Reconceptualizing language teaching: an in-service teacher education course in uzbekistan
Into Example: Spoken English – Debate, Topic: Expressing Opinions
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Reconceptualizing...e-version
Into Example: Spoken English – Debate, Topic: Expressing Opinions:
Men vs. Women INTO ACTIVITY: This activity gives the students the opportunity to get to know each other better and therefore helps to create a non-threatening environment for speaking and sharing ideas. It also encourages students to think creatively because they must share per- sonal characteristics in an abstract way. A) The teacher shows the students the example… If I were a ___________, I would be (a)_____________ because ______________. i) If I were a body of water, I would be an ocean because an ocean can be very calm, deep, and mysterious, but in a moment’s notice it can be raging and dangerous. ii) Students in their respective teams talk about and share what each of them said. B) The teacher writes in the first subject (food, animal, music, object). C) The teacher writes in the second subject. D) The teacher writes in the third subject (man / woman) – if you are a man you must answer the woman; if you are a woman you must answer the man. i) Teacher asks for some responses (2 boys and 2 girls) for the last one and writes the names up on the board. ii) Positive qualities about each gender are written on the board next to the name. The icebreaker was adapted from: Klippel, F. (1984). 183 CHAPTER FIVE: FROM SYLLABUS DESIGN TO LESSON PLANNING Through: The middle portion(s) of the lesson. There are three basic precepts to the phase of through. First, move from familiar to new, simple to complex, mechanical to unstructured in order to build schema upon ex- isting knowledge structures. Second, pre-teach necessary metalanguage, lexical items, and forms to reduce anxiety and activate schematic knowl- edge. Third, explicitly mark transitions between tasks and activities. (Rich- ards & Lockhart, 1994). Decisions about sequencing of tasks and information: Suggested techniques: a) Present directions carefully and deliberately; b) Model pro- cedures and skills; c) Monitor students’ attention and comprehension; d) Provide appropriate feedback; and e) Supply abundant transitional cues. Role of Pacing: “the extent to which a lesson maintains its momentum and communicates a sense of development” (Richards and Lockhart, 1994). Suggested techniques: a) Efficient delivery of directions; b) Varied tasks and interactive modalities; c) Systematic redundancy (but not excessive repe- tition); d) Tasks directed toward students’ level of proficiency; e) Setting of limits; and f ) Ongoing diagnosis of students’ cognitive states. Beyond: The last phase of a lesson plan that considers how the les- son connects in students’ minds to the course of study. This section builds coherence among lessons and supports learners to make connections among lessons on their own. Suggested Techniques: a) Summarize major points emerging from the tasks; b) Explain how the lesson is connected to goals and/or objec- tives; and c) Explain how the lesson will connect to the next lesson. ACTION Take an already existing lesson plan or one you had written for a lesson at your university, and divide up the lesson plan with the three phases of into-through-beyond. SUMMARY This section addressed the three sections of the lesson plan: into, through, and beyond. Additionally, we have provided you with suggested techniques to keep in mind as you navigate throughout the lesson. 184 RECONCEPTUALIZING LANGUAGE TEACHING HOMEWORK TASK SEVENTEEN Formally write a complete (and revised) lesson plan from Homework Task One [approximately 80 minutes]. Make sure you are able to answer the following questions about it: Chapter 1: What kind of competence(-ies) are you trying to address in the lesson plan (i.e., linguistic, sociolinguistic, pragmatic, strategic, and/or all the competencies)? The answer to this question will support your lesson plan from a theoretical language perspective. Chapter 2: Which methodological approach and/or language teach- ing principles are you trying to achieve? The answer to this question will support your lesson plan from a language teaching methodological per- spective. Chapter 3: How will you assess what you are trying to measure (i.e., Assessment-for-Learning and/or Assessment-of-Learning)? The answer to this question will support the connection you see among teaching-learn- ing-assessing. Chapter 4: Will you be teaching a competency through speaking, lis- tening, writing, reading (or) all of the above? Will an activity that you had learned from Chapter 4 be included in your lesson plan? This answer can support some techniques you may use in your classroom to support the answers above. Chapter 5: Please keep in mind how the lesson plan you create will fit into the syllabus of the course and the overarching national standards. More specifically, what are the specific goals (i.e., cognitive, performative, and affective) that you want to achieve; or, are the goals/objectives of your lesson being created from a backwards design perspective? REFERENCES 1. Klippel, F. (1984). Keep talking: Communicative fluency activities for language teaching . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2. Richards, J. C., & Lockhart, C. (1994). Reflective teaching in second lan- guage classrooms . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 185 CHAPTER FIVE: FROM SYLLABUS DESIGN TO LESSON PLANNING Download 1.4 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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