2016年1月27日 星期三

【運用Speaking aids 幫助學生開口說英語】


Reference:  http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/speaking-aids?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=bc-teachingenglish


Speaking aids - speaking article

Probably you agree that these little things make a lot of difference and it is with good reason why people spend time, money and energy to get the right small objects to help them put themselves and their loved ones into the right mood.
  • Why use speaking aids
  • Post-it notes
  • Walls
  • Coloured paper
  • Small objects
    • To control turn-taking
    • As metaphors
  • Conclusion
Why use speaking aids
In contrast, we often expect that our students have the right mood to speak without having anything that would help them to be in the right mood to speak, or any prompt that would help the flow of ideas. These small prompts or small speaking aids get especially important when children get into the age when they want to speak about themselves more than e.g. about the little animals or fairies in a tale. In this article, I will give you some ideas what little objects to use and how to use them so that students aged 12 upwards find speaking easier and less stressful.
Post-it notes
Post-it notes are great conversation starters. Ask your students to put information on a post-it note each, and get them to wear it, mingle and find out about each other. What can be written on the post-it notes?
  • To practise the simple past e.g., get them to write a name, a date and a place that is important to them. These three things should come from three different stories or events in their lives.
  • To practise e.g. the Simple Present, used to, the Present Perfect or likes/dislikes, ask them to write five things, some true and some untrue about themselves on the post-it notes. When students mingle, they ask further questions to find out which are true and which are not.
Walls
Walls of your classroom can be given meanings such as:
  • Agree - disagree: Ask students to position themselves between the two walls to express their opinion on a statement e.g. ‘Playing computer games is a waste of time.' The closer they are to a wall the more they are of that opinion. First, ask students to share ideas with people near them, then put students far from each other together to talk.
  • Summer - winter /casual - elegant /men's - ladies': Say names of clothes items and ask students to position themselves between the two walls to express their opinion about the clothes, and then ask them why they are where they are.
  • Like - dislike: Say names of performers, sports, types of music, etc. as relevant in your class and ask people to comment on their position.
  • I know - I don't know: Ask a question related to your topic. A. Ask students standing nearer the ‘I know' wall to share what they know about your topic. B. Ask students standing nearer the ‘I don't know' wall to ask further questions or make a list of things they would need to know. Then put A's and B's together. Ask B's to give the answer to your initial question at the end.
Coloured paper
Coloured paper can be used as a metaphor that represents the choice of the student. Here is how you do it:
  • Lay a good selection of different coloured paper out on the floor or on a big table in the middle of the classroom so that all the colours are visible to the class. Call out a subject e.g. something you like to eat. Everyone takes a colour that corresponds to something they like to eat.
  • Give students 1 to 2 minutes to talk to each other about the subject then ask students to put the coloured paper back.
  • Change the subject and at the same time, ask students to change partners and find the colour that they associate with the new subject. Some possible subjects: clothes, food, a place I like, a holiday decoration in my house, a season, an animal, music, a good friend, a dream. It's better to go from concrete to more abstract subjects.

Original idea by Karen Sekiguchi
Small objects
Small objects such as Lego pieces, buttons, pebbles, shells, toothpicks, etc. can be used A. to control turn-taking, B. as metaphors representing other things or people.
  • To control turn-taking
    When students discuss a topic, tell a story or describe a picture in small groups, give everybody an equal number of some small objects e.g. shells or toothpicks. Their aim is to get rid of the objects as they talk. They can get rid of the objects by putting them down if - you set it depending on their fluency level - they say a complete sentence or minimum three sentences about the subject. You can do it the other way around: give groups a pile of objects and students can pick up objects when they contribute to the conversation. Here the aim is to collect as many objects as possible.
  • As metaphors
    Small objects can represent real beings, like the student's best friend or their pet. It makes it easier and more interesting to describe people and animals this way. You can also ask the student to focus on similarities and differences between the object and the person or animal.
    Buttons are easy and fun to transform into different imaginary people. Give out a good selection of different buttons. Get students to choose one and imagine what kind of person it would be, what this person would like, how they would live, what their name would be, etc. Get students to mingle and find a button friend for their button person.

    Small objects like Lego pieces can also represent periods/events in students' lives, e.g. three holidays they have had, three semesters of school or some important years. Students choose the periods/events/years first, then they choose little objects to represent them. Pairs then share.

Conclusion
Using these little, inexpensive speaking aids has the following advantages:
  • Students get prepared for talking as they are thinking about the prompt, e.g. which object to choose, what to write or where to stand. So there is thinking time with an outcome that later will help talking.
  • Students concentrate on the subject through concentrating on the prompt.
  • It is easier to start talking as these prompts communicate first, so they break the ice before the students start talking.
  • They decrease anxiety as people's attention shifts from the person who speaks to the prompt. Also, there is something to hold, to look at or to move around for.
  • Their use often results in natural groupings, e.g. students with the same or different opinions, interests and ways of thinking.
  • Their use often triggers imagination and/or brings back memory, so it helps creative expression, personalisation and originality in speaking.
  • They develop thinking skills such as forming an opinion, finding similarities and differences and using metaphors.
  • They talk to and rely on different intelligences and senses.
  • They are very flexible and easily adaptable to different levels, ages and teaching aims.

Further reading
Lindstromberg, Seth (ed.) Language Activities for Teenagers (2003) Cambridge, UK: CUP
Bonnie Tsai and Judit Fehér Creative Resources (2003) Atlanta, USA: IAL
Judit Fehér, Freelance teacher, Trainer, Materials writer

2016年1月26日 星期二

【Zaption: DIY 英語學習的影音課程, 訓練聽力& 口說的好幫手】

無意間發現一個可以幫助學生看影片學英文更有效率的網站~~
翻轉教學, 混成式學習, 或線上學習都很適合XD~~

身為英語/ 語言老師的你, 是否曾經遇到使用影片教學的困難?
要學生回家觀看影片, 不能確保學生影片學習的過程是否有效率和效果,
學生或許對影片重要的細節也容易過目即忘 (我的學生就會這樣).
有了免費的 Zaption (https://www.zaption.com/),  老師即可將Youtube 或自己拍攝的影片用來
設計各種不同種類的exercises (texts, images, questions, and discussion).  讓觀看影片的過程
變成edutainment !  學生答完所有題目後, 會得到feedback, 老師也可以藉統計資料得知學生
的回答情形!   客製化的影片還可以share 給更多人! 桌電平板電腦皆適用!

Zaption demo :  https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=14&v=SxEu112XMNw





2016年1月11日 星期一

【炸彈遊戲/ New Year Monkey BAAM Game】

[步驟]
1.分組並決定各組選數字的順序 (總共有25 個數字可以選取,選完數字後會跳出either 題目 or 炸彈,共20 道題,5 個炸彈,老師可視需求增減炸彈數量)。
2.小組組員輪流選數字和答題(可依學生舉手速度或用按鈴快慢的方式決定)。
3.答案正確者得money (我用的是poker chips,各有黃藍綠紅,每種顏色代表不同的錢幣面額,分別 ( $500, $1000, $1500, $2000),老師可視答題情況給分並加入加分題。
4.選到炸彈的學生那組得到的money 會瞬間歸零!
5.統計各組所得,贏家給獎品!

這遊戲小小改編自去年九月初師大英語系系上舉辦國中英語科補救教學研習營,中央國教輔導團Gloria莊惠如老師課程告一段落用這遊戲幫助參與研習的學弟妹和菸酒生複習補救教學相關的知識。配合2016年猴年,我把遊戲名稱直接改成New Year Monkey Buum Game,並在每張投影片加上猴子來應景,也改了一些遊戲規則和內容(當返回主數字選單的投影片要點的物件, 即超連結)。這學期修研所碩博合開的一門課,將其運用在student-led discussion上,前置作業是要同學回家先讀兩篇期刊文章的summary和名詞定義 (2.5 頁A4),並預告閱讀文章需要注意的重點(其實就是課堂討論的Discussion Questions),在課堂上直接給同學15 分鐘討論Discussion Questions (有6題),結束後直接玩這遊戲(最好的情況是先請各組針對討論問題發表看法,但時間關係,只能直接玩遊戲),20 題搶答題問題來自於Discussion Qs,老師上課和課本。整個過程(包含小組討論Discussion Questions)費時45分(但並非25 個數字都被選完,但大概有完成16題,出席的19 位同學都已是碩博士生,但這遊戲還是可以燃起他們的鬥志,並覺得緊張刺激!

[應用]
適合不用花太多時間即可作答的問題,也可以用來國高中段考總複習!可用來幫助國高中生學習單字文法句型和對話!讓學生在遊戲中學習英語!大學生和研究生也適用,只是題目內容和設計會偏向專業的知識和應用!

2016年1月10日 星期日

【錢幣製作/ Designing Your Currency】

家教底迪就讀雙語國中國一國際班的作業(其實自從他轉到雙語小學就常會有一些特別形式的作業)。這個作業是要學生設計一款錢幣,並將之畫在A4 白紙上,完成後在全班面前做大約五分鐘的口頭報告!弟弟很可愛,設計出的錢幣Kennethy 是以自己的英文名 Kenneth 來命名!