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Published byRonald Craig Modified over 8 years ago
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Scaffolding Questions, prompts and nonverbal communication enabling learners to complete tasks which they could not have managed on their own (Wood et al., 1976).
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Breaking down ideas into smaller parts
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Visual and graphic support (Pictures, Venn diagrams, mind maps, tables, charts) Make key words memorable – repetition, paraphrasing, matching up. Give activities before reading or listening tasks to prepare students. Reinforce understanding of key concepts and key words after reading/listening tasks. ‘Model’ activities such as role-plays with a colleague or a bright student first. Give students language frames to guide written work or glossaries. Code switching – alternating between the 2 languages. Making tasks accessible if a text/audio is very difficult to understand.
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1) The prince & princess activity as an alternative to a gap-fill? 2) The George Washington info-gap activity? 3) The greenhouse effect info-gap with pictures activity? 4) Re-ordering sentences about the greenhouse effect? 5) The text on Karl Marx.
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The task assigned to a text determines the level of difficulty just as much as the text itself.
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Introduce the general topic [activation] Prediction Pre-teach vocabulary, if necessary Gist task – with a time limit – to give the students a ‘flavour’ of the text Detailed reading – scanning for information and analysis at sentence level Discussion – don’t ignore the actual content of the text! Follow-up/extension task – students prepare a written or spoken piece on the topic
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