I don't know if you've come across the British Council site yet but it has some great ideas on it. This is a useful grammar guide although you would probably need to look at the language in more depth.
Guide
Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Keeping your learners interested
If you have 15 minutes to spare, you might want to look at this video/podcast on how to keep your learners interested. It's based on a talk given by Penny Ur who wrote 'A course in English Language Teaching'
Click here
I hope that you feel a bit more confident about being in the classroom and are willing to experiment in your approach. Think about the following:
a) Give the learners meaningful practice - beyond the gap fill! How you can encourage the learners to collaborate with each other? For example, if you want the learners to ask each other questions, do they have to have the same questions? Can you divide up tasks so that learners ask each other different questions, perhaps to complete a questionnaire or a table?
b) Personalise the language (Jo Gakonga mentions this). Individuals like to relate language to their own lives so ensure the learners have opportunities to talk about their own lives.
c) Vary your approach. Avoid lots of PowerPoint slides with lots of text on them. You will need to provide the learners with input but there should be a balance between teacher talking time and student talking time.
d) Think about warmers that 'sparkle' - that get the learners interested.
I hope that you feel a bit more confident about being in the classroom and are willing to experiment in your approach. Think about the following:
a) Give the learners meaningful practice - beyond the gap fill! How you can encourage the learners to collaborate with each other? For example, if you want the learners to ask each other questions, do they have to have the same questions? Can you divide up tasks so that learners ask each other different questions, perhaps to complete a questionnaire or a table?
b) Personalise the language (Jo Gakonga mentions this). Individuals like to relate language to their own lives so ensure the learners have opportunities to talk about their own lives.
c) Vary your approach. Avoid lots of PowerPoint slides with lots of text on them. You will need to provide the learners with input but there should be a balance between teacher talking time and student talking time.
d) Think about warmers that 'sparkle' - that get the learners interested.
Saturday, 26 April 2014
Review of key terms
We're halfway through the course so here's a quiz to check your knowledge of 15 key terms. There are 5 types of quizzes you can try:
Click here
Tuesday, 15 April 2014
The inductive approach
This is a summary of how to use an inductive approach to teach grammar. What do you think are the pros and cons of such an approach?
Wednesday, 19 March 2014
Assignment 4: Lessons from the classroom
Assignment 4 is all about reflecting on your progress, how you propose to work on your action points and how you will continue learning after the course.
Please read through the assignment brief to make sure you are clear on everything; I have summarised it in the audio below.
Monday, 17 March 2014
Pronunciation activities
For those interested in integrating phonology in your lessons (and in the future, hopefully), this is a useful summary of some top pronunciation activities:
Click here
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