TEACHING GRAMMAR IN THE POST  COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH ERA 
D I A N A B A U D U C C O 
 Grammar. To teach or not to teach? This  has been the question that language teachers  have asked themselves for ages. It has been  a matter of debate for teachers, linguists and  second language acquisition experts. 
 Historically, language teaching approaches  and methods have moved from one extreme  of the spectrum to another as regards the  explicit teaching of grammar. Long before our  times, grammar was at the centre of language  teaching, as it was believed that the study of  the grammar of X‟s language was the best  way to its mastery. So, from medieval times  till around the 1970s, the fixation of language  teaching on the study and description of  structures manifested in approaches such as  the Grammar Translation and the Audio  Lingual method, with short interludes of the  other approaches such as the Direct Method,  Total Physical Response and the Silent way  which although claiming to differ still based  their syllabus on grammar points. 
 From the Grammar-dominated end of the  spectrum, we moved to the Absolutely-noGrammar end. Grammar based approaches  proved inadequate in that students were  unable to communicate outside the  classroom. Based mainly on Hymes‟  “communicative competence” and Krashen‟s  models of language acquisition, the  Communicative Approach emerged as the  meaning-focused alternative to the formfocused approaches of the past. Strong  versions of the approach emphasized the  teaching of functions and absolutely  discouraged the teaching of grammar structures arguing that communication – and  not language description- was the aim of  language teaching. 
 However, the studies of the last 30 years  have proved that the lack of grammar  instruction has not encouraged language  acquisition. On the contrary, more recent  studies show that grammar instruction and  explicit knowledge of the target language do  have positive effects on language acquisition.  So, how should we approach the teaching of  Grammar in the Post- CommunicativeApproach Era? 
Source: https://www.eflmagazine.com/teachinggrammar-post-communicative-approach-era/ Accessed  on 17/06/2018