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2 Posts tagged with the classroom_management tag
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Following an intensive spell of travelling, this month’s instalment is a little belated I’m afraid. Still, better late than never, and to begin with once again, a couple of quick reminders: 

1)     My A-Z of areas is not meant to be definitive or exhaustive. Please feel free each month to add you own!

2)     I will comment only briefly on each of my areas. Please expand on them or discuss them as you wish!

 

C is for…

 

Communicative Approach

In some ways, it’s a little surprising that ELT methodology took a while to get round to the notion of language being for communication. Beginning over a hundred years ago, grammar translation dwelt upon enabling learners to appreciate the written word more than to enable them to engage in spoken or written communication, and as we saw last month, behaviourism gave rise to the ‘drill and kill’ repetition approach to language instruction. In the late 70s, luminaries such as Chomsky, Krashen and Tyrell – and later still Willis and Willis (Task Based Learning) and Michael Lewis (The Lexical Apparoach) helped to popularise communicative language teaching. So how communicative is your classroom? Here’s a simple test. Ask yourself why we communicate in everyday life outside the classroom, then see if your classroom approaches and activities are preparing your students to do this. Here’s my list of reasons for ‘Everyday Communication’:

  • To give and receive information
  • For entertainment
  • To share opinions
  • To solve problems
  • For survival
  • For ‘social and emotional’ reasons (ie to create and maintain contacts and friendships)

Obviously, there is some overlap here, but that can be considered a good thing – there’s nothing wrong with killing two birds with one stone!

 

Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR)

At one time it was common to ask ‘What do your students know in English?’ but increasingly these days we are asking ‘What can they DO in English?’ ‘Can do’ statements relating to the various skills are of the course the centrepiece of the CEFR, and provide students and teachers alike with a way of measuring communicative ability, rather than counting the number of phrasal verbs that students ‘know’ (but can’t use). This shift towards describing students’ competence gained momentum with the creation of the CEFR by the Council of Europe back in the 1990s. As well as providing a means of describing competences through the ‘can do’ statements, the document also serves to provide a scale of level descriptors that can be used for all languages in all countries – thereby making it easier to understand a student’s level irrespective of where they have studied. Find more information online at www.pearsonlongman.com/ae/cef/cefguide.pdf

It’s interesting to note that despite the title containing the word ‘European’, through experience I have seen the influence of the CEFR spreading beyond the borders of Europe as far afield as South America and South East Asia.

To what extent has the existence of the CEFR affected your ELT classroom, and in what ways? It would be interesting to hear any thoughts on this.    

 

Checking

My German teacher at school used to recite a lengthy list of grammar rules, then follow up with the ‘killer question’: “Do you understand?” An all pervading silence would follow, with a few barely perceptible nods from a bemused class. Clearly, ‘Do You Understand?’ is among the least useful of questions we could use in class, as few learners will ever say ‘no’, thereby exposing their weakness in front of their peers. Students need to be given the opportunity to demonstrate understanding, and this is where concept check questions come in. CCQs are usually closed questions about the target structure addressed to the class allowing the teacher to gauge how well the point has been grasped.

For me, the world of concept questions began sometime last century during my interview for the CTEFLA course at IH Hastings, when the interviewer, Mr Adrian Underhill, asked me to provide concept questions to ensure students understood the difference between the following pair of sentences: ‘I remembered to lock the door’ and ‘I remembered locking the door’. After 15 minutes of me not having the faintest idea, I recall the ease with which Adrian provided the following:

  • ‘How many actions are there in each sentence?’ (2)
  • ‘What are they?’ (remember and lock)
  • ‘In the first sentence, which happened first?’ (remember)
  • ‘In the second sentence, which happened first?’ (lock)

Wow, I thought. And a whole new window on the world of teaching opened up before me.

What means do you use to check meaning? Do you ever use straightforward translation?

   

Classroom Management

Discipline, interactions, involvement, instructions, timing… It seems there’s a lot to this vital area, so we’ll visit it bit at a time when we get to ‘D’, ‘I’ and ‘T’ respectively. It’s not that I’m shirking responsibility by not covering it all here, I promise.

 

Connected Speech

Conversely, there’s no need to wait for ‘P’ (for pronunciation) for this – connected speech is big enough to get an entry of its own here.

Following an input session on this topic, one CELTA course trainee once said to me ‘So we use connected speech because we’re lazy, then?’ That could be one way of putting it, in that the movement of the mouth and tongue from one word to another does sometimes produce certain phenomena that result from labour saving… Commonly, we refer to four kinds of connected speech:

  • Elision: Where a sound vanishes at the word boundary (eg the ‘d’ in fish and chips)
  • Assimilation: Where a sound changes at the word boundary (eg where ‘nd’ becomes ‘m’ in ‘hand bag’)
  • Intrusion: Where an extra sound appears at a word boundary (eg law (r) and order)
  • Catenation (My favourite) where a word boundary appears to shift, giving rise to word play such as ‘fork handles’ becoming ‘four candles.’ See this immortalised by the British comedy duo ‘The Two Ronnies’ here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cz2-ukrd2VQ

What difficulties do you students have with connected speech, both receptively and productively? How do you help them with these issues?

 

Christmas (or Winter Holidays)

For those celebrating or simply taking a well earned break, make sure it’s a good one. Looking forward to hearing from you with your comments – and additional ‘C’s of your own. We’ll be back with ‘D’ at the end of January! Happy teaching.

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The last few weeks have been especially busy, with a memorable 6 day visit to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in late May.

 

Nothing prepares the first time visitor for the searing heat of the Middle East, with daily temperatures hitting 44 degrees (the night time being relatively ‘cool’ at just 32 degrees…) During my visit, I had the opportunity to visit two large schools in the capital, and met a large number of great teachers. One thing that made this trip special was spending several hours sitting in on classes. It was fascinating to see the teachers in action in a culturally unfamiliar setting, and truly encouraging to see such enthusiastic and responsive students, the ones I met being aged between 12 and 16. Their level of English was generally excellent, and they were keen to try it out on me, as I was repeatedly asked where I was from (Leeds UK but resident in Poland – that confused them!) and if I supported Manchester United. (I don’t…)

 

A striking memory from the classroom visits was how the schools had truly embraced technology in the classroom, and were using it to great effect. Many teachers I have met prefer to stick with what they already know and resist using new methods in their teaching. They see technology as frightening and complicated and constantly worry about it going wrong. The Riyadh teachers however had taken the leap of faith and discovered just how much work it can actually save, and how it can make classroom management and the learning experience that much more effective.

 

All the classrooms I visited were equipped with Interactive Whiteboards, projectors and sound systems, and even though not all used IWB software, all used laptops connected to the projector to great effect.

 

  • Classroom management was made so much easier when giving instructions. All the students were focussed on the coursebook page on the board as the teacher set up activities. The familiar alternative is for the students to bury their heads in their coursebook during instructions – often on the wrong page!
  • Feedback was quick and easy. Answers to exercises were flashed up on the board in exactly the right place. This made it easier for the students to check what they had written in their books.
  • Student participation was increased. Especially in some of the younger classes, the opportunity to come to the front and write on the board served as a great motivational tool – they clearly loved using the software, and were actively involved.
  • Teachers had used great creativity in sourcing material from the internet (for example photos), and this made the teaching of vocabulary quick and easy. In one lesson, which was about the advantages and disadvantages of living in cities, the teacher had downloaded pictures showing different aspects of life in Riyadh, thereby personalising the vocabulary input at the same time. This fitted in perfectly with the principle of starting with what was known to the students, before moving on to the new.   
  • Cassette players have long been absent from many classrooms, but here even a separate CD player was nowhere to be seen. Controlling the audio directly from the computer saved the time and hassle involved in carry a separate CD / Cassette player – as well as that of rewinding tapes or finding the right track on the CD. One teacher had further personalised the audio track by adding a slide show of images from the web that were relevant to the recording.

 

The experience of seeing all this in action convinced me more than ever that technology has its place in the classroom – of course not to replace the teacher, but to supplement what we do in making our lives easier and the learning experience richer and more effective for the learners. What’s more, learners expect to interact with technology in all spheres of life nowadays, and it’s worth thinking about avoiding the situation where they feel as though going to school is like going back in time.

 

A final and compelling objection to technology of course is the cost. My feeling though is that just as it’s now possible to buy a DVD player for 10% of its 1995 purchase price, something similar could well happen with classroom technology – and it’s no doubt started already!

 

So that’s some of what the Great Teachers in Saudi Arabia are doing. More Great Teacher stories to follow soon! 

 

My thanks go to the teachers and students of Al Rowad and Al Manahij Boys’ schools in Riyadh for their hospitality, good food and excellent coffee during my visit.