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Motivating Students Abigail Bruhlmann English Language Fellow June 2014.

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Presentation on theme: "Motivating Students Abigail Bruhlmann English Language Fellow June 2014."— Presentation transcript:

1 Motivating Students Abigail Bruhlmann English Language Fellow June 2014

2 Warm-up Discussion Why are your students learning English? What role does English play in their present lives? What role might English play in their future lives?

3 “Three Questions to Ask in Any Classroom” What am I learning? Why am I learning it? How do I know I have learned it? Adapted from: Drummond, S. (2014, May 27). The 3 Questions to Ask in Any Classroom. NPR. Retrieved from: http://www.npr.org/blogs/ed/2014/05/27/315294389/the-3-questions-to-ask-in-any-classroom

4 Classroom setup Rows vs. Semi-circle Turn-n-talk to your partner vs. stare straight ahead

5 Classroom community Students feel comfortable Students feel like they belong Students connected to each other and the teacher Students know the teacher and know each other

6 Classroom interaction Individual work Pair work Small group work Whole class work

7 Classroom management Clear rules and expectations Routines Smooth transitions between activities

8 Formative Assessment Checking in with students along the way Informal Prepares students for summative assessment

9 Examples of Formative Assessment Exit/entrance papers (KWL) Peer/individual assessment Individual white boards Response journals/logs Kinesthetic assessments Discussions Think, Pair, Share Graphic organizers Numbered Heads Together Adapted from: http://wvde.state.wv.us/teach21/ExamplesofFormativeAssessment.html

10 Summative Assessment Cummulative assessment at end of unit Final assessment of how much was learned Formal (tests, quizzes, projects, presentations)

11 Authentic materials Materials that students see and use in their daily lives Songs, comics, cereal boxes…anything!

12 Dialogue Journals An individualized, private “conversation” between student and teacher Worked on all throughout the term Fluency > Accuracy Denne-Bolton, S. (2013). The Dialogue Journal: A Tool for Building Better Writers. English Teaching Forum 51(2), pp. 2-11.

13 Dialogue Journals May 31 I think is very interesting the book “Charlotte’s Web” because I like the animals, but is sad because Fern’s father wants to kill Wilbur. June 7 Yes I think I would take care of the pig because is not his fault that he is small, so I would help him. June 4 I am happy to hear that you are enjoying “Charlotte’s Web”! I agree that the story is interesting. I think it is heartwarming too, because Fern shows so much love for Wilbur. Do you think that you would take care of a little pig to save its life? June 10 I think I would help him too, though it would be a big sacrifice for me.

14 Personalized post-it notes When monitoring small group work Put post-it note on student desk (vocabulary, pronunciation, grammar) Optional: follow-up with student later

15 Error Correction How effective/necessary is oral error correction? How do you practice it? How often do you practice it?

16 An error is not an emergency

17 Error Correction Basics: Error vs. Mistake Look for patterns (systematic) Self correction > Teacher correction Balance fluency and accuracy Affective filter

18 Types of Error Correction Indirect Recast Clarification request Elicitation Repetition Direct Grammar explanation Explicit

19 Recast Student: –I go to the store yesterday. Teacher: –Oh, you went to the store yesterday. That’s cool. What did you buy? -Teacher restates Ss’ utterance correctly, but without drawing attention to the correction -Indirect correction, best used for mistakes -Most often used by teachers -Often understood by Ss as an alternative to their utterance rather than a correction -Source: http://journal.tc-library.org/index.php/tesol/article/viewFile/160/158

20 Clarification request Student: -I go to the store yesterday. Teacher: -I go to the store? Wait, what did you do yesterday? -Teacher pretends not to understand Ss, causing them to self-correct -Indirect correction, best used for mistakes -Ss are expected to correct their own mistakes by following the T’s clues

21 Elicitation Student: – I go to the store yesterday. Teacher: – Ah ok, yesterday I… www.youtube.com/watch?v=tm5dqn08TME -Teacher uses rising intonation to repeat the S’s sentence up until the error -Indirect correction, best used for mistakes -S is subtly made aware of the error and has to complete T’s sentence

22 Grammar Explanation Student: -I go the store yesterday. Teacher: -Ah, you said “yesterday,” which means this action happened in the past, so we need a simple past tense verb, not the simple present. So… www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsMA44kclME -Teacher highlights and explains the grammar rule being violated -Could be direct or indirect (depends if it´s a mistake or error) -Ss can use the grammatical clues to correct their own mistakes, or teacher uses the grammar explanation to correct the mistake for the student

23 Explicit Student: - I go to the store yesterday. Teacher: - No, it´s not “I go.” I went to the store yesterday. www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvSXqVzr5Mg Teacher explicitly tells the Ss that the utterance is incorrect Direct correction, best used for errors Very clear that there was a mistake Ss do not get an opportunity to correct their own mistakes

24 Repetition Student: -I go to the store yesterday. Teacher: -I go? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkusnsacpsQ Teacher repeats the error (using question intonation) Indirect correction, best used for mistakes Clear that there is some confusion Students get an opportunity to correct their own mistakes

25 Assessment #1! Can you identify the different types of error correction? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFVSQTNUxtc

26 Which type to choose? Use a variety/use them in combination Mistake or error? – Is the student able to self-correct? – Explicit correction for Ss who have no idea how to correct the error or don’t understand that an error occurred Know your Ss and their learning styles – Ss who are good at grammar might benefit from metalinguistic correction – Highly observant Ss might recognize recasts as error correction

27 No matter which one you choose... Give concise explanations Don’t correct above the Ss’ level Don’t interrupt the student Don’t correct every single error Stick to a theme Remember the goal of the activity Does correcting this error help achieve the goal?

28 Assessment #2! Match the name of the error correction technique together with its definition and an example for the error. “I go the store yesterday.” Then, write your own example for each technique for the error, “I am agree.”

29 Peer Feedback Active listening during presentations Listeners write: Something I learned: ____________________ Question: ____________________ Comment: _____________________

30 Feedback from Students “Ticket out the door” I learned… I liked… I didn’t really like… I’m still confused about… Questions/comments/suggestions...

31 For more information: http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/blogs/alexen oamen/ways-motivating-efl-esl-students- classroom http://fel.uqroo.mx/adminfile/files/memorias/her nandez_mendez_edith_et_al.pdf


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