Teaching Activity 9.5: Evaluations
Look at these exchanges:
A: Hey, I’ve just heard I’ve passed all my exams.
B: …
C: I’ve just heard that Jack has failed all his exams.
D: …
Choose comments suitable for B and comments suitable for D:
All of them? That’s awful – Congratulations – That’s terrible –
That’s great – Great – Oh dear, I’m sorry – That’s marvellous –
Wonderful – Well done.
BG: London west two.
DF: Is
that the postcode, or –?
BG: Yeah.
DF: Just west two?
BG: Yeah.
DF: All right. Have you got a phone number?
BG: Yes, it’s two six two
DF: Two six two—
BG: o six one nine.
DF: o six one nine. So it’s er,
Bridget Green, fifty-three Cleveland
Square, London,
west two, two s- and the phone number
two six two, o six one nine.
BG: That’s right.
(Here the teacher should play the
recording without showing a
transcript.)
What differences are there between the two versions? Can you
rewrite the first version so that it is more like real spoken language?
An exercise like this will certainly focus
on interactive moves like
repetition and the use of
Yeah to show
that the message has been
received. It would be too much to expect learners to reproduce the full
version exactly. You might build up to the
writing exercise by playing
the full version once then asking students to identify differences, then
playing it again before asking them to produce their version. You can
finish the exercise by showing them the full transcript.
The grammar of spoken English
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