inha university 2011 spring tesol program. welcome to tesol activities friday 7:55-9:15

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Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program

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Page 1: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Inha University

2011 Spring TESOL Program

Page 2: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Welcome to TESOL Activities

Friday 7:55-9:15

Page 3: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• The aim of this course is to sample a variety of activities that you can use in your English classes.

Page 4: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• But before we begin sampling activities, we have to take a quick look at some terms that will be relevant for thinking about and discussing the activities we look at in this class.

Page 5: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Terms for Describing Activities

• The next slide will show some of the terms we will use to discuss activities.

• You should probably take notes because I am going to give you a quiz on this next week.

Page 6: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Important Terms(1) structure

(2) function(3) content(4) skill(5) accuracy(6) fluency(7) scalability(8) adaptability(9) teacher-centered(10)learner-centered

Page 7: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• We need to do this so that we can determine how our activities satisfy the goals of our curriculum.

Page 8: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• Looking at the first four terms:

• What is the relationship between structure, function, content, and skills?

Page 9: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Structure

• Structure is basically the grammar associated with a language.

• If you are teaching passive voice today and present perfect tense tomorrow then you are teaching a structural syllabus.

Page 10: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Structure

•A structural syllabus is a syllabus that has a grammatical progression as its organizing feature.

Page 11: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Structure

Other examples of structure include:present tense future tensepast tense passive voicecausatives comparativessuperlatives conditionals

adjective clauses noun clauses

Page 12: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Structure

• Language items you would see in a structural syllabus.

Present continuous: subject +am/is/are+ verb+ingPassive voice:

subject +am/is/are+ past participle.

Page 13: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Function

• Function is how a language is used in everyday situations.

Page 14: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Functions

• If you are teaching giving advice today and ordering food tomorrow, you are teaching a functional syllabus.

Page 15: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Functions

• Other examples of functions include:

giving adviceasking for directions

telling stories about the pasttalking about rules

requesting information

Page 16: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Example Function: Giving Advice

• If you were to teach a unit on giving advice, you might include the following items:

 I think you should . . . Why don't you . . .

If I were you, I would . . . You'd better . . .

Page 17: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Content

• A content-based syllabus is one in which language is used to talk about things. Students are not explicitly studying the language but language learning occurs incidentally.

Page 18: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Content

• If you are teaching about dinosaurs today and volcanoes tomorrow you are teaching a content-based syllabus.

Page 19: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Content

• Some other examples of content-based lessons might include:

movies clothes ancient history

travel countries

dating

Page 20: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Combining All Three

• It is possible to combine all three elements into a single unit.

• The next slide shows an article that combines all three:

comparative adjectives (structure)comparison (function)changes in living standards

(content)

Page 21: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Combined Elements Sample

• Korea has undergone many changes since the 1950s. In general, people are more educated and wealthier now. There are fewer people living in the country and not as much hunger and poverty. However, the cities are more polluted and the traffic is much more congested.

Page 22: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Task 1

Before we discuss anything else I’d like you to discuss with a partner and fill in the blanks for the proverb below:

Give a man a fish and you

feed him for a day . . .

___________________________

___________________________

Page 23: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Skills

• Skills are things that help students become more competent independent language learners.

• If you are teaching students how to identify a main idea or how to ask a clarification question you are teaching a skills-based syllabus.

Page 24: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day.

Teach him how to fishAnd you feed him for life.

As language teachers, we don’t just want to teach a language. We also want to teach our students how to learn a language.

Page 25: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

The Importance of Skills

While we will discuss all forms of syllabi, we will pay particular attention to skills.

One reason to teach skills is that they can be applied everywhere.

Another reason to teach skills is that they help foster learner independence.

Page 26: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

1.Negotiating Meaning(One type of skill)

Page 27: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Before we go into what negotiating meaning is, lets take a look at why we need to negotiate meaning. The cartoons in this slide and the next illustrate why we need to negotiate meaning with our students.

In the cartoonthe teacher says that the homework is due.

In this example, what does due mean?

Can you foresee any difficulties arising ifthis situation is in an ESL context?

Page 28: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Here, the student misunderstandswhat his teacher wantshim to do.

This is a failure of communication. Do homework today?

Page 29: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Do and Due are homophones (words that have the same pronunciation but different spelling).

ESL students are likely to know the first homophone do, but not the latter homophone due.

Page 30: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Native speakers (who have acquired the structure of the language already would know that “is do” is not usually a valid construction grammatically.

The base form of a verb usually cannot follow ‘is’.

Page 31: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

For example:He is do the dishes.She is do her homework.

The above examples would immediately

seem strange to a native speaker.

Page 32: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• And so, even if a native speaker had never heard the word ‘due’ before and didn’tknow what ‘due’ meant, they would know that the teacher didn’t mean ‘do.’

• And hence they would have a chance to clear up the miscommunication.

Page 33: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• In fact, a native speaker may already be ‘aware’ that what is required in that construction is an adjective or preposition since “________ the homework” also precludes it being a noun.

Page 34: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• A second language learner will not have the benefit of these structural filters to let them know when they have misunderstood.

The construction “is do” may seem like a valid construction.

Page 35: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

And so,

Your homework is due today

becomes:

Your homework is do today.

Page 36: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Which in the mind of an ESL learners might simply mean:

Do your homework today.

Page 37: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

So what does this cartoon tell us?

As teachers, there will be times when your students do not understand you when you are giving instructions in English.

Page 38: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

What’s worse, there are times when they will not understand but they think they do understand.

Page 39: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• If both student and teacher are passive in this interaction, the misunderstanding will not be cleared up: the boy will not hand in his homework on time.

• Teachers, therefore, must be active in their interactions. They must make sure the communication was understood.

Page 40: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

And so both teachers and their students will

need skills to clear up misunderstandings.

Negotiating Meaning is just one example of a skill

that teachers should actively teach.

Page 41: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Task 2

In the previous cartoon we saw an example of a failure of communication, which resulted in a student not handing his homework in.

In partners discuss:(a)How could the teacher have avoided this?(b) How could the student have avoided this?

Page 42: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Here are some possible answers:

TeacherRephrase:

“Your homework is due today. You have to hand it in by three o’clock this afternoon.”

Comprehension Check:“You got that?”“So when do you have to hand in the homework.”

Visual Reinforcement:Write on the blackboard. Send a written notice home.

StudentRephrase:

“So I hand it in tomorrow then.”

Clarification Request:“I’m sorry. Did you say I have to do the homework tonight.”

Page 43: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

So now we have some insight into what negotiating meaning is. It’s giving instruction to your students and then checking to make sure that they understood it!

It is discussing the message until both teacher and student can agree on what was meant.

This is known as coming to mutual comprehension.

Page 44: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• We will look at discussion strategies/skills such as rephrasing, clarifying, and summarizing that will help us to avoid misunderstandings.

• When we clarify and rephrase we are negotiating the meaning of our message.

Page 45: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Negotiating meaning is an example of one skill.

• Being able to negotiate meaning is an important skill for someone who has to give instruction to others on a daily basis.

• It is something that you naturally do in your native language, but is not as natural in a second language.

Page 46: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• Being able to communicate clearly and uncover misunderstandings is also a good skill for your students to have.

• This is one skill we should teach our students as well.

Page 47: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Word Skills

• Being able to discuss wordsis another valuable skill that students

should have.

Being able to define words, understand definitions, find rhymes, identify sounds, recognize letter patterns and ask for spellings are examples of word skills.

Page 48: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

These word skills helps students get the information they need when they

don’t understand.

It helps them become independent learners.

Page 49: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• Because the skills that we learn in this course are valuable for your students, we will look at activities we can use to teach these skills.

• (This is probably the best part of the course! We will look at really practical ways to teach English that can even be used for the large classes that you are likely to have to teach.)

Page 50: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Accuracy

• Accuracy refers to how grammatically precise a student is speaking.

• When we our activities focus on making error free speech, we are concerned with accuracy.

Page 51: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Fluency

• Fluency is how fast and natural a produces speech. Fluency is a measure of the flow of speech.

• Activities that try to get students to communicate at a rapid pace are fluency-based activities.

Page 52: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Scalability

• Scalability refers to how easy it is to use an activity for large or small groups.

• If an activity can be used with a class of 4 students or with a class of 30 students then it is scalable.

Page 53: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Adaptability

• Adaptability refers to the ease with which an activity can be adapted for use with low or high level groups (or mixed groups) of students.

Page 54: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

• The best activities are adaptable and scalable.

Page 55: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Teacher-centered

• Teacher centered activities are activities where the focus is on the teacher.

• Lectures and question-and-answer sessions are examples of teacher-centered activities.

Page 56: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

Learner-centered

• Learner-centered activities are activities where the focus of the activity is on the student.

• Activities with a high degree of student participation such a group discussion are examples of learner-centered activities.

Page 57: Inha University 2011 Spring TESOL Program. Welcome to TESOL Activities Friday 7:55-9:15

End here!