PREPARING GREAT TESOL GRAMMAR AND PRONUNCIATION LESSONS发表时间:2021-11-23 09:32 We all want our teaching to be interesting and effective. I regularly reflect on my teaching practice, and try to consider each of the following aspects of lesson planning, particularly for TESOL grammar and pronunciation lessons. Let me share some tips that help me improve my TESOL lessons, and perhaps you will find an idea you could use. Presenting the point First, remind yourself of the scope of the TESOL lesson; know the needs and abilities of your students, and the time frame and focus of your class session. Aim not to overwhelm your class with too much information, but also not to under-interest your students with too little challenge.
Plan to begin by illustrating your main TESOL lesson point in context. Give or generate a piece of real language–oral or written–to show your focus. Ideally, it will be in a context your students recognize and experience. Then you might present some of the challenging aspects of the point to illustrate why it is the focus of your TESOL lesson. Once you’ve introduced the point, decide whether you will present the lesson inductively or deductively. Will you give your TESOL students carefully selected examples to help them discover a TESOL grammatical rule or pronunciation pattern, or will you teach them the rule or pattern first and then show examples of it? Generally, if students are challenged to figure something out themselves, they will remember it much better than if they are told. If we present material in the form of puzzles or TESOL challenges, students are more engaged and interested. For example, with a little help, students can often figure out the pronunciation differences of the +s or +ed suffixes if they are given illustrative examples to sort into columns. Providing focused practice Once the point has been presented, focused practice requires TESOL students to apply the lesson in varying degrees of difficulty to given sets of data. This helps both to reinforce the regular patterns and to introduce some of the TESOL challenges where the pattern isn’t always as expected. (Yes, all rules have exceptions, and I have discovered that it’s best not to over-emphasize them, but also not to ignore them, even when a point is first introduced.) Typical focused practice activities can include flash cards; various mnemonic activities such as visualization, actions, or sorting; chanting or singing; pencil and paper exercises such as matching, multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blanks (cloze); or even puzzles, such as word searches or picture searches (on topics specifically chosen to highlight the lesson point). Remember that these activities inherently have different levels of difficulty. For example, in error analysis exercises, finding a correct usage among two or three options (multiple choice) is easier than finding and correcting incorrect usage. Challenging TESOL students with communicative exercises Communicative exercises give students an opportunity to use their new skills in less controlled situations: strategically-chosen activities that provide maximized opportunity for practice. Do you have favourite types of communicative TESOL activities you frequently or exclusively use? Is it time to try something new? Potential exercises could focus on conversations; interviews; writing emails; giving advice or opinions; discussing daily tasks or current events; case studies; or games such as board games, bingo, or charades. Again, remember to take care to match the inherent difficulty of an activity to the abilities of the students. Communicative exercises can be found in many textbooks and on many websites. Often the activities are even sorted by the teaching points they specifically emphasize. Your challenge is not so much to find an activity, but to evaluate its appropriateness for your group of TESOL students. Giving feedback How and when are the questions to consider when thinking about how you provide feedback and correction as your students work through the exercises and activities individually or in small groups throughout the lesson. Some strategies to consider: During the focused and communicative TESOL activities, you can closely monitor your students and step in to offer correction whenever you feel it’s necessary. You can roam around the room, pausing at groups of students, available to answer questions or provide advice. You can observe types of difficulties in a number of students or TESOL groups and then briefly call the class to attention for a lesson reminder given to the whole group. At the end of the TESOL lesson, you can summarize your observations (both positive and negative) for the class. At the end of the lesson and/or the next time your class meets, you can review the main points and field questions. 免费领取更多英语教学法请联系我们 TESOL中国官网:www.tefltesol.com.cn TEFL中国官网: www.teflinchina.com 了解更多课程信息和最新开课信息 TESOL客服微信:13261910737 总部电话:010-68666616 企业邮箱:hi@TESOLinchina.com 学员服务邮箱:winter@tesolinchina.com |