TESOL Materials Design and Development

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Susan R. Easterbrooks Georgia State University
Advertisements

The Communicative Approach
How to teach heterogeneous groups
YL Material Design & Development
In The Name Of GOD.
Materials and Lesson Planning
Review E = Encounter Students demonstrate what they know or are able to do (teachers assess students’ knowledge and abilities) I = Internalize Students.
1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training Implementing English K-6 Using the syllabus for consistency of teacher judgement.
TESOL Materials Design and Development Week 6 SLO Workshop Conclusion Scaffolding in Productive Skills Lesson.
Balanced Literacy J McIntyre Belize.
1 RUNNING a CLASS (2) Pertemuan Matakuliah: G0454/Class Management & Education Media Tahun: 2006.
Consistency of Assessment
Using Course books for Language Teaching
Making Use of Assessment Data for English Language Curriculum Planning 15 December 2006 English Language Education Section Curriculum Development Institute.
Created by The School District of Lee County, CSDC in conjunction with Cindy Harrison, Adams 12 Five Star Schools SETTING GOALS (OBJECTIVES) & PROVIDING.
Reflective practice Session 4 – Working together.
GSE M&M WEEK 11.
Course-books and Their Use.
WINTER Template Finding creativity in what we do every day in the classroom 01 Adam Simpson Sabancı University, School of Languages.
Material Design & Development Week 1 Course Intro, Syllabus & Life Map Mini Lesson.
EIF (productive skills and grammar) E= Encounter  Students demonstrate what they know or are able to do through activities or tasks.  Teachers assess.
Tell your partners about your speaking activity.
Syllabus Design The second of a series of workshops in second- language acquisition and instruction at the Language Training Center North Carolina State.
Lesson Planning for SHS ALTs From beginning concepts to making your own plan.
Week 7. 1.Give back tests 2.Discuss mini lessons/lesson plan 2 3.Student Learning Objectives 4.Classroom management 5.Engaging activities: Silent Way,
TESOL Materials Design and Development Finish Tomlinson’s “Introduction” and begin Harmer’s “Describing Learners” Week 3.
Communicative Language Teaching
Erasmus Plus Mejora de la Competencia en comunication linguistica en los centros europeos.
Task Based Learning In your classroom.
Supplementary materials
Supplementary materials
YL Material Design & Development Week 4 Sample Lesson 1 & Processing YL’s Halliwell & Paul.
Materials Design and Development Week 12 Sample Listening Lesson & Processing the Park Lesson.
TESOL Materials Design and Development Week 12 Park Lesson & Processing.
Materials Development Week 15 Final Segment Review.
Weekend TESOL Materials Development Week 14 class notes: (workshop) SLO Writing & Choosing Keywords.
Published materials Authentic materials
English Composition Jonathan Watts. Welcome back to class! I hope you had a wonderful weekend! Today we will talk about Essay Development –Pg
Material Design & Development Week 3 Student Learning Objectives Productive Skills Framework Lesson Planning.
TESOL Materials Design and Development Week 5: Workshop & Lecture on Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) and using Language Analysis in Lesson Planning.
TESOL Materials Design and Development Week 7 SARS: Lecture & Workshop.
Material Design & Development
YL Material Design & Development Week 8 SLO for Mid-Term Project Productive Skills Framework Lesson Planning.
YL Material Design & Development Week 8 SLO for Mid-Term Project Productive Skills Framework Lesson Planning.
How Much Do We know about Our Textbook? Zhang Lu.
Comparative Lesson. Queen Elizabeth Lee HyoRi Lee Myung Park Baby.
Plan an individual lesson Think about it aims How to achieve them The shape of the lesson Techniques that are most appropriate for learners.
By: Mrs. Abdallah. The way we taught students in the past simply does not prepare them for the higher demands of college and careers today and in the.
YL Material Design & Development Week 1 Course Intro, Syllabus & Life Map Mini Lesson.
Material Design & Development Week 7 Write SLO for Mid-Term Project Productive Skills Framework Lesson Planning.
Material Design & Development Week 4 SLO for Mid-Term Project Productive Skills Framework Lesson Planning.
Failing to plan .. is planning to fail
English Literature Course Cho Yu-kyung Kim Hye-Rin
GSE YL Methods 1 Speaking and Listening Methodology Lesson Planning and Student Learning Objectives Lecturer: David Boesch.
Learning Through Failure. Reflect O Take a few moments to write down your answers to the following questions: O What was your reaction to the video? O.
PSTDP Garanhuns Week 9. Warm up: Paper, Rock, Scissors What did you do yesterday? Yesterday, I _______. Well, I didn’t _____.
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
Selection and Use of Supplementary Materials and Activities
Academic Seminar – Week 6 Lesson Plans & Formative Assessment Graphs.
Looking back on our first day… What did we do the first day we met? What do you think our purposes were? What would you like students to “get” from your.
Unit 20 Identifying the different components of a lesson plan
Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages
Weekend TESOL Materials Development
Material Design & Development
TESOL Materials Design and Development
YL Material Design & Development
Week 10 Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
TESOL Materials Design and Development
Introduction to Teaching Young Learners
Material Design & Development
Presentation transcript:

TESOL Materials Design and Development Week 8 SARS part 2 & review of EIF Framework and lesson planning 1

Warm-up & Opportunity for outcome feedback: Think about the following Qs: What happened in the encounter stage of the present perfect lesson? How did it set the Ss up for success? What happened in the internalization part of the present perfect lesson? How did it set the Ss up for success? What is the difference between collaborative discovery and guided discovery activities? Which was used in the present perfect lesson? What is the role of the teacher in inductive lessons?

SARS Warm-up: Discussion Questions Do you only use the textbook when you teach your classes? Do you always follow the textbook exactly the way it is laid out?

Coursebooks and Materials Principles for using a coursebook: Understand how the coursebook is organized Adapt the material & Use SARS Prepare the learners Monitor and follow up Building a repertoire

Understanding how the coursebook is organized Most coursebooks are organized around key features of language. For example: topics and associated vocabulary (ex: animals, food, body parts) grammar structures (ex: verb tenses) social and cultural interaction skills (ex: introductions)

Adapt the material Coursebooks are not written for a specific group of people. No book can meet all the needs and interests of each group of learners you teach. Therefore, coursebooks need to be adapted to your particular group of learners.

SARS S = Select A = Adapt R = Reject S = Supplement

Prepare the learners Learners often fail activities in coursebooks because they have not been adequately prepared. As long as learners know what to do and have the ability to it, they will be successful.

Preparing the learner also means preparing yourself  ask yourself these questions: What is the context for the activity? How can you make the context clear and interesting to learners? What is the purpose of the activity? What is the focus  to learn grammar, to communicate, to learn vocabulary? What can you do as a teacher to set your students up to be successful at the activity? How long will the activity take?

Planning for Clear Instructions What info do Ss need to know? page # or materials task purpose groups time special considerations such as turn taking, not showing your paper, etc How will T convey that information? using focusing Qs previewing short & simple instructions chunking CCQs modeling providing visual as well as verbal instructions

Monitor and Follow Up How can we “monitor” our students? While students are doing the task, make sure to check their progress and help them if they need it. Make sure to check on ALL students!

Build a Repertoire What does the term “repertoire” mean? “the complete list or supply of skills, devices, or ingredients used in a particular field, occupation, or practice” From: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary How can we apply this definition apply to language teaching? (What does “repertoire” refer to in terms of teaching?)

Coursebooks often contain consistent activities throughout. Doing activities “consistently” can build your repertoire of ways to do each type of activity. It can also help students to get used to it and know what to expect (predictability).

Comparatives 2 Sample Lesson Look at the sample lesson plan and materials in course packet in your group and answer the following questions: How was SARS applied to this lesson? What parts of the textbook were: Selected Adapted Rejected (Look at the Doosan Textbook pages in the appendix of your course packet and decide why activities on p. 122, 124, 131 were rejected) Supplemented Why do you think SARS was applied this way?

Fill in this chart What Why Select Adapt Reject Supplement

A: Which is ___, A or B? B: (A)/(B) is _____than_____.

A: Which is ___, A or B? B: (A)/(B) is _____than_____. A: Who is ___, A or B? B: (A)/(B) is _____than ____.

Salad Sam kyeob sal

Brad Pitt is handsomer than Shrek. Mabbakie is more smarter than Albert Einstein. Queen Elizabeth is more old than Lee HyoRi. Soccer is more good than tennis. Han GaIn is more beautifuler than Princess Fiona.

Flexibility & Lesson Planning How did the Comparatives 2 Lesson build flexibility into the lesson plan? Why is this important?

SARS Part 2 Look in section 5 of your course packet. Find lesson 6 from the Doosan Middle School 2 English Textbook Make a list of 6-8 lexical (vocabulary), grammatical, and functional items that you could turn into speaking lessons. For example camping vocab: tent, fishing pole, backpack etc..

Compare your list to mine Vocabulary Lesson: Camping items and/or actions; items such as tent, stove, backpack, fishing pole…actions such as fishing, hiking, set up, take down… (note this may be one or two lessons depending on Ss level) Grammar Need vs. Want with because: Review of camping items planning what to take, and stating a reason Giving advice using “you’d better” Making, accepting and refusing requests using A: Would you…? B: OK. No problem / I’m sorry I can’t. I…. Asking and answering about specific past experiences using: A: What did you do on your _____? B: I ____ Describing a sequence of events in simple past tense using before, after, around, until and for Be going to…planning future events using A: What are you going to do on your ______? B: I am going to _____.

Write an SLO for each item By the end of the lesson, SWBAT ___________________________ by _________________________________________.

Compare your SLOs to mine By the end of the lesson SWBAT… use camping item (and/or) action vocabulary such as (tent, stove, backpack, fishing pole…(and/or) fishing, hiking, set up, take down…) BY playing the camp ground board game. ask and answer questions using (A: What do you want/need to take on your trip? B: I need/want to take ___, because _____) By doing a what do I pack role play.

Compare your SLOs to mine By the end of the lesson SWBAT… give advice using the form “you’d better” in a dialog such as (A: I have an exam tomorrow. B: You’d better study hard.) BY doing “I have a problem” mingle activity. make, accept and refuse requests using (A: Would you ___? B: OK. No problem / I’m sorry I can’t. I ____.) BY playing a “Find Someone Who” mingle activity.

Compare your SLOs to Mine By the end of the lesson SWBAT… ask and answer about specific past experiences using (A: What did you do on your _____? B: I ____.) BY doing a class survey. describe a sequence of events in the simple past tense using (before, after, around, until and for) By doing “What Really Happened” information gap. make a future plan using ‘be going to’ in a dialog such as (A: What are you/we going to do on ____ your ______? B: ____ I am/We are going to _____ .) BY making a three day travel schedule to some place in Korea.

Make A SARS Chart What Why Select Adapt Reject Supplement

Pick an SLO Go through the textbook and identify which pages are associated with your TL Decide what you will select and what you will reject and explain why Look at what you have selected, does it need to be adapted? How? Why? What other materials will you need to supplement? Why?

Possible Answers Vocabulary lesson/lessons Select 96-97 because it introduces many of the key terms Adapt p. 96 by removing the what we’ll learn and what we’ll do box, because it might distract Ss attn and undermine my ability to elicit Ss background knowledge Reject p. 98-99 because they will be used in another lesson, 107 because it focuses on writing though I might also adapt it to make it a better ongoing assessment activity at the end of the encounter stage Supplement all practice activities (controlled to free) because the textbook doesn’t offer Ss many opportunities to build the vocab. they are learning

Possible Answers need/want….because Select 98-99 because it suggests items that Ss might want to bring on a trip. Will use the pictures to help Ss b’storm more items Adapt p. 98-99 by using the pictures to facilitate speaking, because in the textbook these are listening activities that either don’t use today’s TL or only partial use the TL Reject p. 96-97 because it was used in another lesson Supplement all practice activities (controlled to free) because the textbook doesn’t offer Ss many opportunities to use the TL that I have selected

Possible Answers you’d better Select: p. 100 because it’s a nice controlled practice activity Adapt: p. 100 by allowing Ss to B’storm additional problems and advice so that they can personalize the TL Reject: p. 106 because it more of a writing activity Supplement: the less controlled and fluency activities because the book only provides controlled practice

Possible Answers making, accepting and rejecting requests Select: p. 101 because it’s a good controlled practice activity Adapt: p. 101 by allowing Ss to B’storm additional requests and ways they can accept and reject them so that they can personalize the TL and see how it is relevant Reject: N/A because there is only one page for this in the textbook Supplement: the less controlled and fluency activities because the book only provides controlled practice

Possible Answers Asking and answering about specific past experiences Select: 96-97, 102-104 because the pictures will allow me to ask Ss about past events and introduce the TL Adapt: 96-97 so that it can be come a controlled practice activity, 102-104 because it’s a reading text that the Ss have already read and I will use it as my warm-up activity Reject: p. 106 because it will be used in the next lesson Supplement: less controlled and fluency activities because the textbook doesn’t provide them.

Possible Answers narration in simple past using time markers before, after, around, until and for Select: 106 because it intros the TL, 96-97, 102-104 because the pictures will allow me to ask Ss about past events and introduce the idea of sequencing Adapt: 96-97 so that it can be used to elicit the words before, after, around…, 102-104 because it’s a reading text that the Ss have already, so they can use the events from that story for controlled practice. Reject: N/A because there is only one page for this TL in the textbook Supplement: less controlled and fluency activities because the textbook doesn’t provide them.

Did you notice a pattern? What kinds of adaptations did I usually seem to make? What did I usually reject and why? What/Why did I usually supplement? Are you using a textbook? Pick a unit in your textbook and do what we did together on your own. Do you notice a similar pattern developing?

What happens in each stage? Review: EIF framework What happens in each stage? E ____ I __________________ F

Rough Drafts of Mid-Term Project Due Next Week! Week 9: All Participants will need to come to HUFS to meet with me and their peers so that we can do group and individual conferencing. A Disadvantage to lesson planning alone is that you have few opportunities to share ideas. Use this time together to borrow activities and ideas from your classmates

What you need to bring Your SLO A rough draft of your LP – All your procedures and reasons for teaching Your materials or a range of materials that you think you might want to use. Use lesson plan template available online, http://songsim.catholic.ac.kr/~jbrawn/HUFS-TESOL/MatDev/MatDev-P-index.html

What happens in each stage? Review: EIF framework What happens in each stage? E ____ I __________________ F

Homework Post your weekly entry to the discussion board and reply to at least two other participants’ entries.