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ROLE-PLAY AS A TEACHING METHOD

ROLE-PLAY AS A TEACHING METHOD. By : Yasmeen Rafaq. WHAT IS ROLE- PLAY?. Role play is a classroom activity in which learners take on roles & act out an imagined or real scenario. For example: Students take on the roles of characters in a novel they are reading

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ROLE-PLAY AS A TEACHING METHOD

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  1. ROLE-PLAY AS A TEACHING METHOD By: YasmeenRafaq

  2. WHAT IS ROLE- PLAY? • Role play is a classroom activity in which learners take on roles & act out an imagined or real scenario.For example: Students take on the roles of characters in a novel they are reading • It is a technique that complements the traditional lecture

  3. WHY ROLE PLAY?

  4. WHY ROLE PLAY? • Students are directly active during the role play, so it is more effective in “embedding concepts” into their long term memory. The excitement of the role play, the interaction and stimulation to visual, auditory and kinaesthetic styles of learning helps a broad range of learners

  5. WHY ROLE PLAY?

  6. WHY ROLE PLAY? • It helps to develop all domains of learning, cognitive (knowledge), psychomotor (skills) and affective (emotional) • Role- play is very useful for developing the ‘interpersonal skills’ of learners • The role play method develops a greater understanding of the complexity of professional practice and enables students to develop skills to engage in multi-stakeholder negotiations within the controlled environment of the classroom

  7. WHY ROLE PLAY? • Role- play can help students explore emotive issues For example: Smoking, religious issues, cultural issues • Hirsch argues that role play consists of the key elements of experiential learning • David Kolb defined role- play as “the process whereby knowledge is created through the transformation of experience”

  8. WHY ROLE PLAY? • Role-plays can be simple or complex, short or long and can be adapted to suit the needs of what is being taught or explored • Several groups of students can carry out the same role- play activity simultaneously. This has the advantage that it allows every member of the class to practise the social skill

  9. WHY ROLE PLAY? • It is not suitable for repeated performance of these role- plays to the whole class, as the repetition becomes too tedious • Alternatively, the role- play can be a single performance viewed by the rest of the class

  10. CONSTRUCTING A ROLE-PLAY The key steps in constructing a role-play are: • Define Aims and Objectives (practice skills, explore concepts, etc.) • Define setting/placement • Define clear role descriptors

  11. CONSTRUCTING A ROLE-PLAY • Define time limit • Define observer tasks (if any) • Define ground rules of safety and feedback • Define debriefing agenda • Define facilitator tasks

  12. RUNNING A ROLE-PLAY • Give players time to study the scenarios • Teacher should intervene as little as possible, however, if new information is needed to be added while the activity is running, it must be prepared in advance • Teacher should check that all roles are active. If any students are not participating, she should talk to them directly • The resources made available to students should assist them to participate in the role play and fulfill their role

  13. DEBRIEFING OR PLENARY SESSION • The final stage is a debriefing. Plenty of time should be allocated to this as it is the most important element of the role play • It is always better to have an ice-breaker or a chat about an unrelated topic for a few minutes to break people out of role so any negative emotions or aggressions can dissipate. As role-play is very powerful people may end up staying ‘in role’ for a while after causing disruption to the group or the learning task

  14. DEBRIEFING OR PLENARY SESSION • It is better to follow the simple rules of feedback- where the participants are asked how it went, what emotions they experienced and one is playing a professional and the other a client – to ask each person’s internal emotions and how the other made them feel • If an assessment then the participant should be able to describe what went well and what didn’t go well. The groups will then give positive and constructive feedback

  15. DEBRIEFING OR PLENARY SESSION It is often useful after debriefing to summarise what was gained- by asking each participant for their points learnt or understood. It will be usually quite an assortment of learning points that shows how each role-play can stimulate several strands of learning beyond the original aims and objectives

  16. AND FINALLY... • Role-play is a powerful and effective teaching method for children and adult and can be adapted to deliver any learning objectives from simple to complex concepts • It really lends well to practice communication skills, debate complex ethical issues or explore attitudes and beliefs. The success lies in the construction and delivery with careful facilitation • It is great for teachers and trainers as it is entertaining, more interactive and reduced learner fatigue

  17. GO ON; GIVE IT A TRY IF YOU HAVEN’T ALREADY!THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME!

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