Most planned courses and course books leave space in the first lesson for a little ‘getting to know you’ session. It’s important both for you and the students to break the ice and get to know one another a little better, and is also a perfect way to find out a little more about the language level of the students.
The basic set up is extremely simple. Prepare enough question sheets, one for each person in the class. The questions need not be entirely individual, but this adds a bit of flavour to the lesson when the students don’t already know what questions they should expect. Give each of the students a blank form, and tell them that their task is to interview the person sitting next to them. Allow enough time for the students to run through their questions, then have each person introduce their neighbour to the class. In larger classes you could do the latter part in groups to save time.
Included below is a sample of twelve question sheets each with some basic bits of information and some individual questions, designed for a group of upper intermediate adults.
Twelve Interview Handouts (.odt) (16.9 KiB, 4 hits)
In time I may post up some alternative versions, but you could easily modify this idea, for example:
- For beginners restrict the questions to familiar topics and simpler constructions.
- Use the questions as the basis for a vocabulary area covered in the lesson, e.g. include questions about pets and animals if going on to look at that topic later in the lesson.
- Tailor the questions to cover an area of grammar to be studied in the lesson, e.g. focus on questions in the present perfect (“Have you ever…?”)
Overall a great little icebreaker which generally gets students in the mood for talking, sometimes produces some very interesting answers and topics for discussion, and can reveal general areas of strengths and weaknesses in the students’ ability with the language, which you can return to in later lessons.
[Photo by eggman]
Posted: August 13th, 2010
Categories:
Activities
Tags:
ice breaker,
introductions,
pair work
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This little activity is adapted from the television quiz show Blockbusters, and has also been described elsewhere on the web. It’s a great way to get students to look at the written language critically, test their knowledge of recently covered structures, and encourage them to read over and correct their own mistakes.
The idea is very simple. Take a collection of sentences containing mistakes from a section of recent homework assignments. Concentrate on mistakes which have previously been covered in class, or focus on a specific area of language, such as tenses, spelling, punctuation, word order etc. The task gives you the opportunity to highlight common mistakes impersonally, and gives students the chance to look at the language critically, and develop their ability to correct themselves and each other.
- Produce a list of 25 sentences each featuring at least one mistake, and put these on a handout.
- Split the class into two groups and explain that they have a few minutes to look through the list and find the mistakes in each sentence.
- Whilst they are doing that, draw up the game board on the blackboard or OHP. Randomly assign the numbers to the hexes.
- Explain that one team is aiming to create a chain of corrected sentences from top to bottom, whilst the other team is attempting to do the same from left to right.
- Ask a person from the first team to pick a number. They should then read out the sentence correctly, pointing out/explaining the mistake(s) where necessary. Depending on the students’ level, you may give them more than one chance, otherwise pass the sentence over to the opposite team.
- The second team then gets to pick a number, and so on, until one team has created a chain of correct answers.
- After the game is over, go through the remaining sentences and resolve any issues that came up during the exercise.
TIP! I find it easiest to draw the horizontal lines of the hexagons first (i.e. six lines in five staggered columns), and then join them up afterwards.
Below you can find a sample handout prepared for a beginners’ class in Germany.
Blockbusters Example A1 (.odt) (16.8 KiB, 3 hits)
Posted: August 6th, 2010
Categories:
Activities,
Games
Tags:
corrections,
group work,
writing
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