วันอาทิตย์ที่ 10 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2556
Games
Teaching English Games
Make learning FUN!
As teachers how do we better educate our pupils so that they;
think for themselves
fly through their exams
have confidence speaking their second language, as well as being able to read and write in it?
With these ideas for teaching English games you can transform your classes and achieve all this because the communication games are designed to allow everyone plenty of opportunity to practise speaking, without neglecting spelling, reading and writing.
In fact most of the games can also be played to specifically ENHANCE these skills. There are also spelling games, writing games and English composition games.
So if you have come to this page because you are looking for ways to improve the effectiveness of your teaching and to make your classes more fun, then you have come to the right place because you can achieve those worthwhile goals right here.
Stimulate your pupils so they look forward to your class
On this page you will find out:
Why teaching vocabulary through the use of games works better than traditional teaching methods
How much fun your classes can be
How to multiply the talking time of your class exponentially
How to give your students a real chance at speaking the language while engaging them in the class at the same time
How to create a positive learning environment
How to be an even more effective teacher by using ideas for teaching English games
You will also discover new ways to:
Encourage even those who are always at the bottom of the class
Motivate your students more
Improve your pupils' grades
Save preparation time
Successfully handle mixed ability situations in class
Enjoy yourself more in class
Thanks for : http://www.teachingenglishgames.com/4-12.htm
Story telling
Story telling: the language teacher's oldest technique
Submitted by Mario Rinvolucri on 19 November, 2008 - 09:09
In this article Mario Rinvolucri explores a range of story telling techniques that he uses in the classroom and gives some insights into why these techniques are effective. You can read the whole text or click on the links below to find out about an individual technique:
Why story telling
Can I open this article by asking you about listening to stories in your own experience? When you were small:
Where did you tend to listen to stories?
What time of day was it, typically?
Who told you or read you stories?
How did you react to the stories?
The point of these questions and the answers you have given them in your mind is for you to realise how you yourself relate to stories. My impression is that most people relate pretty strongly to stories experienced in early childhood. Let me tell you an anecdote that illustrates this:
I was teaching a micro-group of three or four business men. They were all at elementary level. My boss at the time was quite firm with me 'none of those childish stories of yours with this group… we don’t want them all going home in disgust.'
For a couple of weeks I heeded his words and then decided that the best possible way to teach the past tense was the story of Little Red Riding Hood.
I was well into the story, at the point where the wolf is about to eat the little girl up, [ What big teeth you’ve got granny!] when the Italian marketing manager, a man in his early 30s, shouted: 'Fermati!' ( 'Stop!')
I asked why he’d interrupted me and he said that this was the point at which his three year old daughter always begged him to stop the story. She could not bear the next bit!
Can you think of a more powerful way of teaching this guy English than with a text that had him living two roles, that of himself as a child and that of himself as a parent? The power of the story lies, of course, in the text but also, and centrally, in the relationship between the teller and the students.
My claim is that story telling is a uniquely powerful linguistic and psychological technique in the hands of a language teacher which s/he can use with people of any culture (though the story needs to be culturally appropriate) and with people of virtually any age.
The power of story telling lies in the fact that the teacher is in direct communication with the class, she is not dealing with 'third person' text, by telling a story she makes it her own. The Italian marketing manager was reacting to the girl and wolf story as told by Mario and, simultaneously, to his own telling to his little daughter.
Mixed language telling
There are, of course, many different ways of telling a story to a group. One of the most powerful ways with a group of beginners is to tell the story in the way that follows: (In this case the target language is Modern Greek):
There was this man and he seemed very agitated. This andras, this guy, he went round and round the kipo behind his house (kipo is a garden) looking for something. The andras got down on his hands and knees and started scrabbling around in the border underneath the traiandafila, the roses.
Now the wife of the andra, his yineka, happened to be in one of the upstairs rooms of the house. The yineka looked out through the bedroom parathiro and saw her andra searching for something in the border under the traiandafila.
She asked him what he was doing. 'I’m looking for my house keys' her andras shouted.
back.
'Did you lose your house klidia down there in the kipo, in the border under the traiandafila?'
'No' said her andras, 'I didn’t lose my klidia here under the traiandafila, but the light is so much better here!'
I hope the text construction was logical enough for you to understand all the Greek words without having to strain too much. Bi-lingual stories of this sort are magic with small kids and people at this stage of linguistic brilliance (3-8) lap up and ‘interiorize’ the new language without realizing what is happening in their minds. When the story has been told half a dozen times with more and more target language words being used in each telling the whole story is told in the target language and the learners have the giddying sensation that they have understood everything.
Multi-voice storytelling
A technique I really enjoy is telling a story with the help of the listeners. Let me show you how this goes:
I ask a couple of learners to sit either side of me and a bit back from me, all three of us facing the class group. I then start the telling like this:
This story is about three people who lived in a village in Vietnam. It was a small village and it had a big river... I simply don’t remember what the river was like and where it ran… [turning to one of the helpers] Do you have a better memory than me? Can you describe it?
Both helpers have a go at positioning the river in the village.
I then carry on telling the story. Five or six times I stop and get the helpers to enrich the telling with their descriptions. I am careful to retain the plot in my own hands until very near the end. I then ask all the students to write down the ending that they imagine.
They read their endings to each other and I will finally also give them my ending. Told in this way, the story belongs much more securely to the group than if I tell the tale on my own.
Sandwich story creative writing technique
Let me now offer you a creative writing version of the above technique that uses a story from Papua New Guinea. (I learnt this story from the Exeter story-teller, David Heathfield.)
Example:
Dictate to your class these first lines of a story:
'Do you know why dogs in Papua New Guinea always sniff each other’s tails when they meet? Well, you’ll soon find out. Long long ago all the dogs on the island came to the hilltop for a meeting.'
Then ask them to please describe all the different kinds of dogs which came to the meeting place. Give the students time to write about the dogs. Then ask them to please write what you dictate and say the next sentence:
'The meeting place was a huge hall at the top of a hill.'
Then ask them to describe the sort of building they imagine and give them a few moments to write their description. Then once again dictate the next part of the story:
'Before the dogs arrived the place had been very, very quiet.'
Ask the students to describe what it sounded like with more than 1000 dogs all moving around. Give them time to write and then continue dictating the story.
'Before they went into the great hall all the dogs had to go and hang their tails up in a special tail-house.'
Ask the students to explain why the dogs could not enter the great hall with their tails on. Give them time to write the explanation and then continue dictating.
'Halfway through the meeting the dogs smelt something burning. They rushed for the doors of the great hall and saw smoke billowing out of the tail-house.'
Lastly, ask the students to finish the story in any way they like.
Group the students in threes and tell them to read their text to their classmates. They read both the dictated parts and the parts they have written.
The Papua New Guinea ending is that the dogs rushed into the tail house and grabbed any tail they could find in the smoke. From that day to this all dogs have wanted to find their own tail, lost on the day of the great meeting!
This sandwich story creative writing technique is, I think, an outstanding one for the following reasons:
Half of the final text is in fully correct English, the parts dictated by the teacher
Half the text is the students’ own free invention
Psychologically the student appropriates the teacher’s part and feels it to be his own because of his own creative input
All of this boosts the student’s linguistic confidence
Two history, one fiction
Think of two incidents from your life that you
are happy to tell the class and mentally prepare to tell these as brief anecdotes. Also dream up something that might have happened to you but which did not. Prepare to tell the made-up anecdote with the same conviction as the two real life stories.
Come into class and simply invite the students to listen to three different things that happened to you some time ago.
After the telling explain that two of the anecdotes were real-life happenings while one was fiction.
Group the students into fives to decide which was the ‘imaginary’ story. Tell them they will have to justify their choice.
After a few minutes in the small groups ask students to give their views to the whole class.
Take a vote on which the made-up story was.
Students tend to really love lie-detecting especially when the teacher is the 'liar'.
source :http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/articles/story-telling-language-teachers-oldest-technique
วันอาทิตย์ที่ 3 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2556
Song
Teaching vowel sounds to kindergartners involves associating the sound to a word that begins with the vowel, reinforcing the letter with an action and teaching the short vowel sounds before the long vowel sounds. Teach the vowel letters to kindergarten-aged children with information from an early childhood teacher in this free video on education.When teaching letters to young children, take plenty of time to cover each of the five vowels. These are very important for children. Oftentimes when children begin writing they'll leave out the vowel sounds in the middle. I like to call these the middle mystery letters. Take the time to show the children the sounds that each of the vowels make. I like to refer back to the classic letter people when I use the vowel sounds. When I practice A I always have my children make an A with their hands like they're sneezing, and we always say Ahhh-choo, so they learn that Ahhh sound belongs with A. When learning the letter E we like to pretend that we're exercising so the key - the children always go Eh, eh, exercise as they're learning that E says eh. I is one of my favorite letters to teach because the children have a lot of fun. We always teach children that I says "i" and we always go itchy, itchy, i-i-i, as if we're scratching all over our bodies. When we practice the letter O I always tell children that it's the sound that you make at the doctor's office, you always open up and say Ohhhh, and you can say that your mouth makes an O, so when they say the word mop, their mouth is in the shape of an O. The last vowel that you'll want to teach them is the letter U and we always pretend we're putting uh, uh, up our umbrella. So that uh, uh, uh will constantly be reinforced. It's best to teach the children the short vowel sounds first. These are the ones that they'll use more commonly in their three letter words that they'll learn. After the children have mastered their short vowel sounds, then you'll want to take the time to introduce the long vowel sounds. Tell the children that the vowels say their name when it's in a long vowel, this is the difference between being at and rake. Teach the children that the vowels can say either short or long and they'll have to use other visual clues to help them. When they're ready you may even choose to introduce the concept of a silent E that often makes the letter say its name. But again, begin with the short vowel sounds, they're easiest for the kiddos to master at first.
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