The document discusses using a language learning profile framework to analyze learners' language skills and strategies. It proposes examining learners' perspectives in different areas like grammar, pronunciation, and vocabulary to identify mistakes and understand how they acquire a second language. The framework involves analyzing learners' cognitive processes and applying language learning strategies and metacognition to help them become more independent and proficient language users. The goal is for learners to recognize their own thinking processes and develop productive and receptive language skills.
An introductory Albanian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Bengali language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Malagasy language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Romanian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Albanian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Bengali language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Malagasy language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Romanian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Ukrainian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Russian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
Basic Chinese (Mandarin) Language Course101_languages
An introductory Chinese (Mandarin) language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Hausa language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
Baluchi made easy mirán baluch raési (4)MRMusicHut
Best Why is the Main of Ali Bloch You can the hshb sdc
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This thorough e-book covers the Spanish Present Tenses. It discusses when to use the present tense, explains each of the conjugation rules, and provides many examples of proper use.
An introductory Tswana language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Bambara language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Ukrainian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Russian language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
Basic Chinese (Mandarin) Language Course101_languages
An introductory Chinese (Mandarin) language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Hausa language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
Baluchi made easy mirán baluch raési (4)MRMusicHut
Best Why is the Main of Ali Bloch You can the hshb sdc
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This thorough e-book covers the Spanish Present Tenses. It discusses when to use the present tense, explains each of the conjugation rules, and provides many examples of proper use.
An introductory Tswana language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
An introductory Bambara language course prepared by the U.S. Peace Corps for its volunteers.
View and download the full course (with audio) at:
http://www.101languages.net/peace-corps-courses/
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
PHP Frameworks: I want to break free (IPC Berlin 2024)Ralf Eggert
In this presentation, we examine the challenges and limitations of relying too heavily on PHP frameworks in web development. We discuss the history of PHP and its frameworks to understand how this dependence has evolved. The focus will be on providing concrete tips and strategies to reduce reliance on these frameworks, based on real-world examples and practical considerations. The goal is to equip developers with the skills and knowledge to create more flexible and future-proof web applications. We'll explore the importance of maintaining autonomy in a rapidly changing tech landscape and how to make informed decisions in PHP development.
This talk is aimed at encouraging a more independent approach to using PHP frameworks, moving towards a more flexible and future-proof approach to PHP development.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Generative AI Deep Dive: Advancing from Proof of Concept to ProductionAggregage
Join Maher Hanafi, VP of Engineering at Betterworks, in this new session where he'll share a practical framework to transform Gen AI prototypes into impactful products! He'll delve into the complexities of data collection and management, model selection and optimization, and ensuring security, scalability, and responsible use.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
1. Language Learning Profile Framework
For the past several years, there has been a concern to know how learners acquire
a second language and what methods they use to deal with specific problems. For
that reason, it might be helpful to analyse someone’s perspective in different areas,
so we can identify their mistakes and infer what may happened. It has been known
that in order to solve these problems, learning strategies is a useful tool that helps
learners to overcome difficult situations during the process of learning another
language. Therefore, applying the correct strategy to students is a way to facilitate
a learning task.
At the same time, as teachers we gain the experience to have an overview into the
student’s cognitive processes, by taking into account both Oxford and Chamot’s
strategies. These two educators believe in the assumption that actually all students
can learn.
In addition, these two researchers applied their strategies with the idea to help
students to become proficient English language users, and to improve their own
learning. On one hand, teachers help student to understand themselves the way
they learn. On the other hand, students realized on their own processes by using
metacognition, which at the end they become more independent learners.
Eventually, as previously mentioned, coping with strategies encourage students to
recognize their own thinking processes. It is necessary to apply these strategies in
order to make them develop productive or receptive skills.
2. Language Learner Profile
Learner’s Background:
The learner is 21 years old; he is in his second year of Culinary Arts in
“Universidad Tecnológica INACAP”. Academically, in terms of English proficiency,
he started in 2001 at “Instituto de Humanidades San Francisco de Asis–Lota”. After
this, he attended “Liceo Industrial F.F Schwager”, from 1° grade to 4 °year. During
high school he used to spend two hours per week of English classes, in which he
obtained sufficient marks.
Since 11 years old approximately, he started to listen to music in English, from one
of his favorite bands called “Linkin Park”. This was one of the main reasons why
he thought in studying English pedagogy; however, he did not get the necessary
score to get to the university. Finally, he took an optional course on cooking,so he
decided to study something related to gastronomy.
In his daily routine, he stated that he continues loving English despite studying
other type of courses such as French, which can generate some kind of
interference in learning English. At the university, he has 4 hours of English during
the week, and two hours of French. It is relevant to mention that, since he is really
interesting in learning more about English, he spends most of the day listening to
different groups of music and watching TV in English.
3. Taped Interview
Interviewer: (T) Nataly Muñoz
Interviewee: (S) Francisco Muñoz
1 T: Hi
2 S: Hi
3 T: Ok. What’s your name?
4 S: My name is Francisco Muñoz
5 T: How old are you?
6 S: Ehmmm. I’m twenty one years old
7 T: Ok. Can you spell your name?
8 S: Ehmmmyeap, ehmm F- R ehmm, A-N- C ehhh A-S-C-O.
9 T: And what is your favorite type of music?
10 S: I like rock music
11 T: And who is your favourite singer?
12 S: Ahmmm, my favourite singer is mmmmmm, tiriririri Janis Joplin
13 T: Could you describe yourself in terms of personality?
14 S: Ehmm I’m very ehm quite and shy ehmm…….eso
15 T: Ok. What do you do in your free time?
16 S: Ehm, I like cook, cooking ehh I like listen music and emm mmm..and
playing music
17 T: What did you do in your last winter holidays?
18 S: Ehmm, I ….. I go to the ehmm, Sur de Chile ehmm mmm….Punta Arenas
ehmm,
19 visit many cities ehhh mmm… and many people.
4. 20 T: Ok. Could you tell me a happy moment of your life?
21 S: Ehhhh, when ehhh.. I go to my first concert in my life ehmm..in Santiago ehm
capital 22 of my country Chile ehmm, I go with a fried emm, the name of the band
is Iron Maiden 23 emm.. is a popular band of emm.. Heavy metal music emm of
England emm,, this night 24 they are playing emm one of my favorites song emm..
call “Children of dammed” this 25 song emm.. is very amazing emm.. the concert
finish emmamm.. 11 pm. Mmm..we go 26 to the bus emmm when the concert
finish, the concert reunit mmm.. more of sententa 27 mil personas. Ok, you can say
it in Spanish. This night I’m very very happy.
28 T: Ok. What are you going to do for Independence day?
29 S: Ehmm.. I go to the mmm…. fondasemmm.and dancing cuecaemm.drink
mote con 30huesillo ehhchichaem..eat many emm..food
emm..pajaritos
mm..asadosehmm...cosas 31como esas.
32 T: Ok. Thank you very much
33 S: Ok.
5. Interview Analysis: Systems of the Language.
The learner’s interview will be analyzed in three important areas of
language, which are: grammar, pronunciation and vocabulary.
1.
Grammar:
a) Inappropriate use of tenses (past and future):
For learners, sometimes is complicated to make use of the correct tense for
a given context, for example:
- I go to the (18).
- I go to my first concert (21)
- I go with a friend (22).
He is willing to describe actions that he did in a certain period of time;
nonetheless, it would have been appropriate to use past tense in order to
recognize when those actions happened: I went to the - I went to my first concert - I
went with a friend…
- They are playing (24).
He attempts to select the correct past tense; however, it would have been
more suitable to use past continuous to refer to: They were playing …
-“I go to the fondas” (29)
Once more, he makes use of the incorrect tense to express a future action
that has been planned; according to the example above the correct form it would
have been “I will go to the fondas”
b) Omission of a preposition To:
The use of prepositions in English in most of the cases creates problems for
the learners; due to the negative transfer form their native mother tongue.
Eventually, the student learns to use them just by memorizing and in many times
as chunks of words. See examples below:
- “…dancingcuecadrink mote con huesillochicha.eat many food” (29) - (30),
instead “ to dance cueca, to drinkhuesillo and to eat many food”
6. c) Parallel structure:
The learner tries to clarify his hobbies by using sometimes ing- form;
however, it might have been precise to use the same structure during the whole
sentence.
-“I like cook, cooking I like listen music and playing music” (16) instead, “I
like cooking, I like listening music and playing music”
d) Word order :
The student makes efficient use of word order specifically with adjective, a
problem that most Spanish speakers have to encounter, as in the following
example:
-
“Heavy metal music” (23).
7. 2.
Pronunciation:
According to the learner’s perspective, a piece of the interview will be
exhibited in order to analyze his speech. The aspects to be assessed will be:
Stress, intonation, connected speech, and fluency. Therefore, an IPA transcription
is provided to understand the student’s ability for speaking.
S: Ehhhh, when ehhh… I go to my first concert in my life ehmmm..in Santiago
ehmm capital of my country Chile ehmmm, I go with a friend emmm.. the name of
the band is “Iron Maiden” emm..is a popular band of emm..Heavy metal music
emm... of England emmm... this night they are playing emm one of my favourites
song emm..call “Children of dammed” this song emm.. is very amazing emm.. the
concert finish emmamm 11 pm mmm… we go to the bus emm… when concert
finish the concert reunit mmm… more of setenta mil personas. Ok you can say it
in Spanish. This night I’m very very happy.
/(E) wen (e) aɪ gəʊ tʊ maɪ ˈ rst ˈk nsɜ rtɪ nmaɪ laɪ f (em) ɪ n Santiago (em)
fɜ
ɒ
ˈ
kapɪ talofmaɪ ˈ ntrɪ
kʌ
Chile
(em)
aɪ gəʊ wɪ ð
əfriend
(em)
ðɜ neɪ mofðəbændɪ z ˈa rən ˈme dn (em)ɪ zəˈ pɒ pjələrbændof (em) ˈ
ɪ
ɪ
Hevɪ
ˈmetl ˈ
mjuˈz k (emm) ofˈ
ɪ
Iŋglɒ nd (em) ðɪ snaɪ tðeɪ ʌ r ˈple ɪ ŋ (em)
ɪ
wʌ nəvmaɪ ˈfe vərɪ tssɒ ŋ (em) kɒ ld ˈ ɪ ldrənof ˈdæm dðɪ ssɒ ŋ (em) ɪ z
ɪ
ʧ
ɪ
ˈver ʌ ˈ
ɪ
meɪ zɪ ŋ (emm) ðə ˈk nsɜ rt ˈf nɪ ʃ (em) (am) 11 ˈpiˈˈem (m)
ɒ
ɪ
wigəʊ tʊ ðəbʌ s (em) wen ˈk nsɜ rt ˈf nɪ ʃ ðə ˈk nsɜ rtriunit (m)
ɒ
ɪ
ɒ
mɒ rofsetentamɪ l/okjuˈ kænse ɪ tɪ n ˈspæn ʃ /ðɪ snaɪ tIm ˈver
ɪ
ɪ
ɪ ˈver
ɪ
ˈ
hæpɪ /
a) Stress:
The Student does not struggle with word stress throughout his speech. In
the examples below, he stresses noun, verbs and prepositions as well.
-Noun: /tʊ maɪ ˈ rst ˈk nsɜ rtɪ nmaɪ laɪ f/
fɜ
ɒ
-Preposition: / Im ˈver ˈver ˈhæp /
ɪ
ɪ
ɪ
8. b) Intonation:
The learner tends to omit intonation, which he uses a falling tone instead of
rising it, considering that there are important ideas to emphasize:
- /ðɪ ssɒ ŋ (em) ɪ zˈ
verɪ əˈ
meɪ zɪ ŋ/
- /wʌ nəvmaɪ ˈfe vərɪ tssɒ ŋ/
ɪ
c) Connected speech:
The student makes use of a linking feature, in this case would be the Linking R:
-
“they are” / naɪ tðeɪ ʌ rˈple ɪ ŋ/.
ɪ
d) Fluency:
The student’s speech is impaired by the overuse of fillers, such as “ehmm” –
“mm” and “amm”, these are elements that make the leaner’s speech less effective.
Moreover, the excessive pauses that he does, at the same time makes the idea to
be less understandable.
-
“Heavy metal music emm... of England emmm”.
“ whenehhh… I go to my first concert in my life ehmmm”
9. 3.
Vocabulary:
From the learner’s interview, it has been possible to analyze some typical
mistakes that the majority of second language learners make.
a) Omission of connectors:
The use of words to link ideas was very difficult for the interviewee; therefore
it was complicated to follow the interviewee´s speech. It was possible to extract the
following examples:
-“I go to the Ehmm, Sur de Chile ehmm mmm….Punta Arenas”(18) instead
of “I go to Sur de Chile,and then I went to Punta Arenas”
-“I go to my first concert in my life ehmmm..in Santiago ehmm capital of
my country Chile ehmm” (20 - 21) instead of“I go to my first concert in my life, that
was in Santiago city which is the capital of my country, Chile.
b) Cognates:
The interviewee tends to pronounce two words that look the same in
Spanish and in English in the same way.
-“…in Santiago ehmm capital of my country Chileehmmm”(20-21) instead
of in Santiago capital ehmm of my country Chiliehmmm.
-“…drink mote con huesilloehhchicha eat many emm food” (28-29)
instead of in “drink mote con huesilloehh chichi eat a lot of food.”
3. Misspelling of words:
The interviewee has problems pronouncing words which have the similar
sounds in English for example:
-“Ehmm I´m very ehmmquite…”(14) Instead of “I´m very quiet”
10. Writing task
Write a brief paragraph (100 words) answering the following question. If you
were a millionaire. What would you do with that money?
1 With my money spend on my family because they loved and buy a place 2
away from the city because system capitalist for my it’s bad in my opinion, 3 my
futur house, this house a forest and lakes, for my tranquility, with
4 renewable
energy, and inverted a system ecologist for good of the earth,
5 a place tourist
where people enjoy the nature and local food,everithing 6 made with valance of
humans and nature. Like song “Imagine” of John
7 Lennon. Imagine the
people living life in peace..you may say I’m a dreamer
8 but I’m nothing only
one.. I hope some day enjoinus, and the world living 9 one’s .
11. Writing Analysis
The piece of writing will be analyzed in two maincategories systems of
language, which are: Grammar and Vocabulary. Regarding the previous task,
these are the following problems identified:
1. Grammar:
a) Syntax:
The learner encounters some difficulties for building sentences with the
appropriate structure, an issue that makes the idea complicated to understand at
the beginning, as in these examples:
“With my money spend on my family” - Perhaps he wanted to say
“I would spend my money on my family”
“Because they loved” – Maybe he wanted to say “because I love
them”.
“Because system capitalist for my it’s bad in my opinion”Maybe he wanted to say “ Because of the capitalist system, which in
my opinion it’s bad”
b) Omission of future tense:
The student does not manage future tense, which is an element require for
this task. Most of his sentences are not link with the accurate tense.
“With my money spend” - Instead of “I would spend my money”
“where people enjoy the nature” – Instead of “where people will
enjoy the nature”
“and inverted a system ecologist” – Instead of “I will invest in a
ecological system”.
12. c) Omission of punctuation:
Punctuation is area in which student do not take too much into account. It is
important to mention, that the student presents problems related to when to start
an idea and finish it, in order to make the text coherent.
“With my money spend on my family because they loved and
buy a place” – Instead of “I would spend my money on my family,
because I love them, and I would buy a place”
“my future house, this house a forest and lakes” – Instead of “ I
would buy a house, which will have a forest and lakes”
d) Word order:
This is common mistake for Spanish speakers, due to their native language.
The Student tends to literally translate from Spanish into English.
“because system capitalist” – Instead of “because of the capitalist
system”
“and inverted a system ecologist” – Instead of “ and I will invest in
a ecological system”
“a place tourist” – Instead of “a touristic place”
“everithing made with valance of humans and nature” – Instead
of “everything build with balance between humans and nature”
e) Genitive case:
The student does not use of genitive case to indicate for possession.
It might be a consequence of his mother tongue.
“Like song Imagine of John Lennon” – Instead of “ such as the
John Lennon’s song called IMAGINE”
13. 2. Vocabulary:
a) Lack of conditionals:
The interviewee was not aware of the use of conditionals in the English
language so he did not know how to explain a hypothetical situation.
Example:
“With my money spend on my family…” instead of “If I were a
millionaire I would spend my money on my family”
b) Misspelling of words:
The interviewee had problems remembering the writing form of some words.
This is a problem suffered by English learners due to the fact that there are not
specific rules for the writing form of words.
Examples:
“my futur house” instead of “my future house”
“everithing made with…” instead of “everything made with…”
“…ecologic…” instead of “…ecological…”
c) Cognates:
The interviewee used many wrong words because he had confused the
English words with Spanish words with similar sounding.
Examples:
“and inverted…” instead of “and to invest…
“with valance of humans” instead of “with balance of humans”
d) Fixed expressions:
The student tends to use the same structure he uses in Spanish when he
writes in English. As it is shown in the following example:
“for good of the earth” instead of “for the earth´s welfare”
14. e) Lexical problems:
The learner chooses words he thought were more relevant or appropriate to
the context even if the words were being misused.
Example:
“I´m nothing only one” instead of “I´m not the only one”
“…enjoin us” instead of “join us”
“and the world living one´s” instead of “and the world will live as one”
15. Adapted from “Prediction with Story Telling” “The Learning Strategies Handbook..Chamot (1999).
Learning Strategies Lesson Planning Form.
Content area: Grammar
Topic: 2nd Conditional
Grade: University, 2nd year
Objectives
Content/knowledge skills: At the end of the class the S will be able to identify the
use of 2nd Conditional through a reading comprehension activity, in order to
improve his English.
Procedure
Preparation
1.
Firstly, it is necessary to ask the student what strategies he uses, that helps
him to understand a paragraph or how the story continues. Foster the student to
share his strategies and write them on the board.
“When you are reading a story or a paragraph, what sort of things come to your
mind that helps yourself to comprehend the story?”
2.
Introduce sentences with missing information and ask them to predict the
rest of the sentence.
“We are going to read a few sentences, and as we read them we will put in practice
a strategy that you can use to complete the sentences with the appropriate
structure”. In this moment, think for a while if the story is about a hypothetical
context; for example, if you were an animal. What would you be? Or, if you were a
magician, what would you do then?
Presentation:
16. 3.
Discuss the strategy of prediction, which will be practiced during the task of
completing the sentence.
“What are you doing when you complete the sentences? You predict based on
what you already know about the information of the sentences or other personal
experiences. Prediction is a useful strategy you can use before and during reading
to help you look for and remember information you are expecting. For example, at
the beginning you read the sentences first and then you can complete with the
missing information with the corresponding structure by remembering what you
already know. Predicting based on the patterns in the story helps you check to see
if the story makes sense”
Preparation 2:
4.
Activate student background knowledge about the use of 2nd Conditional “I
would have..”
“We are going to see sentences with the 2nd Conditional structure; do you know
what “conditional” means? When do we use this 2nd Conditional? Which is the
most typical word use in 2nd conditionals?
Practice:
5.
Conduct the completeness task, having the student practice the strategy of
prediction. Tell the student that he will practice completing the sentence with the
2nd conditional pattern when you are finished.
“We are going to read and retell the information of the sentences. Before and
during the reading, I’m going to remind you to make predictions and check your
predictions. I’m also going to ask you why you made the predictions and what
information of the sentences helped you made the predictions”.
Evaluation:
6.
Help the student to evaluate his use of the strategy prediction. Lead the
student in a discussion about how he used the strategy during the replacement and
how she could use the same strategy while she completes the sentences.
“While reading the sentences, did you make predictions? When did you make
predictions? Why did you make predictions? Unconsciously you made predictions
based on what you knew or what you heard. The sentences had a specific pattern,
and you used the pattern to help you to complete the sentence. What were some
17. of the patterns? Did the strategy help you to understand and replace the correct
word?
Expansion:
7.
Have the student apply prediction to a new task of replacement and then
report on their experiences.
“Do you ever predict when you read on your own? When you read the sentences,
predict what you think come next. Use the information of the sentence and the
information you previously know about it. Write down what you predicted and why
so that we can discuss it tomorrow. Think about how this helped you to continuing
the story by completing the sentences”.
18. Lesson Plan Evaluation
First of all, we must say that at the beginning it was very complicated to us to find
the purpose of our lesson plan because for us the instructions of the teacher were
not completely clear and we were sort of lost. Another disadvantage was the fact
that the format of the lesson plan was complete unknown for my partner and me;
hence, we did not know how to create it. Nevertheless, Chamot´s book was really
useful because it helped us to understand how to develop the complete lesson.
Then, as we were working in the lesson plan we were able to realize the point of it
and how to finish it in order to create and to plan a successful class.