Page 173 - Teaching English as a Foreign Language for Dummies 2009
P. 173

                152
Part III: Teaching Skills Classes
 The text is incomplete so that the students can extend the dialogue themselves. Comprehension questions for this text may include:
✓ Where does Alejandro think En is from? Is he right? ✓ Do En and Alejandro speak the same language?
✓ Is En a teacher?
Notice that good comprehension questions prove that students have got the sense of the text.
Students can now work in pairs to extend the dialogue by completing Fabio’s words and the response given by the En and Alejandro. The class then com- pares its results.
If you intend the students to read aloud and role-play, it’s best if you and a strong student perform the dialogue in front of the class first so that everyone can hear it. Lower-level students will enjoy practising short dialogues in pairs or small groups, swapping roles each time.
Reading Case Study
I prepared this lesson to help a class with their reading skills. It’s very easy to update and personalise, so do try it.
✓ Class Profile: 10 adult Italian students in Italy. 90-minute evening class.
✓ Level: Intermediate.
✓ Materials: TV schedule for one evening in English. Extra board pens.
✓ Problems: Pronunciation errors (pronouncing each letter). Drilling needed as students are daunted by the idea of reading long texts in English; focus on scanning.
✓ Lesson aims: To practise scanning in a reading text; to revise and increase vocabulary connected with TV programmes.
The sections of the lesson proceed as follows:
1. Warm-up (6 minutes): Show pictures of characters from famous TV shows, made in English-speaking countries, shown around the world (The Simpsons, Friends, and so on). When students recognise one or two, divide the class into teams and hold a quiz to find out how many characters they can identify.
   

















































































   171   172   173   174   175