene. t of the learner. Taken together,
these three aspects of autonomy promise the development of the overall
academic ability, intellectual competence, social consciousness, and
mental attitude necessary for learners to avail themselves of opportunities
and overcome challenges both in and outside the classroom. Clearly,
learners working alone cannot attain such a far-reaching goal; they need
the willing cooperation of all others who directly or indirectly shape their
educational endeavor, particularly that of their teachers. Autonomous
learners deserve autonomous teachers.
The Postmethod Teacher
The postmethod teacher, like the postmethod learner, is an autonomous
individual. Teacher autonomy in this context entails a reasonable
degree of competence and con.dence on the part of teachers to want to
build and implement their own theory of practice that is responsive to
the particularities of their educational contexts and receptive to the
possibilities of their sociopolitical conditions. Such competence and
con. dence can evolve only if teachers have the desire and the determination
to acquire and assert a fair degree of autonomy in pedagogic
decision making. Teacher autonomy is so central that it can be seen as
de.ning the heart of postmethod pedagogy.
Teacher autonomy is shaped by a professional and personal knowledge
base that has evolved through formal and informal channels of
educational experience. In the . eld of L2 education, most teachers
enter into the realm of professional knowledge by and large through a
“methods” package. That is, they learn that the supposedly objective
knowledge of language learning and teaching has been inextricably
linked to a particular method, which, in turn, is linked to a particular
school of thought in psychology, linguistics, and other related disciTOWARD
A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 549
plines. When they begin to teach, however, they quickly recognize the
need to break away from such a constraining concept of method. In
order to do that, they have to rely increasingly on their personal
knowledge of learning and teaching. Personal knowledge “does not
simply entail behavioral knowledge of how to do particular things in the
classroom; it involves a cognitive dimension that links thought with
activity, centering on the context-embedded, interpretive process of
knowing what to do” (Freeman, 1996, p. 99). It does not develop
instantly before one’s peering eyes, as a . lm develops in an instant
camera. It evolves over time, through determined effort. Under these
circumstances, it is evident that teachers can become autonomous only
to the extent they are willing and able to embark on a continual process
of self-development.
There has recently been a systematic effort to investigate the complex
process of teacher knowledge during and after formal teacher education.
It is a sign of the times that the TESOL profession has bene. ted
from the publication in the course of a single calendar year of . ve useful
volumes on issues related to teacher knowledge. In a signi. cant contribution,
Woods (1996) explores how teachers interpret and evaluate the
events, activities, and interactions that occur in the teaching process, and
how these interpretations and evaluations feed back into teachers’
subsequent planning, thereby enriching their teaching performance and
enhancing their intellectual competence. Whereas the volume edited by
Freeman and Richards (1996) unfolds the thinking and learning processes
teachers employ as they learn to teach, the one edited by Bailey
and Nunan (1996) brings out the teachers’ voices, which have been
rarely articulated or heard before. In another edited volume, Nunan and
Lamb (1996) attempt to help teachers become self-directed individuals
in order to take effective control of the teaching and learning processes
in their classrooms. Finally, van Lier (1996) offers a framework for
pedagogical interaction in terms of teachers’ awareness, autonomy, and
authenticity.
Although it is highly satisfying to see this robust beginning to the
effort to understand teachers’ articulated encounters with certain aspects
of particularity and practicality, teachers must be encouraged and
empowered to embrace aspects of possibility as well. Otherwise, teacher
self-development will remain sociopolitically naive. Such naiveté commonly
occurs, as Hargreaves (1994) wisely warns,
when teachers are encouraged to re� ect on their personal biographies
without also connecting them to broader histories of which they are a part; or
when they are asked to re� ect on their personal images of teaching and
learning without also theorizing the conditions which gave rise to those
images and the consequences which follow from them. (p. 74)
550 TESOL QUARTERLY
He goes on to argue, quite rightly, that when divorced from its surrounding
social and political contexts, teachers’ personal knowledge can
quickly turn into “parochial knowledge” (p. 74).
In light of the above discussion, it is reasonable to ask questions such
as these: How do postmethod teachers pursue professional development
involving the triple pedagogic parameters of particularity, practicality,
and possibility? How do they theorize from practice and practice what
they theorize? One possible answer is that they do so through teacher
research. Teacher research is initiated and implemented by practicing
teachers motivated mainly by their own desire to self-explore and
self-improve.
Contrary to a common misconception, doing teacher research does
not necessarily involve highly sophisticated, statistically laden, variablecontrolled
experimental studies, for which practicing teachers have
neither the time nor the energy. Rather, it involves keeping one’s eyes,
ears, and mind open in the classroom to see what works and what does
not, with what group(s) of learners, and for what reason, and assessing
what changes are necessary to make instruction achieve its desired goals.
Teachers can conduct teacher research by developing and using investigative
capabilities derived from the practices of exploratory research
(Allwright, 1993), teacher research cycle (Freeman, 1998), and critical
classroom observation (Kumaravadivelu, 1999a, 1999b). More speci. cally,
teachers can begin their inquiry by
. using investigative methods such as questionnaires, surveys, and
interviews to gather learner pro. les that include information about
learning strategies and styles, personal identities and investments,
psychological attitudes and anxieties, and sociopolitical concerns
and con� icts
. identifying researchable questions that emerge from learner pro. les
and classroom observation—questions of interest to learners, teachers,
or both that range from classroom management to pedagogic
pointers to sociopolitical problems
. clustering the identi. ed researchable questions in terms of themes
and patterns, and deciding which ones can be explored individually
and which ones collectively with learners, peers, or both
. exploring which of the resources learners bring with them can be
pro. tably exploited for learning, teaching, and research purposes,
including learners’ sociocultural and linguistic knowledge (e.g.,
exploring how often and under what conditions the much-ignored
and much-neglected common L1 can be used as an effective means
of learning and teaching even though the mandated methods and
materials might proscribe its use)
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 551
. .nding out to what extent, in carrying out their investigative
activities, they can engage in an electronic, Internet-based dialogue
with local and distant peers and scholars who may have similar
concerns and get useful feedback on their problems and projects
. developing interpretive strategies to observe, analyze, and evaluate
their own teaching acts by using a suitable classroom observation
framework that is based on a recognition of the potential mismatch
between teacher intention and learner interpretation
. determining what basic assumptions about language, learning, and
teaching are implied in their original pedagogic formulations, what
existing assumptions need to be modi. ed in light of research
.ndings, and what changes in pedagogic formulations are warranted
by such modi. cations
As these suggestions imply, the goal of teacher research and teacher
autonomy is “not the easy reproduction of any ready-made package of
knowledge but, rather, the continued recreation of personal meaning”
(Diamond, 1993, p. 59). Teachers create and re-create personal meaning
when they exploit and extend their intuitively held pedagogic beliefs
based on their educational histories and personal biographies by conducting
more structured and more goal-oriented teacher research based
on the parameters of particularity, practicality, and possibility. Most such
teacher research is doable if, as far as possible, it is not separate from but
is fully integrated with day-to-day teaching and learning. As Allwright
(1993) convincingly argues, language teachers and learners are in a
privileged position to use class time for investigative purposes as long as
the activities are done through the medium of the target language being
taught and learned.
The exploratory activities listed above are no more than a general
road map to help teachers pursue self-autonomy and self-development.
What speci. c route they have to follow, what treacherous curves they
have to negotiate, what institutional speed bumps they have to surmount,
and what unexpected detours they have to take will all depend on the
“road conditions” they encounter in their day-to-day teaching. But their
journey will undoubtedly become less onerous and more joyous if
teacher educators can pave the way by laying a strong and stable
foundation through their teacher education programs.
The Postmethod Teacher Educator
As is well known by now, most models of teacher education are
designed to transmit a set of preselected and presequenced body of
knowledge from the teacher educator to the prospective teacher. In this
552 TESOL QUARTERLY
essentially top-down approach, teacher educators perceive their role to
be one of engineering the classroom teaching of student teachers,
offering them suggestions on the best way to teach, modeling appropriate
teaching behaviors for them, and evaluating their mastery of discrete
pedagogic behaviors. Such a transmission model of teacher education is
hopelessly inadequate to produce self-directing and self-determining
teachers who constitute the backbone of any postmethod pedagogy.
What is needed, then, is a fundamental restructuring of teacher
education so that it focuses as much on the teacher part of teacher
education as on the education part of it. One way to accomplish this
restructuring is to recognize that prospective teachers embarking on
formal teacher education programs bring with them their notion of what
constitutes good teaching and what does not, largely based on their prior
educational experience as learners and, in some cases, as teachers. Their
minds are anything but atheoretical clean slates. It is therefore important
to recognize their voices and their visions.
Recognizing prospective teachers’ voices and visions means legitimizing
their knowledge and experience and incorporating them as an
important part of the dialogue between teacher educators and prospective
teachers. In other words, the interaction between the teacher
educator and the prospective teacher should become dialogic in the
Bakhtinian sense (Kumaravadivelu & Bean, 1995). Dialogic discourse
facilitates an interaction between meanings, between belief systems, an
interaction that produces what Bakhtin (1981) calls a responsive understanding.
In such a dialogic enterprise, the primary responsibility of the
teacher educator is not to provide the teacher with a borrowed voice,
however enlightened it may be, but to provide opportunities for the
dialogic construction of meaning out of which an identity or voice may
emerge. Teacher education must therefore be conceived of not as the
experience and interpretation of a predetermined, prescribed pedagogic
practice but rather as an ongoing, dialogically constructed entity involving
two or more critically re� ective interlocutors. When, through a series
of dialogic interactions, channels of communication between teacher
educators and prospective teachers open up, when prospective teachers
actively and freely use the linguistic, cultural, and pedagogic capital they
bring with them, and when teacher educators use the student teacher’s
values, beliefs, and knowledge as an integral part of the learning process,
then the entire process of teacher education becomes re� ective and
rewarding.
A postmethod teacher education program must take into account the
importance of recognizing teachers’ voices and visions, the imperatives
of developing their critical capabilities, and the prudence of achieving
both of these through a dialogic construction of meaning. In practical
terms, the role of the postmethod teacher educator becomes one of
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 553
. recognizing, and helping student teachers recognize, the inequalities
built into the current teacher education programs that treat
teacher educators as producers of knowledge and practicing teachers
as consumers of knowledge
. enabling prospective teachers to articulate their voices and visions in
an electronic journal in which they record and share with other
student teachers in class their evolving personal beliefs, assumptions,
and knowledge about language learning and teaching at the beginning,
during, and at the end of certain courses in their teacher
education program
. encouraging prospective teachers to think critically so that they may
relate their personal knowledge to the professional knowledge they
are being exposed to, monitor how each shapes and is shaped by the
other, assess how the generic professional knowledge could be
modi. ed to suit particular pedagogic needs and wants, and ultimately
derive their own personal theory of practice
. creating conditions for prospective teachers to acquire basic skills in
classroom discourse analysis that will help them hypothesize pedagogic
principles from their classroom practice and thereby demystify the
process of theory construction
. rechanneling part of their own research agenda to do what Cameron,
Frazer, Harvey, Rampton, and Richardson (1993) call empowering
research, that is, research with rather than on their teacher learners . exposing prospective teachers to a pedagogy of possibility by helping
them critically engage authors such as Phillipson (1992), Pennycook
(1994), Tollefson (1995), and Canagarajah (1999), who have raised
the . eld’s consciousness about the power and politics, ideologies,
and inequalities that inform L2 education around the world
. whenever and wherever chances arise, connecting the generic professional
knowledge base available in the professional literature
directly and explicitly to the particularities of learning/teaching
contexts that prospective teachers are familiar with or the ones in
which they plan to work after graduation, thereby pointing out both
the strengths and the weaknesses of the professional knowledge base
These suggestions portend that current teacher education programs, if
they are to produce self-directing and self-determining teachers, require
a fundamental restructuring that transforms an information-oriented
system into an inquiry-oriented one. Underlying the concept of academic
inquiry is pedagogic exploration.
554 TESOL QUARTERLY
Postmethod Practitioners as Pedagogic Explorers
Pedagogic exploration is an integral part of postmethod pedagogy.
Contrary to the commonly held view that research belongs to the
domain of the researcher, postmethod pedagogy considers research as
belonging to the multiple domains of learners, teachers, and teacher
educators alike. These participants, engaged in the joint accomplishment
of learning/teaching operations, ought to be engaged in pedagogic
exploration either individually or collaboratively.
Such a formulation of pedagogic exploration opens up concerns
about objectivity and generalizability. Objectivity relates to the concern
that pedagogic explorers may not have adequate research skills and that
therefore their research projects may not turn out to be reliable, valid, or
generalizable. As Burton (1988) rightly points out, “the most carefully
designed experiment re� ects the bias and values of the experimenter.
Someone had to decide what questions to include and exclude on a survey
or what variable to isolate and attend to during an experimental study”
(p. 766). Research in social sciences and humanities can hardly be
absolutely objective. In fact, philosophers of science such as Feyerabend
(1975) would argue that there is no absolute objectivity even in scienti. c
research.
The question of generalizability becomes problematic only if it is
approached in its traditional sense of a centralized pedagogic project
having implications for a wider sphere of pedagogic activity. As a
reviewer of this article pointed out, it is even inappropriate to talk about
generalizability in the context of a postmethod pedagogy. Instead, the
reviewer suggested the term particularizability because, in a postmethod
pedagogy, any exploration is by de. nition context speci. c and has the
capacity, if carried out properly, to produce situated scenarios that are
ever-changing and ever-evolving. Besides, as Allwright (1993) maintains,
a project that concentrates on locally important research questions can
produce individual understandings, and there is “no reason in principle
why individual understandings should be incapable of being brought
together towards some sort of overall synthesis” (p. 127).
The dif. cult task facing pedagogic explorers is how to get ready for
the kind of research they would like to engage in. All pedagogic
explorers, like all informed and inquisitive human beings, do research in
a casual way—observing what they do, re� ecting on why they do what
they do, monitoring its intended and unintended effects, and then
modifying their behavior in light of lessons learned. This informal
research ability has to be made into a more systematic and sustained
activity. Evidently, pedagogic researchers can achieve this in at least two
ways: by developing, either through a formal teacher education program
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 555
or through self-study, the knowledge and skill necessary to do teacher
research in general (see Freeman, 1998) and classroom discourse
analysis in particular (see van Lier 1996; Kumaravadivelu, 1999b); and by
collaborating with senior and more experienced colleagues and learning
the required skills on the job (see Nunan, 1992).
A postmethod pedagogy, like any other innovative practice, imposes
an extraordinary degree of responsibility on all the participants, particularly
the teacher and the teacher educator. Problematizing such a
pedagogy will identify some broad concerns that may arise.
PROBLEMATIZING POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY
In any educational reform, teachers and teacher educators constitute
pivotal change agents. As Kennedy (1999) observes, when teachers wish
to change, they have to change not only their methods and materials but
also their attitudes and beliefs. Teacher educators function as external
change agents whose job is not so much to change the teachers directly
but to create the conditions necessary for change. The challenge of
change, therefore, is chie� y borne by teachers and teacher educators.
According to Diamond (1993), the primary challenge for teachers “is to
form and reform their own pedagogical theories and relationships” (p.
42), and the primary challenge for teacher educators “is to help teachers
to see themselves capable of imagining and trying alternatives—and
eventually as self-directing and self-determining” (p. 52). The essentials
of a postmethod pedagogy demand that both teachers and teacher
educators successfully meet their primary challenges.
Such a demand raises several questions and concerns, some of which
I list below. These questions, and others that perceptive readers may
come up with, are indicative of the problematic nature of any pedagogic
innovation, more so of one that has the potential, if taken seriously and
tried sincerely, to transform the content and character of everyday
practice of teaching.
. If a meaningful postmethod pedagogy requires a holistic interpretation
of pedagogic particularities, how can appropriate interpretative
strategies be identi. ed and made available to postmethod
practitioners?
. If pedagogic particularity is at once a goal and a process, in what ways
can postmethod practitioners be helped to monitor what they do in
the classroom and how it affects learning outcomes?
. If context-sensitive pedagogic knowledge has to emerge from teachers
and their practice of everyday teaching, and if they have to be
556 TESOL QUARTERLY
provided with the tools necessary to construct such knowledge, what
exactly are the characteristics of such tools?
. If postmethod practitioners have to learn to cope with competing
pulls and pressures representing their professional preparation,
their personal beliefs, institutional constraints, learner needs and
wants, and so on, how can appropriate coping strategies be identi. ed
and made available to them?
. If a pedagogy of possibility is concerned with postmethod practitioners’
sensitivity to the broader social, economic, and political environment
in which they work, to what extent can teacher preparation
programs create such a sensitivity among student teachers?
. If a pedagogy of possibility is also concerned with the individual and
group identity of learners in the classroom, what concrete steps can
postmethod practitioners take to maintain such identity and at the
same time promote the group coherence that is so vital for the
accomplishment of pedagogic purposes?
. If postmethod learners have to be autonomous in the academic,
social, and liberatory sense, how can they be helped to maximize,
monitor, and manage their autonomy for the individual as well as the
collective good?
. If a postmethod pedagogy requires that teachers be given a fair
amount of freedom and � exibility to make their own pedagogic
decisions, what speci. c demands does such a requirement make on
individuals and institutions, and what can be done to help these
individuals and institutions meet the challenge of change?
. If teacher research has to extend its domain to include sociopolitical
factors that shape classroom aims and activities, what potential
theoretical and practical problems are associated with such a research
agenda?
. If postmethod learners, teachers, and teacher educators all have
active roles to play in the implementation of a postmethod pedagogy,
in what ways can these participants collaborate, and how can their
differential and possibly con� icting goals be reconciled for the
bene. t of all?
. If postmethod pedagogy requires meaningful collaboration and
cooperation among learners, teachers, and teacher educators, how
can L2 professionals identify gaps and biases in their beliefs and
assumptions, and in their intentions and interpretations, and how do
we reduce those gaps and biases once they are identi. ed?
Clearly, these questions defy simple answers. In fact, answers to questions
like these will vary from context to context and from time to time. In that
sense, a postmethod pedagogy will always remain a work in progress.
TOWARD A POSTMETHOD PEDAGOGY 557
CONCLUSION AS INTRODUCTION
A work in progress hardly facilitates a conclusion. Hence, following
the true spirit of an open-ended inquiry presented here, I leave the
reader with more food for thought.
The greatest challenge the emerging postmethod pedagogy imposes
on the professional community today is to rethink and recast its choice of
the organizing principle for language learning, teaching, and teacher
education. The concept of method has long been the preferred choice.
We as L2 professionals have operated all along with the basic assumption
that that path is the only one open to us. We have tinkered with the
concept of method now and then but have never given up on the
concept itself. It has had a magical hold on us. It has guided the form
and function of every conceivable component of L2 pedagogy, including
curriculum design, syllabus speci. cations, materials preparation, instructional
strategies, and testing techniques. That a rickety pedagogic
pedestal constructed on the shifting sands of the concept of method has
stood solidly for such a long time is a re� ection more of its magic than of
its merit.
In the search for an alternative organizing principle, the pedagogic
parameters of particularity, practicality, and possibility deserve serious
consideration. I believe that these parameters have the potential to offer
the necessary conceptualization and contextualization based on the
educational, cultural, social, and political imperatives of language learning,
teaching, and teacher education. In addition, they offer a pattern
that connects the roles of learners, teachers, and teacher educators,
promising a relationship that is symbiotic and a result that is synergistic.
The choice of the pedagogic parameters as an organizing principle
opens up unlimited opportunities for the emergence of postmethod
pedagogies that can truly serve the interests of those they are supposed
to serve.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I thank Carol Chapelle and the TESOL Quarterly reviewers for their insightful
comments and suggestions. I am solely responsible for any remaining errors and
omissions.
THE AUTHOR
B. Kumaravadivelu is a professor of applied linguistics and TESOL at San José State
University, where he teaches graduate courses in TESOL. He has published extensively
on L2 learning, teaching, and teacher education in TESOL Quarterly, Modern
Language Journal, ELT Journal, International Review of Applied Linguistics, and Applied
Language Learning.
558 TESOL QUARTERLY
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