Teacher's hand out 2nd g & in put situation novemb 22nd 2016
1. Mr Samir Bounab
What is initial problem solving situation?
• It's the starting point of your lesson where you involve your learners from the
first moment you are in class
• you put them in real life situation conform to the official approach (CBA)
which is learner centered one.
• Using selected aids , you invite your learners to guess, improsive, deduce....
Planning lessons through problem solving situations necessitates from the
teacher to take into account many important facts:
• Help the learner reach the solution in a complete autonomous way where he
or she feels responsible about his or her thoughts.
• Put their ideas (solution) into practice and see their validity ( self evaluation)
• Encourage Independence : Have students work through problems on their
own. Ask directing questions or give helpful suggestions, but provide only
minimal assistance and only when needed to
• Some problem solving classroom activities:
• Brainstorming : helping learners to generate as many as possible as idea
and elicit them in lists .
• Guessing : using pictures ( generally the ones of the school manuals) invite
the learners to guess and improvise.( teacher may help them to put their ideas
―black on white‖ by answering specific questions like : 1) where does the
situation take place? who is in the picture ? 3) what is happening? ( learners
will see , think then write short production )
• What’s the problem ? This is a powerful technic to unify all the ideas
The input Situation & teaching frameworks
PPU & PDP frameworks
Pre stage :
• This can be an :
• ice- breaker,
• warmer
• lead in.
• They are nearly the same; there is a slight difference but all serve one
objective is to get the learner ready and ease for the learning session.
• Ice breaker :
• Icebreakers are discussion questions or activities used to help participants
relax and ease into a group meeting or learning situation.
• The icebreakers can beused to generate interest in a topic and activate the
student‘s prior knowledge.
• Lead-in:
Lead-ins (topic) will encourage the sharing of information and resource.
•Topic Lead-ins will direct the student into the content that will be taught
• Warmer:
• Warmers are usually fun activities that focus on fluency practice.
• Ideally, warmers should only last a few minutes, while a warmer is usually has
no direct relationship to the REST of the lesson,
• a lead-in is a quick preview of the material that will be covered in class. both
lean in and warmer have their strengths.
• A fun, breezy warmer can add a bit of variety to a lesson, and might appeal to
students who like a change of pace.
• On the other hand, a lead-in is a better choice for a more cohesive lesson. This
is particularly important with beginning level students, who need a lot of
structure and
•
What is PPU? Speaking (communicative grammarlesson)
•P= Presentation
•P= Practice
•U = Use
• NB: Use has wider usage in and outside the class than Produce which can
occur just in class
• During Stage = Presentation
• The teacher : [decides on the teaching aids to be used]
• Conveys the meaning of new material / language to students (inductively or
deductively)
• Gives them the chance to interact with it and to indicate in some way (not
necessarily by producing the language) that they have understood.
• Provide maximum opportunity to students to speak the target language by
providing a rich environment that contains collaborative work, authentic
materials and tasks, and shared knowledge.
• Try to involve each student in every speaking activity; for this aim, practice
different ways of student participation
• Provide written feedback like "Your presentation was really great. It was a
good job. I really appreciated your efforts in preparing the materials and
efficient use of your voice…―
• Do not correct students' pronunciation mistakes very often while they are
speaking. Correction should not distract student from his or her speech.
• Involve speaking activities not only in class but also out of class; contact
other people who can help.
• Circulate around classroom to ensure that students are on the right track
and see whether they need your help while they work in groups or pairs.
• Provide the vocabulary beforehand that students need in speaking
activities.
• Diagnose problems faced by students who have difficulty in expressing
themselves in the target language
• provide more opportunities to practice the spoken language
• Check Understanding. the teacher should ensure that students understand
what they have to do and are confident with the vocabulary used on the role
play handout before they begin.
• Reduce teacher speaking time in class while increasing student speaking
time. Step back and observe students
• Indicate positive signs when commenting on a student's response
• What do Students do?
• Talk about subjects of interest to them.
• Students use the material they have already learned
• Acquire new vocabulary in a meaningful context
• Use some of the structures they practiced in the previous lesson.
• Students retrieve and reuse material from previous lessons in a real
exchange of ideas.
• Elicit their interest in the present lesson
How ?
• Answering simple Yes/No
• "Wh-questions,
• Pointing or marking correct pictures or replies,
• Ordering pictures ,
• Matching items ,
• Deducing and explaining rules or concepts,
• Creating questions
• Employ dramatization, role-playing, problem-solving, oral or written reports,
discussion, lecturing, grouping, picture-drawing, showing objects, etc,
During Stage : PRACTICE : {engage the students in an interchange of
communication using what they have been learning}
Students work with the material in a controlled context to help them
develop accuracy, confidence and move toward fluency .
– Activities begin as more controlled : « Guided practice »
• Repetition
• Coping
• Info gaps
• Picture card games
• Simple fill-ins (word, dialog, gesture, strategy)
• Activities next move to being freer or more complex : « Free practice »
• Question-answer exercises where students are restricted to a particular topic
certain vocabulary items.
Post Stage : USE = Produce ( feed back)
– Students are required to choose and discriminate among choices in
language within a less controlled context.
– Activities allow for student learning to be demonstrated as defined by the
lesson objective.
– Common activities include role plays personal reactions , discussions,
values clarification and games.
– Students are given time practice their dialogue (in or out of class), and
create the right mood.
2 Generation Curriculum & PDP listening Lesson Plan
2. How to teach PDP listening?
• Pre-listening :
• The teacher: builds schema and introduces new language as needed
through problem solving situation .
• Use pre-listening activities to prepare students for what they are going to hear
or view.
• The activities chosen during pre-listening may serve as preparation for
listening in several ways.
Sample pre-listening activities:
Students Predict Topic
Predict Vocabulary
Vocabulary selection/sort
Sentence selection
Get students to read the text first
Tune in
Setting the context
Generating interest
Activating current knowledge - what do you know about…?
Acquiring knowledge
Activating vocabulary / language
Predicting content
Pre-learning vocabulary
Checking / understanding the listening tasks
During listening :
While-listening activities relate directly to the text, and students do them during
or immediately after the time they are listening. Keep these points in mind when
planning while-listening activities:
– Three Choices for While-Listening (you should only do one)
• 1) Listen to Main Idea: This listening is for understanding the general
picture.
• 2) Listen to Specific Events: Good for making timelines and
categorizing. •
• 3) Listen to Details: close activity, multiple choice questions, etc.
• If students are to complete a written task during or immediately after listening,
allow them to read through it before listening
• Keep writing to a minimum during listening. Remember that the primary goal
is comprehension, not production
•Organize activities so that they guide listeners through the text :Students
complete multiple tasks that move from a general to specific focus in order
to deepen their understanding of the text and develop specific listening /
reading skills, such as reading / listening for gist or specifics, skimming and
scanning ,using context clues to predict content
• Use predicting to encourage students to monitor their comprehension as they
list
• Give immediate feedback whenever possible
Sample -while-listening- activities :
•Information Transfer: Learners
•Evaluating
•Prediction
•Completion
•Making Inferences
•Correction:
•Questions: ( reference & auxiliary questions)
•Application
•Imagine
•Language Focus:
•Compare and Contrast: *
•Ordering:
•Learners Matching :
More activities for during listening:
•Listening with visuals.
•Filling in graphs and charts.
•Following a route on a map.
•Checking off items in a list.
•Listening for the gist
•Searching for specific clues to meaning.
•Completing cloze (fill-in) exercises.
•Distinguishing between formal and informal registers
Post- listening: Use post-listening activities to:
• Check comprehension,
• Evaluate listening skills and use of listening strategies
• Extend the knowledge gained to other contexts.
• A post-listening activity may relate to a pre-listening activity
• A post-listening activity must reflect the real-life uses to which students
might put information they have gained through listeningStudents complete
activities that expand on content or language from the text using other skills
• , i.e. grammar, speaking, writing
• Assessing listening: Issues in listening assessment
• Validity: To what degree does it accurately measure what you want to
measure?•
• Reliability : To what degree is it dependable?•
• Authenticity: To what degree is it representative of real-life language use?•
• Feed back: To what degree does it provide useful feedback for the learner
and influence the teaching process?
PDP Reading Lesson Plan
To teach ― The receptive skill Read Lesson― we need PDP frame work:
• P = Pre-Reading
• D = During Reading
• P = Post Reading
• Reading is an interactive process that goes on between the reader and the
text, resulting in comprehension
• Reading is an activity with a purpose. A person may read in order to gain
information or verify existing knowledge, or in order to critique a writer‘s
ideas or writing style
• A person may also read for enjoyment, or to enhance knowledge of the
language being read.
• The text presents letters, words, sentences, and paragraphs that encode
meaning.
• The reader uses knowledge, skills, and strategies to determine what that
meaning is
• In the case of reading, this means producing students who can use reading
strategies to maximize their comprehension of text, identify relevant and non-
relevant information, and tolerate less than word-by-word comprehension.
• Recent research brought to light a new lesson format that gave due
importance to pre-reading activities.
• It was found that what is done before reading, is very beneficial for
understanding the text.
• This preparation work is what helps students get connect the new information
to what they already know.
• This new format suggests that 50-60% of the lesson should be spent on pre-
reading activities
• Sample pre-reading activities
• Expectation Outline
• Knowledge Rating
• KWHL Chart
• KWL Chart
• Possible Sentences
• SQ3R
• SQ3R: Reading strategy where students Survey, Question, Read, Recite,
Review. Use this sampleSQ3R Reading Guide.
• Survey—Have students preview the title, pictures, graphs, or captions, then
read the first and last paragraph of the article. Make a list below of the main
points or objectives you find.
• Question—Have students write questions based on their survey of the text.
• Read—Have students read and answer the questions their wrote down as
they a read.
• Recite—Have students look over their questions and be able to recite the
answers without looking them up.
• Review—Have students summarize what they wrote.
• More Pre-Reading Activities:
• Using the title, subtitles, and divisions within the text to predict content and
organization or sequence of information
• Looking at pictures, maps, diagrams, or graphs and their captions
• Talking about the author‘s background, writing style, and usual topics
• Skimming to find the theme or main idea and eliciting related prior knowledge
• Reviewing vocabulary or grammatical structures
• Reading over the comprehension questions to focus attention on finding that
information while reading
• Constructing semantic webs (a graphic arrangement of concepts or words
showing how they are related)
• Doing guided practice with guessing meaning from context or checking
comprehension while reading
• Asking the learners to anticipate from a picture or the title
• Introducing the topic through some key words .
• Telling a parallel story to introduce some difficult words .
3. • Having the learners predict information constituents .
• Review a previous lesson that is thematically or structurally linked to the new
one .
• Ask pointed questions to whet the pupils' appetite and raise their motivation
• Oral Discussion or a short written activity
• Brainstorming the theme
• Playing music to set the tone
• Eliciting vocabulary around the theme
• Doing an enactment around the theme
• Asking a thought-provoking question
• Asking lead-in questions
• Showing a short YouTube clip or a scene from a movie
• Cartoon, riddle, joke
• Thinking about the title
•
• N.B : Examiner Guide = BEM Guide Typology
( September 2013) (Teachers should integrate the different tasks planned
in the guide each time they plan their lessons < The BEM paper is
elaborated according to the BEM guide typology)
• Post reading phase
• Post-reading activities help students understand texts further, through
critically analyzing what they have read.
• Post-reading activities
• The role of the teacher here is that of evaluator .He checks that the
objectives set , that is the activities set in the reading phase have been done
to his satisfaction .These activities are corrected .
• This is also an opportunity to diagnose more common mistakes and offer
remedial works to the hole class for mistakes made by all .There may also be
follow up written or oral activities :
• The learners can ask each other questions on the passage
• They can imagine a different ending orally , to pave the way to written
expression .
• They can retell the passage from a different character's point of view .
• They can learn how to summarize the passage orally first then written .
• Summary Writing : Ask students to write a summary of the main points of
a text or passage.
• Outlining : Writing outlines is also a good way to organize and remember
concepts. The emphasis here should be on how students see the
relationships between ideas being presented
• Ask students to choose 10-15 words from the text. You can provide
categories for the words e.g. the most interesting words / the most important
words / key words related to the topic. Students then write a text using the
words. This text could be a story, poem, news report, summary, etc.
• Ask students to say which part of the text is the most
important/interesting and which part is not interesting or key
• Graphic organizer : What does a graphic organizer look like?
‗A graphic organizer (also known as a concept map, mind map or
relationship chart) is usually a one-page form with blank areas for learners
to complete with ideas and information which are connected in some way.‘
(Darn, 2008)
• Graphic organizers…
• can help convey large chunks of information concisely;
• encourage strategic thinking: describing, comparing and contrasting,
classifying, sequencing, identifying cause and effect, decision making, etc;
• can be used to aid reading comprehension – students can brainstorm around
a topic, summarize texts, etc – as well as other learning activities, such as
organizing and storing vocabulary, planning research, writing projects, etc;
• are easy to use with all levels and ages;
• are non-linear and thus allow for multiple connections between ideas
• Reading Aloud in the Classroom
• Students do not learn to read by reading aloud.
• A person who reads aloud and comprehends the meaning of the text is
coordinating word recognition with comprehension and speaking and
pronunciation ability in highly complex ways. Students whose language skills
are limited are not able to process at this level.
• In addition, reading aloud is a task that students will rarely, if ever, need to
do outside of the classroom
• It does not test a student‘s ability to use reading to accomplish a purpose or
goal.
• There are three (3) ways to use reading aloud productively in the language
classroom.
• Read aloud to your students as they follow along silently. You have the
ability to use inflection and tone to help them hear what the text is
saying. Following along as you read will help students move from word-by-
word reading to reading in phrases and thought units, as they do in their
first language.
•
• Use the ―read and look up‖ technique. With this technique, a student reads
a phrase or sentence silently as many times as necessary, then looks up
(away from the text) and tells you what the phrase or sentence says. This
encourages students to read for ideas, rather than for word recognition.
• However, reading aloud can help a teacher assess whether a student is
―seeing‖ word endings and other grammatical features when reading
• What about teaching grammar & pronunciation?
THE MAIN APPROACHES TO TEACH GRAMMAR
A Deductive Approach
a traditional approachut target language and rules are driven at the
beginning of the class and continued with examples.
The principles of this approach are generally used in the classes where
the main target is to teach grammar structures. For instance, these
principles are convenient for the classes that grammar transtlation method
is applied(Nunan,1991).
According to Thornbury‘s three bacic principles a deductive lesson
starts with :
1.presentation of the rules by the teacher.
2.Secondly teacher gives examples by highlighting the grammar
structures.
3.Then students make practise with the rules and produce their own
examples at the end of the lesson (Thornbury, 1999).
An Inductive Approach
Nunan (1999) identifies inductive approach as a process where learners
discover the grammar rules themselves by examining the examples.
In a inductive approach it is also possible to use a context for grammar
rules. That is to say, learners explore the grammar rules in a text or
an audio rather than isolated sentences.
Thornbury (1999) notes that in an inductive approach learners are provided
with samples which include the target grammar that they will learn. Then
learners work on the examples and try to di
PIASP Teaching Method
So What is PIASP ?
PIAsp is teaching method I use to teach grammar and pronunciation items
conform to CBA and Bloom taxonomy ; P= Presentation<Presenting the
context in which the structure appears>
(For example using the script page 170 -where the time conjunctions- where
they are written in bold (I wish all the scripts were elaborated like that this will
facilitate the teachers' work to apply PIASP)
e so you ask your learners to read the script in order to make them notice the
words written in bold ( so here your learners will deal with the first Bloom's
taxonomy category (knowledge = defines, describes, identifies, knows, labels,
lists, matches, names, outlines, recalls, recognizes, reproduces, selects, states.)
where they will define and identify the conjunctions since they have seen some
of them before .
The Aim here is to make the learners see the structure (form & meaning) in
context.
e Isolation:
the focus is temporarily on the grammatical item itself and the aim is :to get the
learner perceive & recognize the grammatical item what it looks like and this
goes also with the second category of Bloom's taxonomy ( comprehension
where your learners will be able to infer, interpret, paraphrase, predict, rewrite,
summarize,.
lv3- Analysis:
Here you will try to make ur learners analyze the isolated items the aim is : to
get your learners perceive how it is formed ( structure), how it functions and
what it means and the rule that govern it.This has a great link with the fourth
category Analysis" ( Blomm's Taxonomy) where your learners will be able to
nalyzes, breaks down, compares, contrasts, diagrams, deconstructs,
differentiates, discriminates, distinguishes, identifies, illustrates, infers, outlines,
relates, selects, separates.
4- Stating Rule :
Here after they analyse you help them to formulate the grammar rule .And this
what Bloom called "Synthesis" where the learners are able to Build a structure
or pattern from diverse elements. Put parts together to form a whole, with
4. emphasis on creating a new meaning or structure through the following key
words "reconstruct, relate, reorganize, revise, rewrite, summarize, tell, write.
5- Practice: This is achieved through three (3) type of tasks
a- Based form task: Mechanical manipulation < focus only on the form >
b- Meaning based task: Focus is on meaning
c- Communicative based task: ( emphasis is on transmitting message)
So this last stage has a great link with what Bloom named Application: Use a
concept in a new situation or unprompted use of an abstraction. Applies what
was learned in the classroom into novel situations in the work place.
So the PIASP is the ideal way to teach grammar item according to Bloom's
Taxonomy .
W Tutorial Classes (TD)
Tutorial Classes = One to One Teaching method = Remedial Work
For Whom?
• ob TD Tutorial means : TD is a teaching method that allows pupils to apply
theoretical knowledge in the form of exercises.
• It usually take place in small numbers to facilitate the teacher's help
• Rational of TDs in Middle school
• Activities in TDs:
• Shows an extra value to learning operation
• Aims at improving the quality of learning
• It‘s a mean and another path to ― reinforce – deeper and last the
learning operation .
• It‘ new occasion for the leaner to acquire new learning strategies.
• Promotes healthy environment for individual teaching and learning
according to each learner needs and put into action a pedagogy of
differentiation
• Develops motivation and reflexion of the learners
• it‘s a chance to take part in dialogues and take part in active
exchanges
• To remember: In TDs we have to avoid :
• Spend the time copying.
• Marking TD
• Re-teach or spend too much time making review
• Answer the learners one by one
• Don‘t give enough time for relfexion for the learners.
TD & Suggested types for grouping students
• tain t Type one : Mixed ability groups
Mixed ability grouping enables learners to cope with real life working
context , where people of different abilities work together. It has , therefore
the advantage of a social inclusion and equal opportunities 2
-It is necessary to have a balanced number of different levels in each group
- The weaker learners will have more practice
- It enables teachers to engage the talented ones to support the weaker
classmates once he/she has finished the assigned task.
- It enables to foster the development of co-operative skills
Type two: setting according to achievements:
•h This kind of grouping requires a diagnostic test. For the time being it will
comply to the national exam type in English, the current written test.
• The shortcoming of such diagnostic test is that it is not really accountable for
being organized after a long summer holiday .It is based on academic
achievement only.
•It would be better to take into account teachers evaluations of previous
learners‘ attainment of the last school year, in foreign languages.
• e The advantage of such grouping is that it enables the teacher to organise
the courses and plan activities according to learners‘ needs.
•It enables to raise learner achievement, better scores in tests .
•It also allows students to gain confidence and take risks, in terms of attitude to
learning : being in nearly similar attainment category prevents inhibition and
negativefeeling due to pressure of brighter students
•Finally it can lessen behaviour problems
•TD needs progression to follow the learners‘ progress since Td is tackle each
week in groups and after 15 days to fulfill a complete session
•TD is planned as any lessson which must be conform to:
•Exist profile mentionned in the syllabus
• CBA & Bloom Taxonomy
Learning Styles:
• children learn in one of three ways: visually, auditorily, or
kinesthetically
• learning style weaknesses:
• Children with auditory weaknesses have trouble following
spoken directions and rely on visual cues,
including watching others, to understand what to do.
• Children with visual weaknesses have a hard time
remembering locations and may appear disorganized or
disoriented when gathering or putting away materials.
• Children with kinesthetic weaknesses have trouble learning
things through sense of touch
• Mistakes that learners do :
• Pronunciation
• Grammar
• Spelling
• Numbers
• Colors
• Intonation
• Questions
• Punctuation
• Capitalization
• Written expression
• Project work
• Typology of tasks and activities
• Meaningful and manipulative language activities
1-Project work
2- Role play and simulations
3-Survey/ questionnaire
4-Interview
5-Listing /categorizing
6-Information gap
7-Cloze test/gap filling
8-Matching/ jigsaw
9-Problem solving activities
10-Games
11-Selecting material
12-Songs
13-Story telling
14-Information transfer
15-Transformation
16- Presentation of a group work/ poster
By
Mr Samir Bounab
Yellowdaffodil66@gmail.com