The Image Conference « UAB Idiomes, Barcelona, Saturday, 8th June, 2013

Here’s a link to what promises to be a very interesting conference.

image

http://theimageconference.org/

İSTEK ELT 2013

All the news from the ISTEK Schools conference for those of us who can’t be there:

image

http://istekelt.com/index.php?option=com_wrapper&view=wrapper&Itemid=5

What’s Happening to Cooperative Learning? – Education News

This is a very clear and extensive explanation of what cooperative learning is, and what advantages it brings to the classroom, while the comments reveal some of the preoccupations teachers have about this methodology.

Cooperative learning

Cooperative learning (Photo credit: Institut Escola Les Vinyes)

http://www.educationnews.org/higher-education/whats-happening-to-cooperative-learning/

Why Learning Innovation Can’t Come From Teachers Alone

An interesting article about sharing responsibility for learning innovation.

education

education (Photo credit: Sean MacEntee)

http://www.teachthought.com/learning/why-learning-innovation-cant-come-from-teachers-alone/

Demand High ELT – An interesting challenge

Screenshot_2013-04-09-14-38-25

Here is a link to a blog by Adrian Underhill and Jim Scrivener which I think deserves a look:

Demand High ELT

Thank you, Sandy Millin for bringing this to my attention in your blog post on Jim Scrivener’s presentation at IATEFL ‘How to demand high

Upcoming event: 14th CETA Conference

CETA Conference Poster 2013

The 14th CETA Conference will be held at the Facultad de Filosofía y Letras of the Universidad de Córdoba on 20th April. (Conference programme)

I will be giving two 45 minute sessions of my workshop ‘Getting Them Speaking‘, from 15:30 to 17:00. I look forward to seeing you there.

Getting them speaking 1 (TESOL Greece)

Getting Them Speaking – Activities for the conversation class

Getting them speaking 1 (TESOL Greece)

In this workshop, my aim was to demonstrate a series of activities which can be used in class as a way of encouraging our students, particularly teenagers, to develop their speaking skills.

NUMBERS BIOGRAPHY (Full lesson plan)

I use this activity at the beginning of the year, when I want to get to know something about my students, and when they want to get to know me a little. At the start of the class I write five numbers on the board, and explain to the students that each number is linked to something significant in my life. The students have to ask questions to find out what each number represents, to which I can only answer yes / no. When they have guessed my numbers, each student gives the class a number which represents something important for them.

DETECTIVES

This activity is taken from Mario Rinvolucri’s book, Grammar Games. A situation is described to the students, and they have to fill in the details of the story which led to that situation, by asking questions, to which the teacher can only answer yes or no. To help, they are given five clues – GARDEN, LOVER, 30 YEARS, JAIL, VANISH.

A man gets onto a train. He sits in a compartment which is empty except for one woman. The woman takes off her gloves. Two hours later, the man is arrested. The police hold him for 24 hours, and then, logically, are forced to let him go free.

The man and the woman were married, but the woman had a lover, and she decided to run away with him. To ensure that her husband could not follow her, before they left the lover cut off two of her fingers and buried them in the garden. When the husband called the police, they found the fingers and the man was convicted for her murder, serving thirty years in jail. When he got out of jail, he took a train. When the woman in his compartment took off her gloves, he realized that this was his wife, and killed her. However, since he had already served a prison sentence for killing her, the police could not prosecute him again for the same crime, so they had to let him go.

 

WOULD I LIE TO YOU?

This activity encourages the students to form open questions, focusing on the use of interrogative pronouns and past tense questions. The teacher writes three sentences on the board and explains that they are related to your life, but two of the statements are true and one is false. The students ask questions to try to discover which of the statements is not true. The teacher is allowed to invent things to defend the untrue statement as if it were true. Once the students have guessed which statement is false, they play the game again in groups, using their own statements.

 

JUST A MINUTE

This game comes from BBC Radio 4. The objective is to speak about a given topic for one minute without hesitation, deviation or repetition. Other students can challenge the speaker if one of these occurs, and if the challenge is correct the challenger wins a point, and continues with the topic for the rest of the minute. For lower level classes, the challenges can be based on grammar or vocabulary mistakes.

 

TIMED PAIR SHARE

In this activity, the students are given a topic to talk about, and time to prepare. They can make notes, but not write out their answers. Then they are put into pairs and each student has two minutes to talk about the topic, while their partner listens and if necessary supports with questions. Optionally, each student can be asked to report to the class on what their partner has told them.

 

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE! (Full Lesson plan)

One way of motivating students is to include an element of competition or time pressure into the activity. In this activity, the students are asked to construct a story against the clock. The first student is handed an egg timer (preferably with a loud tick), which represents a bomb, and asked to dictate the first sentence of a story to the teacher, who writes it on the board. Each student in turn dictates a sentence of the story, but they can only dictate when they are holding the ‘bomb’, and they can only pass on the bomb when the sentence is accepted as correct. The student speaking when the time runs out is eliminated.

 

DESERT ISLAND DISCS

This is a great way to finish a term, based on a BBC Radio 4 programme which has been running for over seventy years. Before the final lesson of the term, ask the students to think of a song / piece of music which is special to them in some way, and prepare an oral presentation giving their reasons. In the final lesson, the students take turns to present their music choice, speaking for two or three minutes (depending on the level of the class). Once they have given their presentation, the class listen to the music they have chosen.

OTHER SPEAKING ACTIVITIES (LINKS)

Picture dictations

Variations on dictations

Armstrong and Miller (Dubbing exercise)

Peer response in the writing classroom (TESOL Greece, 2013)

Here’s a link to the presentation for the talk I gave yesterday in TESOL Greece. I hope the people who attended the talk found it useful.This is a photo taken of a peer revision comme...

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BwvhQiYtN7sRcVBCSEg5U3YwZnc/edit?usp=sharing

TESOL Greece, 2013

All the latest from TESOL Greece via Facebook:

TESOL Greece poster

http://www.facebook.com/groups/TESOL.Greece/

Video-based reflection for teachers, Part 1 – Evolutions

This is the first part of what promises to be a very interesting and thorough series of posts which should provoke a good deal of reflection among us teacher. I’m looking forward to the next parts.

http://tomtesol.com/blog/2013/03/video-reflection-for-teachers-part-1/