This marks a new lesson I have been trying to construct for
the class. Previously the class had a second writing assignment after the
midterm. Last semester I spent a lot of time on that in the second half
of the semester before working on preparation for the final. This
semester the school eliminated the
second writing exam and added a comparison component to the final speaking
exam. In the final the students will now
look at two pictures and describe what is the same and what is different. This has been a new lesson that I have been
trying to construct.
The problem for
me is not that I lack foresight, but that I lack correct foresight. I never seem to correctly anticipate the
problems the students have, nor do I do things the right way. I ran the exact same lesson 6 times this week
and I feel that I only did it correctly the sixth time. My plan was to do it step by step, using
PPIPP and scaffolding to get the point where the students could produce on
their own. This generally did not work
well until the final class. I identified
a few things I did wrong. They needed
more activation than I originally gave; I should have led the class there a bit
more. Some classes were able to pick up
the basic form of sentences from my modeling, some could not. Some of my examples were unclear in that I
should have used pictures with more obvious or easily explained
differences. Some things were a little
rushed. Sometimes I expected a bit too
much.
The good news
is that it went really well by the sixth time.
One the one hand this was due to a bit of trial and error and
experience. On the other hand, it was
also due to paring the lesson down to the simplest and most basic level. I need to recognize the difference between
simple/complex and easy /difficult when making lessons.
Other good news
is that by consistently writing “How do I say _______ in English?” on the WB
and leaving it there the students have been using it a lot. I hear them say it quite often, even when I
am not near their desks. I think this
means they are using it to get a translation or clarification. This is a minor success. I have also started dragging more information
out of students in warm ups. They used
to just give one word answers or bull shit platitudes about what they have recently done. Answers like “slept” or “studied English”
were common responses to “what did you do last weekend?” I have been starting class by talking for a
while about something I have done, making has many sentences as I can, before
asking them to talk to their partners. I
don’t think it is very important to talk about their weekends, but it is
important to get them producing. It has
a noticeable impact in the class. The
more they say in the first 5 minutes, the more they tend to say in the next
70. It usually gets them more engaged
with their partners. They tend to ask
more questions, back channel and peer correct if they chat early. Another small victory…
Getting it right eventually is all you can hope for. Your instinct are pretty good, and will only get better. I'm amazed at how much I'm learning this semester, in roughly my 25th year (I guess we also forget some stuff). Come to think of it, I'm amazed how much I learned last semester, too.
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