be regarded as a set of micro contexts generated by a
teacher and students during a set of interactions.
Most of the analyzed Russian works are dedicated
to the problem of developing and evaluating job
significant competences of prospective foreign
language teachers, among which are the following
groups: professional-communicative competence,
methodical competence, and Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) competence.
E. N. Solovova (2004) introduces the concept of
professional-communicative competence and
considers it as a component of communicative
competence of foreign-language teachers, alongside
with language, speech, social and cultural ones in the
light of emphasis on communicative tasks that are to
be solved by a teacher in the process of professional
activities
(Solovova, 2004). A. A. Korenev, A. M.
Mikhailova (2019) go further in research of
professional and communicative competence from
the viewpoint of teachers’ professional context and
expand this concept by including the following as
components: using language in the classroom (in
particular, interactive communicative sub-
competence as its integral part), profession-wide
socio-cultural communication aspects, and
extracurricular communicative tasks (Korenev and
Mikhailova, 2019). Professional-communicative
competence from the authors viewpoint is considered
as a pack of communicative, discourse, social,
pragmatic and socio-cultural skills enabling a teacher
to effectively interact with students and create the
atmosphere during classes that best supports
promotion of students’ active speech behavior
(Korenev and Moiseeva, 2015). A model of
interactive professional-communicative teacher’s
competence in the classroom is proposed, which
includes three constituents: the linguistic aspect
(language competence), the content component
(methodology skills), and the interactive component
(interaction skills with students) (Korenev and
Mikhailova, 2019). Key principles for the
development of these skills are as follows: situational
context, communicative orientation, step-by-step
approach and common didactic principle to link
teaching with life. Among teaching techniques there
were highlighted interactive technologies,
cooperative teaching, and project technologies. The
development of professional and communicative
competence of prospective foreign-language teacher
is to be implemented as foreign speech practicing
courses, where a number of certain exercises are
recommended to perform as well as to conduct
teaching methods’ courses in foreign language and to
include them into practical training programs
(Korenev and Mikhailova, 2019).
The second group of investigated competences is
methodical competence, which is regarded as the core
of pedagogical and training activities of a foreign-
language teacher and is defined by the authors as
follows:
a teacher’s skills related to teaching foreign
language and culture (Koryakovtseva, 2018);
the integrative property of a foreign-language
teacher’s personality, which determines her/his
readiness and ability to effectively solve
teaching problems (Yazykova and Makeeva,
2012);
the ability and readiness for project
development and implementation of teaching
process as foreign-language interpersonal and
cross-cultural communication, as well as
reflexive activities (Lubotinsky, 2014).
The structure of methodical competence is
considered by academic methodologists differently:
based on subject-matter of methodical
competence as a process of solving dominant
types of teaching tasks, taking into account the
stages of their solution and the roles performed
by a teacher and the relevant sub competences,
methodical competence includes: (1) goal-
setting stage (teacher-researcher, teacher-
technologist, solves gnostic, and constructive
tasks): gnostic, project development,
constructive technology, information
technology competences; (2) goal-attaining
stage (practicing teacher solves organizational,
communicative educational tasks): gnostic,
constructive, communicative organizational,
communicative teaching, correctional gnostic
competences; (3) goal-ascertaining stage (the
teacher-researcher solves gnostic and
constructive tasks): reflexive-gnostic
competences (Yazykova and Makeeva, 2012);
as methodical competence is of holistic nature
then it comprises technological readiness,
value orientations of a prospective teacher,
readiness for creative self-actualization in
pedagogical activity, the ability to analyze and
critically evaluate her/his own teaching
activities (Kozhukhov, 2008).
The foreign language teacher’s ICT competence
is considered as a five-component structure including
(1) value-motivational component: teacher’s
awareness of needs and interest and motivation
formation to use ICT in their professional activities,