Teaching English with ICT
Sunday 6 May 2018
Sunday 22 October 2017
Using songs to teach reading and writing, and ICT
- Target learners: mid teenagers (or adults) at B2 level
- Textbook: Malcolm Mann & Steve Taylore-Knowles (2013). Laser B1. London: Macmillan Education. Unit 8 "The problem page"
- Unit theme: relationships
- ICT resources integrated: “Fast Car” (first recorded by Tracy Chapman in 1988)
- Skills: mediated by ICT: reading and writing - not mediated by ICT: speaking
- Linguistic aims: Narrative tenses (present and past)
Teaching writing with ICT
- Target learners: children age 10 A1 level
- Textbook: Susan House- Katharine Scott (2012) SPARKS 2. Richmond. Unit 3 "Look what I can do!"
- Unit Theme: abilities
- ICT resources integrated: Learn to read at Starfall web site- Iam reading section. "I can do it" http://more2.starfall.com/n/fiction-nonfiction/icandoit/load.htm?f
- Skills:Mediated by ICT : reading and writing not mediated by ICT: speaking
- Linguistics aims: write a short poem related to one character of the story.
1. After reading the story,follow these steps to write a poem:
- choose one of the characters
- Give it a name
- What can it do?
- What colour is it?
- Why did you choose it?
2. Adjust the information you collected to create a poem. After you create the text use a word processor to decorate it. Play with colours, fonts, include images, be creative!
Wednesday 27 September 2017
Teaching reading with ICT
- Target learners: children age 7/8 A1 level
- Textbook: Susan House- Katharine Scott (2012) SPARKS 2. Richmond. Unit 3 "Look what I can do!"
- Unit Theme: abilities
- ICT resources integrated: Learn to read at Starfall web site- Iam reading section. "I can do it" http://more2.starfall.com/n/fiction-nonfiction/icandoit/load.htm?f
- Skills:Mediated by ICT : reading and listening not mediated by ICT: speaking
- Linguistics aims: talk about abilities
In this lesson we will work with a text called "I can do it"
Look at the images and tell your partner what you can or can not do
Can you and your partner do the same things?
while reading:
Read until page 6 and answer:
which are the characters of the story?
what can the hare do?
what can the turtle do?
After reading:
Discuss with the whole class
Who won the race? Why?
What did the hare do?
What happened at the end?
Sunday 24 September 2017
Teaching "literature with a small l" with songs and ICT
- Target learners: mid teenagers (or adults) at B2 level
- Textbook: Davies, P. and Falla, T. (2014). Cambridge English First Result Student's Book. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Unit 12 "Make a difference"
- Unit theme: social issues (e.g. poverty, juvenile delinquency, homelessness).
- ICT resources integrated: “AnotherDay in Paradise” (first recorded by Phil Collins in 1989; recently covered by several singers); Google images; Fakebook
- Skills: mediated by ICT: reading and writing - not mediated by ICT: speaking
- Linguistic aims: Narrative tenses (present and past)
NOTE: this lesson plan was originally submitted as part of an assignment for "Estrategias de la Enseñanza de la Lengua Extranjera", wihile I attended "Licenciatura en Educación" at Universidad Virtual de Quilmes.
Before reading: Brainstorming
“In this lesson,
we’ll work with a song called ‘Another Day in Paradise””. The chorus goes like this:
“it’s another day for you and me in paradise”
Look at the result of a search
for images on Google using the keyword “paradise” (if there is access to the
Internet in class, the search will be carried out in real time by the students
themselves).
·
What do you imagine the song will be about?
·
Who is singing (i.e. who is “me”)? Who to?
·
Where are they? How long have they been there? How
long will they stay?
·
How do they feel about it?
The images presented have intentionally been selected so as to mislead my class in
their expectations, with the intention of deepening their comprehension of the
issue at a later stage.
While reading:
Work
in small groups. Then, report your answers to the class:
Read (and listen to) the first stanza:
A.
Does it match your predictions? Why (not)?
B.
Who are the characters in this story? How old is the female
character? And the male one? Where are they? Why are they there? How are they
related? What are their feelings?
C.
What will happen next? How will he react? Read the
second stanza and check your predictions.
I'll proceed in the same way with the other two stanzas, asking the class to discuss questions with a
variety of objectives: finding specific information, stimulating cognitive and
affective responses, drawing inferences and speculating outcomes. (e.g. Why is the girl homeless? How can this affect her everyday life?)
To round off this stage, students might enjoy watching the video clip as they follow (and perhaps sing) the lyrics on their notes:
NB: I love this video clip because of the images, but it's 9 minutes long. There are shorter alternatives available on the Web.
To round off this stage, students might enjoy watching the video clip as they follow (and perhaps sing) the lyrics on their notes:
NB: I love this video clip because of the images, but it's 9 minutes long. There are shorter alternatives available on the Web.
After
reading:
1. Discuss (class as a whole): Have you ever lived a similar situation (being asked for help by someone in the street)? How did you
react? Could you have done something differently?
At this stage, my main goal is to foster appropriation
(Mc Rae, 1991) of the text, bridging the “relevance gap” between the text and
the readers’ own world, and stimulating personal response (empathy) and
evaluation.
2. Imagine
you’re one of the two characters in the song. Go to https://www.classtools.net/FB/home-page and create a page for your character. (You can find a tutorial
here).
INSTRUCTIONS:
1.
Use appropriate images to give a clear idea of their
background and relations.
2.
Add five posts (two before the moment narrated in the song, one about the incident in the
song, and two after that moment). NB: five is the minimum number of posts required by the site so that your work can be saved.
5.
Comment on the work shared by at least two partners:
a. identify one aspect you particularly like about their work; b. discuss one
similarity or difference between their work and yours.
In this follow-up writing task, ICT is integrated into
my EFL lesson because it “enhances the conversation of the classroom”
(Richards, 20000, cited in Ferradas Moi, 2001:143). Fakebook.com provides a motivating,
realistic –yet safe- environment for fluency practice, whereas the fact that
work will be shared with the class as a whole serves to encourage students to pay
attention to accuracy at the same time. In addition, the steps required to
carry out this task serve to develop computer literacy skills students will
need outside class as well as to develop critical technological literacy
(Ferradas Moi, 2001:153-154).
REFERENCES:
Ferradas Moi, C. and Thomson de Grondona White, C., (2001). “Literature in Language Teaching”, in Davis, E. et al. Estrategias de Enseñanza de la lengua extranjera. Bernal: Universidad Virtual de Quilmes, pp. 105-135.
Mc Rae, J. (1991). Literature with a small “l”. London and Basingstroke: Macmillan Publishers. Pope, R. (1995). “5.3. Types of textual intervention”, in Textual intervention. Critical and Creative Strategies for Literary Studies. London: Rouledge. Pp- 196-202.
REFERENCES:
Ferradas Moi, C. and Thomson de Grondona White, C., (2001). “Literature in Language Teaching”, in Davis, E. et al. Estrategias de Enseñanza de la lengua extranjera. Bernal: Universidad Virtual de Quilmes, pp. 105-135.
Mc Rae, J. (1991). Literature with a small “l”. London and Basingstroke: Macmillan Publishers. Pope, R. (1995). “5.3. Types of textual intervention”, in Textual intervention. Critical and Creative Strategies for Literary Studies. London: Rouledge. Pp- 196-202.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)