Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMariah Tamsin Lawson Modified over 8 years ago
1
Listening Activities (Visuals & Stories) Teacher Training Program Winter 2010. Peter Daley
2
Describing Pictures: The simplest activities involve students looking at a picture (on an overhead or individual sheets) while the teacher describes it. Alternatively students can be asked to describe the picture.
3
Students can be asked to identify which person is being described, easily turning the task into an individual or team competition. Describing Pictures: Such activities can quite easily be altered to suit differing topics, grammar points, and vocabulary. Here a picture that could be used with units concerning physical appearances and emotions.
4
Telling Stories: Instead of describing a picture, a series of pictures or cartoons can be utilized with the teacher or students telling a story that fits the pictures:
5
Including Mistakes: A variation involves describing a picture the students can see with the inclusion of false details:
6
Including Mistakes: There is a nice comfortable room, with a sofa, chairs, a television and a rug. There’s a lovely puppy sitting under the table. There are plates, cups on the table, as well as an empty bottle of red wine. Also on the table is a vase with a tree in it. Behind the table on the wall there’s a picture of a happy family. If you look out the window you can see the moon shining on the sea.
7
Choosing the Correct Picture Another variation involves students choosing one picture from several similar pictures based on the aural description:
8
Using Maps: Students follow and mark on a map directions given by the teacher. Here the directions can be in story form. Alternatively famous area can be used from the real world or fiction. (Lord of the Rings)
9
Using Maps: Similarly, street maps provide excellent visual reference for following directions. Great for pair work with each student’s worksheet missing and containing different information.
10
Floor Plans: Floor plans can be used in the same way maps are with missing information for the students to fill out:
11
Floor Plans: Here is an example of the teacher’s or the student who is reading map:
12
Floor Plans: The floor plan can be altered to show anything, a series of shops or the layout of an apartment for example.
13
Picture Dictation: The teacher (or students) describe a picture that the other students cannot see. Those students try to draw the picture from listening to the description given. Let’s try a quick example…..
14
Picture Dictation: There’s a table in the middle of the picture and a cat is under the table. He’s a white cat. Near the table is a chair. There’s a very fat boy sitting in it. He’s very fat indeed, and very happy, because there’s a big cake on the table and he’s going to eat it in a minute. The cat is happy too; he’s going to eat the mouse which is under the fat boy’s chair.
15
Picture Dictation: I created my own pictures from various photos on my computer. Students sat back- to-back and took turns explaining the picture to their partner who had to try draw what they were hearing:
16
Picture Dictation:
18
Listening for Specific Words / Grammar Points.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.