1 / 54

TYL Week 3: Listening and Speaking

TYL Week 3: Listening and Speaking. Agenda. Activities—Very Young Learners (7 and under) Listen and Do Songs and TPR Disappearing Dialogue I Have, Who Has? Activities—Older Young Learners (8 and older) Interviews and Surveys Mingle Information Gap (Find the Differences)

aletta
Télécharger la présentation

TYL Week 3: Listening and Speaking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TYL Week 3: Listening and Speaking

  2. Agenda Activities—Very Young Learners (7 and under) • Listen and Do • Songs and TPR • Disappearing Dialogue • I Have, Who Has? Activities—Older Young Learners (8 and older) • Interviews and Surveys • Mingle • Information Gap (Find the Differences) • Back to Back

  3. Very Young Learners

  4. How are beginner English speakers like empty refrigerators?

  5. If you have an empty fridge, can you make a recipe? • Fridge=English knowledge (“schema”) • Recipe/dish=Sentences/thoughts in English • If you don’t have any English stored, how can you make sentences and express thoughts?

  6. But Remember . . . • Even if students have just a little “food” in the fridge, they should still make simple “recipes” with them! • From the beginning, students should be speaking and attempting to express their own thoughts in English!

  7. Types of Listening Processing

  8. 2 Ways of Processing: • Top-Down: Listen for the big picture or overall message (ex: listening to a friend’s story) • Bottom-Up: Listen for discrete details (ex: listening to a recipe)

  9. Top-down or Bottom-up? • Listening to directions to get somewhere • Listening to a movie review on the radio • Listening to a university lecture

  10. Top-Down vs. Bottom Up • Do activities to develop both! • Top-Down: Stories, books, movies, tv, taking notes on main idea • Bottom-Up: Listen and Do exercises; TPR; Information Gap exercises, taking notes on details

  11. Activities!

  12. Activity 1: Listen and Do

  13. Listen and Do • For VYL • Listen and Identify (point, fly swatter, slap, bingo) • Listen and Color • Listen and Act (TPR)

  14. Listen and Act • “Simon Says” • Variations: • Student calls the orders • Do what I say, not what I do • “If You’re Happy and You Know It” • If you’re happy and you know it, __________ (2 X) • If you’re happy and you know it, • Then your face will surely show it, • If you’re happy and you know it, __________.

  15. Simon Says

  16. Songs

  17. Songs • Find them on the Internet! • Genkienglish.com • Preschoolexpress.com • Make your own! Or make them with your students!

  18. To Scaffold Songs • Intro vocab with flashcards / games • Use as background music • Play games with vocab while listening • Intro words (echo, chorus) • Add TPR (kids help!) • Make singing fun! • Girls vs. Boys • Karaoke Leaders • Can you remember without looking?

  19. Disappearing Dialogue: Controlled Chunk repetition

  20. Disappearing Dialogue • Objective: To help students memorize and practice saying chunks • You need: • Sentence strips • Pocket chart

  21. Chunking

  22. Teach Chunks • Lexical Approach: Michael Lewis, 1993 • Native speakers have thousands of stored phrases that they use readily

  23. Fixed Chunks • Fixed Chunks: These groups of words are complete and ready to use • Examples: • See you later, • Have a good day, • It’s OK, • No problem

  24. Partially-fixed chunks • Part is chunked, but you can add or change other elements: • I can ______. • Please pass me the ______. • I’d like a _____. • Give beginners lots of sentence frames.

  25. I have ____, Who Has ____?

  26. Directions • Star person = first • “ I have a/an _____.” • Person with that animal responds. • Answer and question • 2nd Round=timed

  27. Think-Pair-Share • Think about Listen & Do, Songs, the Disappearing Dialogue, and I Have, Who Has. • Which do you think you would use in the future? Why? • Which would you NOT use? Why?

  28. Older young learners

  29. Interviews and Surveys

  30. Information Gap

  31. HUGE category of activities!Integrate listening and speaking. • Listen and manipulate • Listen and draw • Find the difference • Guessing Games

  32. Find the Difference

  33. Guessing Games • I Spy • I’m Thinking Of . . . • Where’s Waldo?

  34. Where’s Waldo • Pre-teach vocabulary: • Pre-teach vocabulary: • “I see a ________ with ______.” • “I see a ________ who is ____ing _____.”

  35. Think-Pair-Share • What was your favorite Information Gap activity? Why?

  36. Back to back

  37. Directions Before Watching: • Pre-teach essential vocab • Students discuss cards • guess video order from beginning to end using cards • Put papers in order from top to bottom

  38. While Watching • Partner A faces the screen • Partner B faces the opposite wall • Play the clip for 10-20 seconds or so, then stop. • Partner A tells partner B what he/she saw. • Re-arrange the cards • Use the cards to orally re-tell what happened.

  39. Additional Notes • Have them write a paragraph about the video using sequencing words (first, next) • Adjust the grammar for whatever you’re studying (present progressive, past tense, present tense) • Adjust the level—use cards, sentences, or nothing—they just talk

  40. Think-Pair-Share • What did you think about Back to Back? • Pros? • Cons? • How do you think you could use it in the future? • What kinds of videos could you use it with?

  41. Eternal mingle

  42. Important Info • Ages: All (over 5 or 6) • Levels: All • Skills: All (just adjust)

  43. Directions • Each student=1 card • Students meet with 1 other person. • Ask and answer questions. • Trade cards. • Find another partner. • Talk to everyone in the room!

  44. Think-Pair-Share • Eternal Mingle: • Pros? • Cons? • Aside from conversation starters, how else could you use this activity?

  45. Other UsesVocab / Grammar Vygostsky’s most famous idea concerns the ____ of __________ __________. Yesterday, I _________ a really big box of popcorn at the movies.

  46. Gallery Walk

  47. Gallery Walk! • Students do a drawing, cut out a picture, or bring a favorite toy from home. • Example: Cut out a fashionable model. 2) Have students practice in writing. 3) Have them practice orally. 4) Gallery time!

More Related