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Teaching Grammar and Vocabulary TYL Spring 2013

Teaching Grammar and Vocabulary TYL Spring 2013. Agenda. Cloze Activity: Big Ideas Practical Ideas for Grammar and Vocabulary Grammar: Younger/Older Learners Vocabulary . Cloze Activity: Grammar. Directions:. Work with a partner to compare answers.

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Teaching Grammar and Vocabulary TYL Spring 2013

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  1. Teaching Grammar and VocabularyTYL Spring 2013

  2. Agenda • Cloze Activity: Big Ideas • Practical Ideas for Grammar and Vocabulary • Grammar: Younger/Older Learners • Vocabulary

  3. Cloze Activity: Grammar

  4. Directions: • Work with a partner to compare answers. 2) Finally, ask more people if you need more help.

  5. Answers • Acquiring , Learning • Explicit • Implicitly • Chunks • Fun, meaningful, themes, narratives • Meaning • Error correction, accuracy

  6. Let’s discuss Grammar!

  7. Very young learners (below 7 or 8)

  8. #1 • Emphasize grammar acquisition—not learning. • Krashen’s Acquisition-Learning Hypothesis • Acquisition: Subconscious • Learning: Conscious • Grammar=best learned through natural language use in motivating, authentic tasks

  9. #2 • Explicit, or direct, grammar instruction doesn’t work. • Grammar rules and labels= abstract • Piaget—abstract thinking comes later

  10. #3 • Grammar should mostly be taught implicitly. • Ways to do this? • Pattern Books (Brown Bear, etc.) • Songs (Mr. Monkey) • Classroom commands • “Give out the papers”  “Give out the white papers”  “Give out the white papers that are on my desk” • Games

  11. #4 • There should be a lexical, or vocabulary, focus. Grammar should be learned through chunks, which can later be broken apart and used in creative ways. • What does this mean? • Weinhart: Grammar is “the evolution from chunks to creativity”

  12. Grammar: “Evolution of Chunks to Creativity” • Example 1: • “Could you please pass me the salt?” • Add nouns: the paper, a crayon • Add verbs: help me, come here • Example 2: • “What do you see?” • Add different verbs: hear, want, like • These grammar rules are difficult, but a learner can MEMORIZE the chunks in a fun way and get creative with them.

  13. Example: Grammar through ChunksSystematic ELD

  14. Grammar Through Chunks:Doing a picture walk • Picture walk=talking about pictures before reading a story • Students use sentence frames to talk about the pictures

  15. Silly Sally Picture Walk

  16. Go Fish!

  17. #5 • All instruction—in grammar, vocabulary, or any of the four skills—needs to be fun and meaningful. It should be based on themes and on narratives and should have a social focus.

  18. Older Young Learners #6 • Mini-lessons on grammar • Focus on meaning. • Lessons=short, interactive, and highly visual. • Remember whole language? (whole text, smaller skills, whole text again) • This is similar! Meaningful language use, grammar lesson, meaningful language use again

  19. #7 • Some grammar instruction can come through error correction. • Are you practicing fluency and the communication of meaning, or are you working on accuracy? • Also, ask yourself: Do I need to correct on the spot, or can I do it in a whole-group format after the activity?

  20. Fluency or accuracy? • Too much correction!

  21. Delayed Feedback: Step 1

  22. Delayed Feedback: Step 2 • Mini-lesson • Look at your anecdotal notes • Write common sentences on board • Maybe: Change some nouns • Have students analyze in pairs • Show corrections on board

  23. On-the-Spot Error Correction • Research: Mackey and Oliver (2002) • On-the-spot correction = not for kids under 7 • Research is contradictory • However, one form of correction that has the lowest rate of uptake = recasting • Recasting = Correcting what the student said with no explanation • Child: “I eated dinner last night.” • Teacher: “You ate dinner last night.”

  24. Error Correction Strategies that Work • Clarification Request • Student: “He walk to the store yesterday.” • Teacher: “Sorry--I didn’t understand.” • Studies: Somewhat effective • Metalinguistic Feedback • Student: “He walk to the store every day.” • Teacher: “He is 3rd person singular and needs an –s at the end.” • Studies: Somewhat effective (but not for very young learners)

  25. Error Correction Strategies that Work • Repetition • Student: “He eated.” • Teacher: “He eated?” (with rising intonation) • Among the most successful strategies • Elicitation • Student: “Last night, he eated.” • Teacher: a. “Last night, he . . .” OR b. “How do we talk about the past in English?” OR “Please say that again correctly in English.”

  26. A few Grammar Activities: Very Young Learners

  27. Very Young Learners: Grammar Instruction through Chunks • Pattern Books • Poems, Songs with Patterns (shared reading) • Simple, repetitive games • Go Fish: Do you have a ___? • Memory/Concentration: It’s a ____. This is a ___.

  28. A few Grammar Activities: Older Young Learners

  29. Battleship • Look at the top table. • Choose 1 box in each row. Draw a “battleship” in the box. (There should be 7.) • Find a friend to play with you, but don’t look at your friend’s paper! • Decide: Who’s Partner 1? Who’s Partner 2?

  30. My Battleships:

  31. Battleship (cont.) • Fold you paper under the first box. • Partner 1 will look only at the top of the page. • Partner 2 will look only at the bottom. • Partner 2 will ask 2 questions for each row. • (Do you have __ on __?) 6) Partner 1 answers • “Yes, I do” = Partner 2 marks an X • “No, I don’t” = Partner 2 marks a dot • Switch roles when you finish the last row! • The winner is the person who “sunk” the most battleships!

  32. Board Games

  33. Board Games • Make your own, OR • Get CandyLand! The girl/ not cook

  34. Other Games

  35. Mad Libs

  36. Step 1: Fold your paper • Fold above the hearts!

  37. Step 2: Make a chart with the students (whole group) Plural nouns = add –s or –ies

  38. Step 3: Choose which words you want to use. • Write them in the top right box. • Just do numbers 1 – 5 (to get the idea)

  39. Step 4: Copy your words • Write the words from the top right box in the paragraph • ONLY 1-5!

  40. Step 5: Read your story • Share your story with a partner!

  41. Movie Segments to Assess Grammar Goals • Blog

  42. Vocabulary

  43. For beginners . . . • It’s all about filling the refrigerator. • Vocabulary instruction should be thematic. • It should be taught with appropriate sentence frames, too.

  44. For example . . . • Family Vocabulary • Frame: I have a ____ / 1 have 2/3 ___s. • Weather Vocabulary • It is ______. / It is ____ in the _____. • When it is _____, I like to ______.

  45. Beginners • Re-use and recycle vocabulary hundreds of times! • Games, games, games! • Meaningful activities: Songs, books, projects, etc.

  46. Vocabulary: Recycling activities for beginners

  47. Posters • Practice writing: Groups write on them with whiteboard markers • “Teacher, Student”: Students quiz each other using the answers on the back • Sticky Ball or Fly Swatters

  48. Realia • Buy at a teacher supply store or toy store • Bring in real stuff!

  49. Guessing Games • Is it a/an _____? (vocab word) • Do you ____ with it? (verb) • Is it ______? (adjective) • Do you do it _____? (at the park? At school?) • Formats: • Magic Bag (whole class) • Hot Seat with cards (whole class or small groups) • Cards (pairs)

  50. I have ____, Who Has ____?

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