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Classroom management through diversifying exercises and activities

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Classroom management through diversifying exercises and activities

  1. 1. Classroom management through diversifying exercises and activities Prof. Naima TRIMASSE Prepared by: Sophia AKDIM
  2. 2. Initiating interaction By : OMAR TAKY EDDIN
  3. 3. I- What is interaction? • Interaction is the collaborative exchange of thoughts, feelings, or ideas between two or more people, resulting in a reciprocal effect on each other. • " Telling is not teaching: listening is not learning” • “Teaching is listening, learning is talking.”
  4. 4. • A.Theory of language • a) The structural view : • b).The functional view: • c) The interactional view: sees language as a vehicle for the realization of interpersonal relations and for the performance of social transactions between individuals. Language is seen as a tool for the creation and maintenance of. social relations.
  5. 5. II-Interactive principles Automaticity: true human interaction is best accomplished when focal attention is on meanings and messages and not on grammar and other linguistic forms.
  6. 6.  Risk taking: interaction requires the risk of failing to produce intended meaning, of failing to interpret intended meaning…  Communicative competence: all of the elements of communicative competence (grammatical, discourse, sociolinguistic, pragmatic, and strategic) are involved in human interaction.
  7. 7. III- Roles of the interactive teacher: • 1.the teacher as Controller • 2.the teacher as Director • 3.the teacher as Manager • 4.the teacher as Facilitator • 5.the teacher as Resource
  8. 8. IV- Questioning strategies for interactive learning Categories of questions and typical classroom question words: 1) Knowledge questions: common question words: define, tell, list, identify, desciribe..who? What? Where?when?.. 2) Comprehension questions: explain, define, locate, select, indicate, summarize…
  9. 9. 3) Application questions: demonstrate how, use the data to solve, illustrate how, show how apply. What is (…) used for? What would result? What would happen? 4) Inference questions: common question words: how? Why? What did(…) mean by? What does (…) believe? What conclusions can you draw from..?
  10. 10. 5) Analysis questions: distinguish, diagram, chart, plan, deduce…what is the relationship between? What is the function of? What motive? 6) Synthesis questions: compose, combine, develop…what if? What would you have done in this situation? What would happen if? 7) Evaluation questions: evaluate, defend, decide
  11. 11. Sustaining interaction through group work by: Sophia Akdim
  12. 12. I- Group work It ’s a generic term covering a multiplicity of techniques in which two or more students are assigned a task that involves collaboration.
  13. 13. II- Advantages  It encourages the development of critical thinking skills.  It requires the establishment of an environment of support, trust and co-operation.  learning can be nurtured. Students have the opportunity to learn from and to teach each other.
  14. 14.  It promotes student learning and achievement.  Deep rather than surface approaches to learning are encouraged.  It facilitates greater transfer of knowledge and learning.  The focus is on student centered approach to teaching and learning, and assessment.  Students are involved in their own learning.
  15. 15.  It enhances social skills and interactions. Learning outcomes are improved. Group work offers an embracing affective climate. Group work promotes learners responsibility and autonomy. It’s a step toward individualizing instruction.
  16. 16. III- Excuses for avoiding group work The teacher is no longer in control of the class. We Can’t Tell Who’s Done What. Group Work is Unfair. Allocating Different Marks is Too Time Consuming to Track. Students are Not Responsible (Mature) Enough for Team Work.
  17. 17. Students Don’t Perform At “Their” Level In Group Work. Students will use their native language. We Can’t Mark Them Separately so Freeloaders get it Easy. Teachers can’t monitor all groups at once. Some learners prefer to work alone.
  18. 18. IV- Rules for successful group work Selecting appropriate group Techniques:  Games  Role-play and simulations  Drama  Interview  Brainstorming  Information Gap  Jigsaw  Problem solving and decision making.  Opinion Exchange
  19. 19. Planning group work:  Introduce the technique  Justify the use of small groups for the techniques  Model the technique  Give explicit detailed instructions  Divide the class into groups  Check for clarification  Set the task in motion
  20. 20. Monitoring the task Debreifing:  Reporting on task objectives.  Establishing affective support
  21. 21. Small group work By: Mohamed AIT MADANI YOUSSEF
  22. 22. Taking cultural expectations and belief systems into account. The teacher should emphasis on the group harmony. ‘the nail that sticks out is hammered down.’ proverb A belief in group work requires teacher to accept that students learn best when they work together.
  23. 23. Arranging the classroom space for active student participation The seating arrangement in the classroom should facilitate small group learning. Students should be able to interact in a face to face manner.
  24. 24. Emphasizing the importance of group work point out to students that all members will benefit. Let students know that they will be expected to work in groups composed of culturally and linguistically diverse members.
  25. 25. Teach students how to work cooperatively Students should be taught group work skills and terms related to it. Share ideas take turn Assign roles student teacher Conflict should not be viewed negatively.
  26. 26. Assigning group roles Group task is best accomplished by assigning roles to each member. Define and model roles for students. Take into account English proficiency level of students when assigning roles.
  27. 27. Strategies for engaging students in group work •Showdown •Round tabl •Three minutes review •Talking chips •Fan and pick •Numbered heads together •Jigsaw •Think-pair-share
  28. 28. Reflection and self-assessment Students should reflect on: How they work together. Individual participation Difficulties Good way to work more effectively
  29. 29. M.A TEFL & ICT CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT COURSE Prof Naima TRIMAS USING TEXTBOOKS Ahmed dakhissi
  30. 30. Outline: 1 Reasons for / against textbook use 2 Options for textbook use 3 Going beyond the textbook 4 Concluding remarks
  31. 31. 1. Reasons FOR / AGAINST textbook use FOR  Textbooks provide an attractively presented teaching material  Textbooks are well structured (consistent grammar, appropriate vocabulary exposure and practice, a range of skills and tasks,…
  32. 32.  Textbooks are time saving (it takes less time to prepare a lesson from a textbook)  Textbook’s teacher guide helps teachers with methodology  Textbooks are reassuring for ss (they allow to review what has been done and prepare for what’s coming)
  33. 33. 1. Reasons FOR / AGAINST textbook use Against Textbooks are boring (Teacher and ss are just page turners)  Textbooks are lacking variety  Textbooks are not always appropriate (every context is unique)
  34. 34.  Textbooks are endangering the engagement which a student centered classroom offers  Textbooks are only proposals for action, not instruction for action
  35. 35. 2. Options for textbook use WHEN TEACHERS (FOR WHATEVER REASON) DECIDE TO AMEND PARTS OF A TEXTBOOK, THEY HAVE FOUR ALTERNATIVES: Omit Replace Add Adapt
  36. 36. 2. Options for textbook use Omit WHEN THE LESSON IS NOT APPROPRIATE, THE TEACHER CAN SIMPLY OMIT IT AND GET ON WITH STH ELSE. SS MAY, HOWEVER, WONDER WHY THEY’RE USING THE TEXTBOOK IF MANY PAGES ARE OMITTED.
  37. 37. 2. Options for textbook use Replace THE TEACHER CAN REPLACE THE TEXTBOOK’S LESSON WITH ONE’S OWN. THIS WILL FIT MORE THE SPECIFIC CONTEXT AND SS’ NEEDS
  38. 38. 2. Options for textbook use Add THE TEACHER MAY ADD TO WHAT IS IN THE TEXTBOOK. WHEN THE TEXTBOOK’S LESSON DOES NOT ALLOW INTERACTION AND SS’ ENGAGEMENT, THE TEACHER MAY ADD ACTIVITIES, EXERCISES… TO ACHIEVE THAT.
  39. 39. 2. Options for textbook use Adapt THE TEACHER CAN ADAPT CREATIVELY THE TEXTBOOK LESSON BY REPLACING SOME (NOT ALL) OF THE SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES, REWRITING PARTS OF IT, REORDERING OR REDUCING ACTIVITIES
  40. 40.  Using textbooks creatively is one of the teacher’s premier skills  There are no perfect textbooks, usually advantages outweigh drawbacks  Accessing a multitude of teaching materials is no longer a problem, but using effectively and how using can be.
  41. 41. 3. GOING BEYOND THE TEXTBOOK 3.1) Reasons for G.B.T 3.2) How to G.B.Tise? 3.3) G.B.Tising constraints
  42. 42. 3.1) REASONS FOR GBT it’s challenging, esp in EFL situation, to find a real life context in which the target lge can be used meaningfully GBT exposes SS to a rich linguistic and conceptual context
  43. 43. 3.1) REASONS FOR GBT GBT allows the teacher to address a multitude of Lge skills and facilitates skills integration GBT allows SS to process information differently based on • their different learning styles and intelligences •
  44. 44. 3.1) REASONS FOR GBT GBT enhances teacher creativity SS appreciate the personal touch of their teacher on teaching materials • Varying sources and dealing with • them eclectically motivates SS •
  45. 45. 3.2) HOW TO G.B.TISE? Relevance to SS needs: do my SS really need this? Appropriateness to SS’ linguistic and cultural background Relevance to official guidelines
  46. 46. 3.2) HOW TO G.B.TISE? Authenticity (esp. in listening materials) Lay out: good presentation to interest SS
  47. 47. 3.2) HOW TO G.B.TISE Flexibility: continuous reflection on own materials so that these materials don’t become other textbooks Variety to touch different learning styles and intelligences
  48. 48. example Please observe the rules prohibiting the combustion of vegetable material and the exhalation of noxious fumes in this auditorium No smoking
  49. 49. Learners don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.
  50. 50. 3. GBT CONSTRAINTS How to find appropriate materials among the vast amount of information available (esp on the net) How to find appropriate materials for my specific context. It’s preferable for materials to focus on local or known context which allows SS to focus on lge use rather battling with unfamiliar contexts
  51. 51. 3. GBT CONSTRAINTS Fitting syllabus objectives: the teacher should know well the syllabus Financial constraint
  52. 52. 3. GBT CONSTRAINTS Time pressure: the syllabus length doesn’t allow the teacher to go beyond the textbook Large classes
  53. 53. 4. CONCLUSION NOTES Teaching can never be based on a single textbook, no textbook can fit all teaching/learning situations (one size does not fit all)
  54. 54. 4. CONCLUSION NOTES Textbooks don’t have meaning, teachers give textbooks meaning
  55. 55. 4. CONCLUSION NOTES Varying teaching materials is a very important aspect of teacher’s professional development. The more various ways you use the more SS you reach
  56. 56. 4. CONCLUSION NOTES The textbook is a dead material, it needs to be spiced up with supplementary material
  57. 57. 4. CONCLUSION NOTES It’s not the question of adopting or adapting a textbook, it’s “How” which matters. “a poor teacher will manage to ruin the perfect textbook while the good teacher can work miracles with the world’s worst textbook” Keith Walters
  58. 58. THANK YOU YOU’VE BEEN A WONDERFUL AUDIENCE
  59. 59. John came back home late, his mother asked him: John, where were you? I was looking for you. John replied: well mum, I was teaching my dog how to play piano. The mother said amazingly: “and now, can your dog play the piano? John said: how can I know mum? I said I was teaching the dog, I don’t know whether the dog learned that or not. The ONLY objective of teaching is LEARNING
  60. 60. Authentic activities/tasks/materials by: BRAHIM MEZGAR
  61. 61. I- authentic avtivities/tasks  “Tasks with a real-world rationale require learners to approximate, in class, the sorts of behaviours requeired of them in the world beyond the classroom.”  An example of real world task might be : “the learner will listen to a weather forecast and identify the predicted maximum temperture for the day” DAVIDNUNAN
  62. 62. II- Authentic Materials DAVID NUNAN stated that a rule-of-thumb definition of authentic materials is any material which has not been specificully produced for the purposes of language teaching.
  63. 63. III-Types of authentic materials  Gebhard suggested many types of authentic materials: 1. Authentic Listening/Viewing Materials 2. Authentic Visual Materials 1. Authentic Printed Materials 2. Realia (Real world"objects)
  64. 64. IV- Types of authentic activities Interactive Simulations Listening Activities Listening/ Viewing Activities  Activities Using Cultural Objects
  65. 65. V- Advantages of authentic materials / tsks/ activities  It provides students with the opportunity to make use of non-linguistics clues ( lay out, pictures, colours, symbols, the physical sitting in which it occurs) and so more easily to arrive at meaning from the printed word.  Adults need to be able to see the immidiate relevence of what they do in classroom to what they need to do outside it, and real life reading matter treated realistically makes the connection obvious
  66. 66. It’s a way to bring real world experiences into the classroom by focusing on practical language skills. Motivation and renewed interest in the subject matter will be incresed in students because they deal with content and situations that are meaningful for them. authentic texts are often regarded as more interesting than textbook materials because they can be more up-to-date, and relate to everyday issues and activities
  67. 67.  Authentic materials, particularly audio-visual ones such as films and TV shows, offer a much richer source of input for learners making connections between the classroom world and the world beyond it makes the learning process more easier Exposed to more authentic activities, students can increase confidence in using the language.
  68. 68. VI- Problemes with authentic activities / materials Special preparation is necessary which can be time consuming With listening, too many differnt accents can confuse students perception of the in put grammatical items show up unexpectedly, and without warning, which require students to have mastered a core knowledge of grammar
  69. 69. VII- Classroom management and authentic tasks/materials They make students more likely to love the subject, which makes them attend on time so that interuptions caused by lateness can be avoided. They cupture and stumulate the learners interest which can contrebute to decreasing disruptive behaviours
  70. 70. Setting arrangement

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