Elements of Communicative Activities
An authentic
activity is one which brings the language to life by providing the REAL CONTEXT of language
usage through a newspaper article, a radio broadcast, a dictionary,
a story, a letter, a recorded conversation between two people, a diary
entry, an advertisement, a menu, a travel brochure etc.
A communicative
activity is one which brings the language to life by providing a REAL
BASIS for speaking, and the interactive EXCHANGE of ideas, opinions, and
feelings with another person.
It is important to
stress the aspect of exchange when teaching the four aspects of
communication: Reading, Writing,
Listening, and Speaking.
Confidence Building
One of the most
difficult parts of learning a foreign language is practicing it. In order to practice a foreign language, a person
needs to have confidence.
Be sure to:
- Encourage the
students to speak more
- When they do
speak, compliment them.
- Allow them to
use Japanese ONLY on a limited basis (i.e. if there is no other means
of getting their point across)
- Encourage the
use of gestures and facial expressions.
- Use only
constructive criticism.
- Utilize
student-focused lesson plans.
- Limit teacher
talking time to an absolute minimum.
Memorization
Memorization has
its good points when used properly. Memorizing a
greeting, however, is not one of them. When a student hears, "How are you?" the automatic
response is . . . You got it! "Fine, thank
you, and you?" The most amusing
aspect of this is that a student may obviously not be "fine". There are many responses to the question such as:
tired, hungry, hot, cold, or even bored. Just saying the dreaded "Fine, thank you, and
you?" response has NOTHING to do with communication. It's like merely speaking to a tape recorder.
Positive uses of
Memorization:
·
Memorizing vocabulary words—gradually being able to
reach the point where the object, subject, action etc, is linked directly
to the English word for it. All too often the object, subject, action, etc
is linked to the Japanese word and subsequently linked to the English
word.
Example: I see a pencil, I
think “pencil”. I don’t see a
pencil
and think えんぴつ and then think what’s
the
English word for えんぴつ—pencil.
·
Memorizing grammar structures through examples.
Example: I hear, “How are
you?”. I respond, “I’m happy”.
I
know that I can change “Happy” to any type of
emotion
to fit the situation. I don’t
hear, “How
are
you?”, and know my response will always be
“I’m
fine thank you and you.”
Brainstorming/Mind-mapping
Brainstorming or
Mind-mapping is a quick way of organizing thoughts and ideas.
- Ask the students
to think about a topic; for example: visiting London.
- Give them a
few minutes to write down as many words as they can about the topic in
their notebooks.
- Then draw a
Spider Diagram* on the board and record all of their ideas.
From this, you can tell
how much the students already know and use this to inform your teaching and
planning. In addition, this gives the students
confidence because they can look at the board and see all the information
they were able to come up with on their own, without having been taught in
class.
* A Spider Diagram
is where you write the main topic in the middle of the board and draw a
circle around it. Then you
write down all of the ideas students came up with and draw connecting lines
to the main topic.
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