TheMinistry of Higher and secondary education of the Republic of Uzbekistan The Uzbekistan state World Languages University


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Guljahon METODIKA COURSE WORK edited

4. Interviewing.


Students interview each other. They share viewpoints and ideas. They usually share their personal experiences and think about them during the interview. This makes students relaxed and reduces the fear of writing.

During writing (3 steps): 1. Drafting, 2. Revising and 3. Editing.


  • The teacher tells his students to write on every other line of their paper to allow room for revising and editing.

  • They write the first form of their writing.

  • Then they revise whether the content of their writing is clear or not, either in pairs or alone.

  • Students edit their writing, either in pairs or alone, as they focus on grammatical, spelling, and punctuation mistakes they might have in their writing.

  • In the end, they write the final form of their writing.

After writing (3 steps):

1. Publishing students’ writing:


The teacher encourages his students to publish their writing in different ways, e.g. in classroom, school, newspaper or magazine. They can collect their written work in a classroom book. They can put it in the classroom, school library. Students can borrow it and read it.

2. Classroom discussion:


Students can read their writing to the whole class, in groups or in pairs. This helps students practice listening to and speaking about their writing.

3. Drawing pictures based on the writing:


Students start drawing pictures based on their writing. This helps students realize that learning English can be fun, enjoyable and interesting.

TIPS FOR TEACHING THE FOUR SKILLS IN EVERY YOUNG LEARNER LESSON Where did this blog post idea come from?


Picture this: A Primary teacher is getting ready for the next class, a 50-minute lesson with a group of lively, inquisitive, ten-year-olds. Besides the obligatory content of the school’s curriculum, they want to integrate Values Education, to develop their learners’ 21st Century Skills and to encourage Extensive Reading. Then there is Revising and Reviewing of language and perhaps some Project Work. And what about some exam preparation, before or after homework correction?
It is hardly surprising that some teachers feel overwhelmed by everything they need to fit in to the time constraints of a single class and why they worry that they aren’t able to practise the four skills in every lesson. But with a bit of organisation and creative thinking it isn’t just possible. It’s easy.

Getting organised


Start with your class book and lesson plan. Highlight the explicit skills focus for each stage of the lesson. Either use color-coded sticky notes in your class book – a different colour for each skill so that you can see at a glance where extra practice is needed. Or add a column in your lesson plan and write R, (Reading), W (Writing), L (Listening) or S (Speaking).
Now look more closely for less obvious skills practice; a speaking activity on a reading spread or a short reading task before a writing activity. Add these into your lesson plan and you’ll start getting a clearer picture of how the skills practice is balanced. You’ll notice which skill is being neglected and will be able to add in an extra task. These tasks don’t need to be long and laborious. Short and simple activities work best.

Routines


Routines are essential for effective classroom management and organisation. They are also a great way of building in extra skills practice.
  1. Starter questions


Add a short speaking activity to the beginning of every lesson. Choose a question according to your learners’ age and abilities and write it on the board in a speech bubble.
Invite a learner to ask you the question. Provide an answer and write the response in a second speech bubble. Put brackets around any parts of the response that can be changed and personalised. For small groups, ask each learner in turn. For larger groups, learners ask and answer in pairs. The speech bubbles initially act as support but as the activity becomes a routine you won’t need them.

Exit tickets


An exit ticket is a technique for learners to show you what they have learnt at the end of a lesson. It is also a great way to add extra writing practice. Before leaving class learners hand you a ticket or note with an answer to a question or a response of some kind. This can be as simple as ‘Write a sentence to describe today’s lesson’. Write the task on the board and give learners a couple of minutes to write. Then collect their tickets as they leave the classroom.

Show and tell


‘Show and tell’ can be as free or controlled as you wish but everyone should take part. Depending on class size, invite one or more learners to speak for a couple of minutes in each lesson. The ‘audience’ should be encouraged to clap or ask questions as appropriate. Model the activity and offer support such as prompts on the board
It is important for learners to want to write in their journals. Encourage them to design personalised covers and to include illustrations as well as text. Have a discussion about journals before you start using them. This will generate ideas and excite learners at the prospect of keeping a record of their learning.

DEAR Time


DEAR Time is a great routine for encouraging reading for pleasure. DEAR stands for ‘Drop Everything And Read’ and everybody in the class does exactly that – including the teacher. As with all routines, it is important to set things up carefully, making sure that everyone understands what they need to do.
Rules
Each learner selects something that they want to read. This can be anything at all as long as it is in English – a story book, an extended reading text in a class book, a blog post or a magazine article – anything! At the appointed time, the teacher announces ‘DEAR Time’ and everyone stops what they are doing and reads independently and quietly. This is obviously a reading activity but with a bit of thought can easily lead to opportunities for speaking and writing.


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