Speaking Activities for the Classroom
Hello, I’d Like to Book a Flight
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apeaking activities
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Flight Plans
- Where in the World Are We
- Where in the World Are We Now
- Chapter Six : Finding the Right Words
- Talking Based-on Vocabulary Words
- “A” is for Abacus. “B” is for Botulism.
- Write a List of Words to Describe...
- Word-Hints and Gestures
- Whispering Words Along-the-Line
- Preferences
- Where Would You Rather Live
- What Would You Least Prefer
Hello, I’d Like to Book a Flight... Put SDS in pairs with their chairs sitting opposite one another. One student who wants to book a flight has the list of flight possible destinations and is telephoning the travel office for information. The other student works in the travel office and has a list of all the departure and arrival times, flight numbers, etc. The conversation should go something like this :
First speaker : “Hello, I’d like to fly to Athens next Saturday. Do you have a flight available? Can you give me the flight information?”
Second speaker : “Certainly Sir. We have flight number OA4527, departing London at 08:45 and arriving in Athens at 13:20. Would that be suitable?”
First : “Oh, yes thank you. That would be suitable. Can I book now? Is it possible to book over the phone?”
Second : “Certainly Sir. Could you give me your name and credit card information?”... and so on and so on. SDS should improvise their conversations.
When the first student has booked, he can change roles with the other one, who now becomes the tourist and inquires about a different destination and passports, visas, check in times and anything else that comes to mind. See destinations as follows. Flight information is on the next page :
Antwerp Geneva Paris Amsterdam Glasgow Rotterdam Athens Galloway Shanghai Brussels Jersey Singapore Birmingham Le Havre Southampton Chicago Manchester Toronto
Copenhagen Munich Telaviv
Dublin Marseilles Utrecht
Duesseldorf Nice Warsaw
Essen New York
Zurich Edinburgh Newcastle Friedrichshafen Ostende
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Flight Plans Destination Flight number Departure Arrival Antwerp BRA639 11:10 12:50 Amsterdam KL543 09: 00
11:15 Athens OA4527 08:45 13:20 Brussels SN880 07:30 09:40
Birmingham BA 5432
07:35 O8:15
Chicago AA22 10:10 14:45 Copenhagen BA333 10: 40
13:55 Dublin IA 543 06:00 07:05 Dusseldorf LH 8312 10: 10
12: 15 Essen LH6675 13:40 15:55 Edinburgh LC 123 16:20
17:50 Friedrichshafen LH7878 19:50 21:40
Geneva BA 8305 05:40 10:05 Glasgow BA 5773 22:20 01:15 Galaway AL 5531 11:40 14:10
Jersey VE 6432
12:30 14:00 Le Havre AA 8749 19: 25
21:45 Manchester BA 6994 23:20 01:25
Munich LH6190 20:20 23:50 Marsailles AF5545 18:40 20:00 Nice AF9687 21:15 24:00 New York BA333 10:10
12:00 Newcastle BA1326 05:45
06:40 Ostende BA5183 07:20 09:30 Paris AF3287 20:10 22:45 Rotterdam BRA 4434 07:30 09:35
Shanghai CA 6676 10:40 02:20 Singapore SQ2859 24:10 15:40 Southampton BA3362 14:20 1:406
Toronto AC5773 12:00 14:15
Telaviv IA5778 10:35 15:40 Utrecht HA7777 11:30 13:40 Warsaw PA6676 10: 45 14:50 Zurich SR334 08:00 10:55 Take care to speak clearly, especially when you say numbers. 190
Where in the World Are We? Read the name of a city and draw an arrow to show/tell what country it is located in. Please note how to pronounce these names in English.
Perth Australia Jedda Germany Oslo USA Milan Switzerland Kyoto Italy Copenhagen Germany Dusseldorf Denmark Coventry Saudi Arabia
Brussels Japan Adelaide Turkey Ankara Australia Frankfurt Belgium Geneva England Cork Israel Edinburgh Canada Istanbul Scotland Halifax Lebanon Montreal France Nice Turkey Osaka Ireland Quebec Canada Marseilles USA Beirut Egypt Jerusalem China Philadelphia Japan Durbin Canada
Tangier Russia Acapulco France Jakarta South Africa Shanghai Morocco Cairo Norway St. Petersburg Brazil Boston Indonesia Brazilia Mexico 191
Where in the World Are We Now?
Some people really like these geography games, so here is yet another one. Match the places listed on the left with a location in the right hand margin.
Antwerp New Zeeland
Lima sol Peru
Oxford Finland Warsaw India Vienna Cyprus Hamburg South Korea Aukland Belgium Lumbai Austria Rotterdam England Seoul Sweden Islamabad Poland Miami USA Glasgow Holland Detroit Germany Lima
Pakistan Honolulu Scotland Colombo Austria Izmir Michigan Manchester Holland Innsbruck Greece Amsterdam Columbia Bogota Turkey Kabul Sri Lanka
Mecca Hawaii Athens England Budapest Romania Casablanca Morocco Oman Afghanistan Birmingham Saudi Arabia
Buffalo England Istanbul Jordan Bucharest Hungary
Let’s hope your teacher knows all the answers; otherwise look in an atlas. 192
Chapter Six : Finding the Right Words In this chapter, we will be trying to find the correct words or expressions to name or explain an idea, a feeling, a desire, a wish, a need, etc.
By and large, we should search, first, in our minds to find the required words and expressions. If we have tried our best and can’t remember or think of the vocabulary that is needed, we can also discuss the problem with our friends, in pairs or groups, thereby learning-by-doing and by helping one-another.
When the above student interaction does not provide a wished for result, student can look up the word(s) in a Thai-English dictionary, an English dictionary, a thesaurus, or English dictionary website, or elsewhere. This means that, generally, a good part of class-time should be spent by students looking things up and talking about them.
After the students have finished or when the time is up, the teacher can ask the students to read out their answers aloud, correcting mistake and pronunciation where needed.
It is imperative to remember that all of these exercises are intended as the basis for speaking in the classroom, so the student’ preparation time should only be a lead-up to the performance of the main task of getting the SDS to read and talk to communicate their results.
Teachers who just hand out the sheets and let the students work on their own without hearing them talk and without interacting with them should be seen as shirking their duty. Many teachers just like to give out an assignment to keep students busy while he/she does some marking or grading or daydreaming. Once again, it should be stressed that the teacher is there as a helper and should keep his/her mind on the speaking activity and the students.
Teachers will certainly not want to do all of the included tasks with their classes. There are many too many handout sheets in this book for any teacher to ever use then all in the classroom. Teachers should, rather, browse through each chapter to find a topic appropriate for the situation or, use them as models as a basis for thinking up new topics. Better yet, use the sheets to inspire your students to create their own vocabulary-learning-tasks, in a way that will help them follow their interests and practice in learning skills to better- prepare them for the days when they will enter their professional careers.
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Talking Based-on Vocabulary Words
Write twenty topic names on small scraps of paper and put them in a small box on the desk at the front of the room. Then, call the students to the front of the class one-by-one and get each one to pick a scrap with a word/topic on it. The first one has to stand up and speak freely on that topic for three minutes.
When the first one is finished, he/she chooses a second one who must go to the front and do the same thing, and so on. Here are some words to start with, but it may be better to let them choose topics that are more suitable.
Fast food
Traffic jams
Boyfriends
Part-time jobs
Bangkok
Movies
Magazines
Holidays
Family
Lipstick
Brand names
Newspapers
Internet
Pets
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“A” is for Abacus. “B” is for Botulism.
Write out the twenty-six letters of the alphabet, on twenty-six scraps of paper with one letter on each slip, and let each student draw one slip out of a box. Once the student sees the letter, for example, “A” he/she must write down as many words starting with “A” as possible, with a ten-minute time limit : A An Art After
Apple Angry
Apathy Anxious
If you get the letter “B,” try to write as many words as possible in ten minutes: B Be Bee Been
Brain Blonde
Breezes Brunette The purpose of the game is to see who can list and read out the most words. If you get letter “H,” write as many “H” words as you can think of: H Ha
Had Hand
Horror Handle
Housing Handsome If you pick a paper with “x,y,z, or q” put it back in the box and draw another. The words can have any number of letters. The words you see above were only chosen for layout purposes to make the page look interesting. Another fun task is to write a list that looks like a pyramid, beginning with “P” at the top and ending with the word perspective as the eleventh word in the list: P Pa etc. 195
Write a List of Words to Describe... Try to say only nice things. boys girls mothers fathers rough pretty tough nice dirty fine loud
gentle playful sweet active cute devious coy disobedient soft rowdy polite
soldiers policemen politicians drivers managers employees maids security guards Or let each student choose a word for this task and then exchange his/her word with another student who must give a list of descriptive adjectives.
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Word-Hints and Gestures Put the students in pairs and give the first person a list of words that the second person must guess, based on word-hints suggested by the first person’s definitions or gestures. For example, the first student may say something like, “It is a big book in which we look up words.” The second will say, “dictionary,” Now try this one, “It is a scanty two piece ladies’ swim suit named after a Pacific atoll.” Can you guess? Bikini? Yes. Some appropriate words may be seenthe list on the left margin but students may use the empty boxes to make up their own lists of words, appropriate to the level and interests of the class. You can even have the pairs compete against one another to see who guesses the most words. Use a pair of scissors to cut out the list you want to use.
Rouge Valentine
Rose
Bird
Pig
Tissue
Temple
Taxi
Saxophone
Perfume
Coat
hanger
Wallet
Wig
Motorcycle
Cup of tea
Guitar Hairpin
Kitten
Pilot
Mechanic
Laptop
Knife
Hamburger
Chicken
Another thing to do is have each pair make up a word list and then exchange lists with another pair. Vocabulary should not, however, be too hard. 197
Whispering Words Along-the-Line Break the class into groups of five and have them stand in line, one behind the other, in a line facing the board. The teacher then whispers a word into the ear of the person at the back of the line, whoI in turn taps on the shoulder of the one in front of him/her and, then, whispers the word in his/her ear. Then, that person does it to the next, and so on and so on, all the way to the person at the front, who finally writes the word on the board. It’s surprising how the words can change in the process. Some examples to use might be :
Fish
Danger
Lover
Romance
Tip
Thief
Sneeze
Butterfly
Boxer
Chips
Sheep
Slips
Bubble
Dancer
Boat
Blind
Deaf
Scream
Election
Suspect
Lion
Gorilla
Snake
Lips
Sleep
Rover
Lady
Scrape
Use the blank spaces to make lists of new words that are hard to pronounce. 198
Preferences Number your preferences concerning these modes of personal transportation.
Car
Pickup
Bicycle
Motorcycle
Camel
Horse
Buffalo
What kind of public transportation do you prefer?
advantages disadvantages Sky
train
Underground
Air bus
Normal
bus
Express bus
Express
boat
Longtail boat
Taxi
Tuk
tuk
Minibus
Minivan
Other?
How would you like to tour around the world? type preference advantages disadvantages Plane
Train
Bus
Ship
Automobile
Balloon
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Where Would You Rather Live?
Number your preferences in order, and indicate advantages and disadvantages. type number advantage disadvantage Flat
Condominium
House Houseboat
Caravan Cave
Under a bridge
Tree house
Palace
Which of These Jobs Might You Prefer and Why? Number preferences in order and indicate the advantages and disadvantages.
Taxi driver Singer
Policeman Air hostess Tour guide Lifeguard
Disc jockey
Model
Dancer Social worker
Salesman
Dishwasher
Teacher Secretary
Driver Pilot
Actor Soldier
Accountant
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What Would You Least Prefer? What kind of car breakdown would you least prefer?
Flat tire
Dead battery Run out of gas
Overheated radiator Broken hose pipe
Wet sparkplugs Faulty windshield wipers
Stuck in the mud
What kind of wife/husband would you least like to have? Bitchy
Stingy Nagging Hyper sensitive
Jealous Bossy Lazy
Crazy Alcoholic Unemployed
What kind of boss would you least like to have? Ungrateful Non-compromising Unapproachable Penny-pinching Deceitful Stubborn Two-faced Resentful Hateful
Think up some other topics concerning things that you would prefer least. |
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