Role of Grammar — A Critical View
Modern language pedagogy, and CTET with it, takes a critical view of grammar. Grammar is not the goal of language learning; it is a tool that helps a learner communicate accurately. The mistake the syllabus warns against is teaching grammar as a set of isolated rules to be memorised and reproduced, the child who can recite the definition of a noun but cannot use language naturally has missed the point. The recommended approach is grammar in context: rules are noticed and absorbed through meaningful use of language, in stories, conversation and the child's own writing, rather than drilled in the abstract. This often means an inductive approach, where learners meet many examples first and work out the pattern, rather than a deductive 'rule-first' lecture. Formal grammar terminology has limited value for young children; what matters is that they use correct structures fluently. So when CTET describes a teacher who drills grammar rules in isolation, the expected critique is that grammar should serve communication and be taught through use, not as an end in itself.
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Acquisition vs learning, and the four skills
| Acquisition | Natural, subconscious pick-up through meaningful exposure (Krashen) |
|---|---|
| Learning | Conscious, formal study of rules in a classroom |
| Receptive skills | Listening and Reading (taking language IN) |
| Productive skills | Speaking and Writing (putting language OUT) |
Core pedagogic principles
| Meaningful & contextual | Teach language in real situations, not isolated words |
|---|---|
| Known to unknown | Build new language on what the child already knows |
| Grammar in context | Grammar is a tool for communication, not an end in itself |
| Errors as learning | Mistakes show the rules a child is testing, not just faults |