Teaching English Through English
by Jane Willis
excerpts
prepared by Michael Dragsten
Synopsis: This
article contains excerpts from Jane Willis’s Teaching English Through
English: A Course in Classroom Language and Techniques (Longman Handbooks
for Language Teachers Series, Longman ELT, 1982). The excerpts from units 14 to
21 discuss ideas, methods, strategies, and various activities for teaching the
four core components of English: listening, speaking, reading,
writing. Footnotes and parenthetical words are included here for further
elucidation of the key points.
Unit
14: Focus on Dialogues (pp. 94-102)
·
Focus on form, meaning,
and use of expressions.
·
Remember context: put grammatical
structures in real-life context.
·
Provide model sentences with
demonstration, pictures, diagrams, realia.
·
Provide contrastive examples with
pictures and practical situations.
·
Ask yourself: does a change in form
lead to a change in meaning?
·
Write some possible answers: think
of possible questions that suit them.
·
Write sets of graded questions: (1)
a ‘sign-post’ question[1] to make them listen with a purpose. (2)
some questions to check general understanding of the situation. (3) some
questions to check particular items that may cause problems.
Possible mode of presentation
Draw
a picture of people talking. Act it out for students. Make them listen to
understand. Get them to learn each line and say them in pairs. Then write some
cue words on the board and get them to do it all in pairs.
Method
(1)
Before introducing the dialogue, introduce the characters and set the scene.
Give a sign-post question, then do the first reading of the dialogue.
(2)
Provide general comprehension questions and do second reading. Then do a third
reading with pauses for repetition, class in halves[2].
(3)
Provide more detailed questions to promote short oral practice. Listen and
repeat, faster (but no faster than a normal speaking pace), class in halves,
then individuals[3], then in pairs. Check pair work.
(4)
Assess the performance of several pairs[4] (strong ones going first), class
listening. Suggest variation on the dialogue, and ask students for some ideas
of what they could say in the new situation. Do less controlled pair work,
teacher wandering round to listen. (This is in preparation for oral production
and ‘live talk’).
Unit 15: Focus on Oral Practice (pp. 104-112)
Substitution
tables
Fred
big
ball.
He
has/’s got
a small
balloon.
Jane
nice
toy car.
Discrimination exercise
Listen
to the question carefully and give an appropriate answer. For example, give an
answer like “Yes, I do” or “Yes, please,” depending on the nature of the
question.
Substitution
drill
“Ali
goes to school every day.” Substitute the following words into the sentence:
– yesterday
– shopping
– to town
– every day
Conversation
drill
You
are B; tell A what he/she needs.
e.g.)
A: “Oh dear, it’s raining.” B: “You need …”
(a raincoat, an umbrella, find shelter, etc.)
A: “I feel so
cold.” B:
“You need….” (a coat, gloves, the heater, etc.)
Using
picture cues
a.)
Make true statement about the things in the pictures. This is a discrimination
exercise involving compare and contrast.
b.)
Say which you would rather have as a present; tell your neighbor why.
c.)
Describe one of the objects to your neighbor (without naming it), until he/she
can guess which it is.
Guessing games
(with cue cards)
A
teacher or student picks a card and the others must guess which it is by asking
questions based on a model given (e.g., to practice using questions in the simple
past).
Transformation
drills
e.g.)
Change the sentence of the form “will” to “going to.”
Using wall
charts
a.)
Make sentences about the picture using the pattern “I saw x (verb +
ing)…” (x = someone). For example, “I saw John swimming in the
lake.”
b.)
In the situation given by the picture, think and ask what questions the
characters might ask one another.
c.)
Make up a dialogue, in pairs, based on the characters in the picture.
Imaginary
situation
e.g.)
Your friend’s parents have gone away for a few days, leaving your friend in
charge of the house and family. You check that your friend has remembered to do
everything (house chores). You ask questions like, “Have you swept the yard?,”
“Have you …?,” etc. In an office situation, a boss might check on the secretary
in the same way.
Expanding
Expand
a given set of words to make sentences and provide alternative examples.
e.g.)
Fred/holidays/July à ‘Fred has gone on a holiday in July.’
Or, ‘For July, Fred
will be on holiday.’
Teaching skills for oral practice
Conversation
drill
—Use
a two-line dialogue to practice English spoken naturally. Use picture
cues to elicit a certain kind of sentence (e.g., to practice the form “should
have done”). Then, change these sentences into naturally uttered responses.
For
example,
Question: “What
should he have done?”
Answer: “He
should have gone to bed earlier,” or
à
“gone to bed earlier” (the shortened, naturally spoken response).
Provide
more examples of utterances and change them into the most natural oral responses.
Do the same for other sentence patterns that need practice.
Substitution
tables
a.)
Together as a class (or in pairs) create a simple substitution table with a
maximum of six items in the longest column. Make sure the possible sentences
resemble naturally spoken English.
b.)
Make up 6-8 questions or statements that will naturally elicit a sentence from
the table as a response. You could also tell a very short story (possibly
humorous) which could be summarized by a sentence form the table.
c.)
Practice in pairs, eliciting and reading out sentences from the table you have
written.
d.)
Make up a short four line dialogue containing one of the sentences from the
table, or a similar one, that will illustrate how this structure can be used in
an everyday situation.
e.)
Make a copy of all the tables and dialogues produced by students for future
practice materials.
True/false
statements
a.)
Look at the following sentences and say whether each refers to past, present or
future time:
(i) If Cyril had won the lottery he would have bought a Mercedes.
(ii) If Fred was rich enough he would buy a Mercedes.
(iii) If Charlie gets a raise in salary he’ll buy a Mercedes.
b.)
True or false statements about sentences like the above can help you diagnose
whether the students have understood the meaning and implications of the
structure. The students listen to your statements, which should either be true
or false, and then tell you which they think it is, giving the corrected
version if it was false. For example, sentence (i) above can be written on the
board and the following statements made orally by the teacher. Which of the
following are true or false about sentence (i)? Correct the false ones.
– Cyril won the lottery.
– He has bought a Mercedes.
– Cyril tried to win the
lottery. –
He can’t afford a Mercedes.
– He didn’t buy a
Mercedes.
– He didn’t win the lottery.
– He wanted to buy a Mercedes.
c.)
Write some true/false statements about sentences (ii) and (iii) above and try
them out on your neighbors.
A game to play: Give Me Another One (with any number of players up to 8, in a circle).
—Player A chooses a pattern sentence,
e.g. “Jim likes playing football.” He then gives another sentence on the same
patter in order to show which words can be changed, e.g. “Jim likes watching
television.” He then says, “Give me another 6!” (or perhaps up to 10). Each
player in turn says one different sentence on the same pattern until the six
are done. Then someone else chooses and the game continues.
You are out
– if you hesitate for longer than the agreed time (5 or 10
seconds).
– if you make a mistake and do not correct it yourself
before the next player’s turn.
– if you give a sentence which is meaningless or
unacceptable, e.g. “Jim likes making,” or “Jim likes crying.”
The
game finishes when only one person is left in, and he or she is declared the
winner.
Unit 16: Focus on Vocabulary (p. 114)
How can we
teach it?
*draw
pictures, diagrams,
maps
*use a model
*bring
maps, charts,
graphs
*take students out of the classroom
*explain
simply, mime, act
*bring the real thing into the classroom
*write
in figures, use
symbols
*demonstrate
*give
a context and let students
guess
*provide synonyms, antonyms, lexical sets
*translate
into language 1
and then
*pre-teach key vocabulary before
exemplify
in
English
introducing a text and allow students to
infer or guess the meaning.
Unit 17: Focus on Activities for Oral Production (pp. 124-132)
Explanation
and Description
·
interpretations of graphs, maps,
diagrams; e.g. from geography or social science textbooks.
·
mini-speeches on topics of interest;
e.g. hometown, hobbies, school rules, pop stars.
·
describing a process; e.g.
rice-growing, bottling factories, cocoa production.
·
street directions or directions for
a journey.
·
instructions for operating a machine,
or how to drive a car, etc.
Discussion/Conversation
·
interpretations of pictures; e.g.
the story behind a picture or speculations about the people in the picture.
·
social issues; e.g. traffic,
pollution, education, role of women, planning a new town or school (or ideas
from a textbook or newspaper).
·
personal experience; e.g. discussion
of horoscopes, disasters, plans for future, holidays.
·
pictures for opinions; e.g. fashion,
pop stars, consumer goods.
Role-play and
Dramatizations
·
extending or continuing a set
dialogue
·
inventing a conversation for
characters in a picture; e.g. two people leaving a cinema, or a tourist
arriving at a hotel reception, or someone shopping, etc.
·
social events; e.g. shopping,
travel, party, interview
·
dramatizing a sequence; e.g. a
family discussion about choice of job for teenage son, or discussion between
witnesses of a car accident (using cue cards).
Games and Problem Solving
Guessing games
(teams or whole class)
—Class
has to guess by asking questions about what object, action, person
or place one student is thinking of or has a picture of. The questions
can only be answered with “Yes” or “No.” Examples of guessing games: “Twenty
Questions,” “Personalities,” “Glug,” “Hide and Seek” (see directions below).
Elimination games
(teams, groups or whole class)
Examples:
“Just a minute,” “Conversation Gambits,” “My grandmother went to market,”
“Simon Says,” “Don’t answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’”
Problems (pairs)
Each
person in the pair has a picture or some information that the other needs, but
cannot see. They must find out, by asking questions and explaining, enough
information to solve the problem or complete the task set. For example, “Find
the difference,” with two nearly identical pictures or maps; “Arrange a
meeting,” with two diaries with various engagements for the week.
Game directions
“Just
a minute”
—Teacher
writes 4 to 8 topics that the class has already talked about, e.g. ‘tea’ or ‘football’
or ‘holidays’ or ‘my village,’ etc., on small pieces of paper which are then
folded up. One person or team is chosen to pick one topic, and must talk about
it for a set time, e.g., 15 or 30 seconds, without hesitating or repeating
anything. Points can be awarded for each 5 seconds of speech. Students or teams
are out if they hesitate for over 3 seconds, or repeat the same thing. Mistakes
in English need not matter, since the object of the game is to encourage
fluency.
“Don’t
answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’”
—One
team asks members of the other team questions to try to make them answer “Yes”
or “No.” The answering team can use other responses, e.g., “Of course not,” or
“I think so,” or “I did” or “It is,” etc. The teacher times how long it is
before a “Yes” or “No” is said. The team with the longest time wins.
“Twenty
Questions”
—One
person or team thinks of an object or animal, etc. The others can ask up to 20
questions with “Yes” or “No” answers, in order to guess what the object is. If
they guess in less than 20, they have won. Questions like, “Is it alive?,” “Is
it made of wood?,” Does it have 4 legs?,” etc., are possible.
“My
grandmother went to market and she bought…”
—This
game practices weights, measures, the use of articles a and an,
and ‘some,’ etc. Student 1 begins “My grandmother went to market and she bought
a kilo of tomatoes.” The next student repeats that, and adds something new,
i.e., “My grandmother went to market and bought a kilo of tomatoes and a blue
dress.” Student 3 repeats it and adds one item. If any student forgets
something or gets it in the wrong order, he is out. This can be played
individually or in teams; the members of the team can help each other out.
“Conversation
Gambits”
—The
teacher sets a situation, e.g. “in a restaurant,” or “meeting a friend in the
street,” or “visiting a friend in hospital,” or gives the first line of
conversation like, “I went to a party last night.” The aim of each team is to
keep the conversation going by thinking of appropriate questions to ask every
time there is a silence. If there is a silence of more than a set time, e.g. 5
or 10 seconds, the team is out. Again, the teacher needs to time each team’s
performance.
“Glug”
—This
is similar to Twenty Questions, except that “glug” stands for an action, e.g.
dance. Questions like “Do you like glugging?,” “Have you glugged today?,” “Do
you glug in the kitchen?,” etc. can be asked.
Unit 18: Focus on Listening (p. 134)
Kinds of
listening
*discussions
*dialogues
*folk songs
*stories
*interviews
*news broadcasts
*descriptions
*lectures
*instructions
*talks
*pop
songs
*telephone
conversations
*advertisements
*directions
Listening
purposes
·
general information: main points
·
specific information: particular
items
·
cultural interest: general
·
people’s attitudes and opinions
·
organization of ideas
·
sequence of events
·
lexical items: words expressing
noise, movement, etc.
·
structural items: their use and
meaning
·
functional items: their form and use
Listening enabling
skills
·
predicting what people are going to
talk about
·
guessing at unknown words or phrases
·
using one’s own knowledge of the
subject to help one understand
·
identifying relevant points;
rejecting irrelevant information
·
retaining relevant points (by note
taking, summarizing)
·
recognizing discourse markers, e.g.
“Well,” “Oh, another thing is,” “Now, finally…” etc.
·
recognizing cohesive devises, e.g.
“such as,” “which,” including link words, pronouns, references, etc.
·
understanding different intonation
patterns, and uses of stress, etc. which give clues to meaning and social
setting
·
understanding inferred information,
e.g. speakers’ attitude or intentions
Listening activities
*true
or
false?
*identify who said what, who did what, etc.
*discuss
for or against
(debate)
*complete flow charts
*continue
the
dialogue
*discriminate between two things (is it A or B?)
*fill
in a
table
*compare and contrast (with optional reading texts)
*write
short answers to
questions *take notes
(not just copying)
*think
(problem
solving)
*draw a picture (for visualization)
*multiple
choice (select a, b, or c) *follow
directions (with a map)
*put
events in chronological order
Unit 19: Focus on Reading
(pp. 142-152)
Reading
purposes
·
pleasure: magazines, holiday brochures, letters from friends, etc.
·
survival: forms, official notices, bills and receipts, labels,
directions, bus and train timetables, place names, street signs
·
work: reports, articles, catalogues, workshop manuals, notice
boards, minutes of meetings, professional journals, advertisements, business
letters
·
study: dictionaries, textbooks, indexes, glossaries,
bibliographies, library catalogues, abstracts
·
other (that may fit into one or more of the above categories): newspapers,
photograph captions, posters, job advertisements, instructions for use,
contracts, phone directories, charts, diagrams, reference works, graphs,
literature, novels, plays, poetry
Reading
skills
1.
Recognizing words and phrases in English script.
2.
Using one’s own knowledge of the outside world to make predictions about and
interpret a text.
3.
Retrieving information stated in the passage.
4.
Distinguishing the main ideas from subsidiary information.
5.
Deducing the meaning and use of unknown words; ignoring unknown words/phrases
that are redundant
6.
Understanding the meaning and implications of grammatical structures; for
example, involving cause, result, purpose, reference in time (e.g. verb tenses;
compare: “He could swim well” – past, with “He could come at 10 a.m.” –future).
7.
Recognizing discourse markers: e.g., “therefore” à
conclusion, “however” à contrast,
“that
is” à paraphrase, “e.g.” à example.
8.
Recognizing the function of sentences, even when not introduced by discourse
markers: e.g., the function of an example, definition, paraphrase, conclusion,
warning, etc.
9.
Understanding relations within the sentence and the text (words that refer back
to a thing or a person mentioned earlier in the sentence or the text, e.g.,
information about which, who, it).
10.
Extracting specific information for summary or note taking.
11.
Skimming to obtain the gist, and recognize the organization of ideas within the
text.
12.
Understanding implied information and attitudes.
13.
Knowing how to use an index, a table of contents, etc.
14.
Understanding layout, use of headings, etc.
How do you teach a difficult text? Help students by
·
providing more background
information
·
pre-teaching key words the day
before
·
dividing text into short chunks
·
providing sign-post questions for
main points
·
adding discourse markers where
helpful, e.g., in addition, therefore, so, first, second,
etc.
·
asking easy questions
·
paraphrasing difficult ideas
(simplifying)
·
setting easy tasks like matching
questions and answers
Reading activities
Early stages
(word/sentence recognition)
—match
words to pictures
—sort
words into lexical sets
—match
sentences to pictures
After the
early stages (reading for meaning)
·
arrange jumbled sentences into a
paragraph
·
answer the questions, complete the
sentences
·
is this information TRUE, FALSE, or
NOT STATED?
·
choose the correct answer from a,
b, c, or d
·
note taking for summary, jumbled key
points
·
complete a table or chart of
information
·
label a diagram, fill in missing
information
·
find a sentence/word which tells you
that ___________
·
cloze passages, words given below
·
fill the blanks
·
match questions to answers, jumbled
sentence halves
Activities
and word games (for elementary reading level)
(a)
Matching word to picture
—Students
match the word to the correct picture as quickly as possible.
To make: Prepare
6 pairs of small cards, a word on one card, a picture illustrating it on the
other, using words your students will need to be able to read in their
textbooks. Mix each set up and store in a labeled envelope. Write the words the
envelope contains on the outside of the envelope, with the instructions to the
students: “Find a picture to match each word, then write the words down.”
(b)
Word families (or lexical sets)
—Each
envelope can contain any number of words on separate cards belonging to one
word or family lexical set, e.g. names of animals, kinds of food, colors, etc.
The teacher mixes words from two or three envelopes (i.e. different lexical
sets) together; the students read them and sort them out back into sets as
quickly as possible. This can be done competitively.
To make: Complete
lexical sets (such as for places, food, people, clothes, color, etc.) with
familiar words or phrases then copy them on to cards. Store each set in a
separate envelope, clearly labeled. Pictures can also be added, to make a
combination of both games (a) and (b).
For
example, complete the following lexical sets:
Places
Food
People
Clothes Color
(to)
the shop
rice
the doctor
shirt
blue
(at)
school
sugar
Mr. Jones
sandals
green
________
_____
________
______ _____
________
_____
________
______ _____
Reading activities (for elementary to intermediate level)
(a)
Matching sentences to pictures or wall charts
—Two
or more pictures or wall charts are displayed, and students read and sort
sentences into two columns, according to which picture they are about. This can
be done with small pictures, e.g. magazine pictures, or wall pictures or maps,
etc.
To make: Find
suitable pictures to suit the vocabulary your students know orally and need to
read. Write 6 sentences about each picture on cards. Store them in labeled
envelopes, containing or referring to the correct picture.
To use: Mix the
sentence cards from two or more envelopes; students sort them as quickly as
possible according to the picture they refer to.
(b)
Matching questions and answers (based on a picture or short text)
—Students
look at the picture, or read the text, then find all the question cards. Then
they find a card with a suitable answer for each question. This gives students
practice in recognizing referential words like ‘he,’ ‘she’ etc., and discourse
markers like ‘because,’ ‘in order to,’ etc.
To make: Choose a
suitable magazine picture or short text. Mount it on card the right size to fit
in the envelope. Write, on separate cards, 6 questions and 6 or more answers.
The answers should be natural sounding answers, not too long; because to have
long answers that repeat or look like the question would make the matching too
easy. It is a good idea to provide two extra ‘answers’ that do not match any
questions, then students cannot get the last ones right unless they really
understand all of them.
(c)
Matching sentence halves (based on a picture or short text)
—This
is the same as matching question and answer except that you split sentences in
half and write half on each card.
(d)
Jumbled paragraphs or texts
—Students
read the sentences on the cards, then re-arrange the cards in the best way to
form a coherent paragraph which they can check by looking up the original
paragraph in their textbooks. This gives them practice in reading for meaning,
seeing how a text is organized, and reorganizing link words and words which
refer back or forwards. Rearranging paragraphs of a text is also useful.
Unit 20: Focus on Writing Practice-early stages (p. 156)
—Before
students write, make sure that they can say it, read it, and understand it.
Why write in class?
·
to learn the motor skills of
handwriting; to develop neatness, clarity and speed
·
to learn spelling and punctuation,
etc.
·
to keep a written record of what has
been learned and achieved
·
to reinforce vocabulary and
structures already mastered orally
·
to practice for end-of-term
achievement tests
Writing
activities
1.
Match then copy (e.g., match picture to word, vice versa).
2.
Write true sentences about the pictures. For example,
tree
happy.
The
ball
is green.
boy red.
3.
Match, then write: For example,
David has a new
football
who likes playing football.
Mr. Jones has a new
car
which he plays with a lot.
Sam has a new
friend
which he drives to school in.
4.
Write 20 sentences that are true. For example,
a lot
of trees
kitchen.
There are a
few
plants in the
dormitory.
10, 20, .. birds
classroom.
5.
Write a short paragraph about someone you know, using suitable words from the
tables.
market
evening.
Ø Tom/Akosha goes to
the shops
every morning.
store
day.
vegetables
his
Ø He/She buys
rice
for the
family.
meat
her
never
by
bus
not far.
Ø He/She
usually
goes on foot
because it is
expensive.
often
by
bicycle
faster.
6.
Match question and answer, then write. For example,
Where does Anna
live?
He’s twelve.
Where do you
live?
I live in Keta.
How old is
Peter?
She lives near me.
7.
Write more sentences on a pattern, e.g., ‘She goes to bed at 9 o’clock.’
He / go / school / 7.
They / come / home / 2.
Peter / eat / lunch / 12.
Unit 21: Focus on Written Production (pp. 164-175)
Kinds of writing
—Study:
description, narrative, information
—Work:
business letters, minutes of meetings, references, application forms
—Daily
life: form filling, letters, notices
Writing
skills
1.
Handwriting: forming and joining letters.
2.
Mastering spelling, punctuation, sentence construction, referential words
(e.g., he, who).
3.
Linking sentences using connecting words, relatives, etc. Connecting
paragraphs.
4.
Being aware of different demands of written English (contrast with spoken).
5.
Organizing information logically and clearly with a specific type of reader in
mind.
6.
Using discourse markers appropriately to indicate main points, developments in
a theme, change of topic, examples, conclusions, etc.
7.
Using variation in normal sentence patterns and word order to develop a theme
clearly and emphasize the main points at each stage.
8.
Selecting vocabulary to convey attitude and implied meaning.
Writing tasks
1.
Paragraph writing
(a)
‘Hossein’s new house is off Kings Street. He moved there because it was
quieter. It’s next door to a hospital and has a large garden at the back. His
wife likes it because it has a modern kitchen.’
Sadegh / flat / Park Road.
moved /cheaper.
cinema / small garden / front.
Friends / near / town center.
Use
the above words to write about your friend’s house, using the similar
sentences.
(b)
You think you have seen a man who is wanted by the police. Write, for the
police, a short description of the man, saying when and where you saw him.
Begin with:
‘The man I saw was coming out of …’ (Provide information about place, time, and
date. Give a description of clothes, briefcase, etc., appearance, manner, and
possible intentions).
2.
Essay writing
(c)
‘The school leaving age should be 15 minimum.’
Discuss,
then write.
Skeleton plan
Advantages: ‘It’s a good thing to do x because ….’
Disadvantages: ‘It’s not a good thing to do x because
….’
‘Most people prefer x (or y) because …’
‘I think y as well as/instead of x
because (+ example).’
(d)
Write a letter applying for the job advertised here. Give all necessary details
and ask for more information re hours, pay, etc.
Wanted
Jul/Aug Exp. Sales
Assistant, large store.
Must speak English.
Apply to D. Lee, Waltrex
Stores, City Rd, Sidville.
_________________________________________________________
Are your students poor at writing? Try the following:
Ø Stage preparation carefully: students should speak – read –
then write.
Ø Grade each step; give shorter, simpler tasks until they
improve.
Ø Give practice in planning, organizing and expressing
information.
Ø Give model or target essays.
Ø Practice relevant structures before they write their own.
Ø Keep a record of common mistakes. Focus on one per lesson.
Ø Insist on corrections. Test them later.
Ø Make them write in class. Vary the topics set.
Ø Do writing as group work. (The strong help the weak).
Teaching skills
1. Preparing for a written examination
(a)
List the kinds of written tasks that your students have to perform for the
final school leaving examination.
(b)
Plan a pre-examination program of essay writing revision as follows:
ü List the typical forms of writing required by the essay
topics on past examination papers.
ü What specific grammatical structures and other language
items can be used for each form of writing?
ü What types of essay could be planned or organized in similar
ways? (e.g., describing a process, giving directions, giving opinions, compare
and contrast, using markers like “first,” “second,” “third,” “however,” “on the
other hand,” etc.).
ü What have different forms of writing got in common? Show
your students how one form of writing might be useful in three or four
different essay topics; this is useful when they select exam questions.
ü List areas of lexis (vocabulary) which may be needed for the
examination. Vocabulary depends on the topic, not so much the form
of writing; e.g., a description of a place may include some of the same
vocabulary as giving street directions but not the same grammatical structures.
2. Early intermediate writing. Model paragraphs, guided
production
(a)
Read/expand/write
Look
at writing task (a) about Hossein’s house at the beginning of this unit. This
is in three stages; (i) reading, (ii) writing practice, on to (iii) written
production. Do this exercise quickly, orally in pairs. Write another short
model paragraph, giving biographical details about a (famous) person you all
know. Then think of someone else, similar, and write prompts as in stage (ii).
Finally, think of someone else for students to write about by themselves,
keeping to the same patterns. Perhaps they could do an autobiography, with some
extra help.
(b)
Cloze paragraphs
Write
another short model paragraph at a level simple enough for your students to
imitate, using a different form of writing. To use this in class you would
write it on the board leaving out every 6th word or some of the
verbs or subjects, etc. Write below it more than enough words to fill the
blanks. When your students can say and write it correctly, you could delete
more words, or perhaps every 5th word instead, and not give them
words below to choose from. They then write this on a new page (so they cannot
see what they have just written). By this method, students practice one form of
writing intensively, and you only have to write the model once on the
blackboard. (Alternatively, you can write the models on overhead projector
transparencies since you can re-use them over and over again.)
(c)
Expanding from key points
This
is more difficult than expanding sentences, since students have to not only
expand each point into a sentence but also provide something to go before and
after. Adequate oral planning is essential. Structural and lexical items need
revising too; so do suitable discourse markers and connecting words.
Look
at writing task (b) about giving a description to the police at the beginning
of this unit. Practice this activity in pairs, getting each other to expand the
points to the length and form it should be written in. Then practice with a
different topic taken from your textbook, making sure the expanded version
sounds like written English. Finally, write down the difficulties your students
may find with this type of exercise (e.g., linking ideas, punctuation, short
jerky sentences, etc.). If you do one version for them on the board as a target
text, then rub it out bit by bit; they will get the idea better.
(d)
Jumbled key points (based on key points from a reading text)
When
students have arranged the key points in the correct order, they can be asked
to join sentences, using link words, relatives etc., and make any other changes
necessary to make it sound like good written English. Then, after preparing it
orally first, they can write it down.
In
pairs, discuss possible alternative ways of linking the sentences.
(e)
Answering questions on a reading text (to form a summary)
Answering,
in full, questions designated to elicit the main points of a reading passage is
another way to get students to write a guided paragraph. Suggested link words
can be shown, in brackets, beside the questions. (Warning: writing a
summary without thorough guidance should never be set except to advanced
students).
3. Correcting written assignments
(a)
Avoiding ‘pitfalls’
If
the writing task has been prepared thoroughly, there should not be too much
correcting to do. If there are a lot of mistakes in many students’ work you
should ask yourself what went wrong at the preparation stage. (NB: It helps you
to diagnose the problems if you write the essay you want your students to write,
before you prepare the preparation lesson).
(b)
Training students to spot and correct their own mistakes
In
the early stages students find this difficult, and so they need guidance in
correcting their own work. Gradually, this guidance should be withdrawn, until
by examination time, students are better at checking their own work and
correcting their own mistakes.
(c)
A method of marking
Here
are some symbols that have been found to be useful:
s – spelling
c – concord (agreement: subject and
verb)
s/p – singular, plural
w/o – word order
T – tense
V – vocabulary, wrong word or usage
app – appropriacy (inappropriate
style or register)
p – punctuation (including capital
letters)
Ir – irrelevant information
?M – meaning not clear
∧
– word missing
If
you let your student know what kind of mistake he has made, he has more chance
of correcting it. You can withdraw your help in stages throughout the
course, thus:
Stage 1 – (elementary) underline the mistake and write the
symbol in the margin.
Stage 2 – underline the whole word/phrase and write the
symbol in the margin.
Stage 3 – do not underline the word or the mistake;
only write the symbol in the
margin.
Stage 4 – (exam classes) put a dot or x in the margin
for each mistake.
(e)
Awarding marks or grades for compositions
There
are two main ways of grading a piece of writing: ‘impression’ marking and
‘split’ (or analytic) marking.
·
Impression marking: you read the written work through quickly and give it an
‘impression’ mark. In an exam, at least two, preferably three, people
independently should give an impression mark for each essay, keeping a record
on a separate mark sheet, not writing the grade on the essay itself.
·
Split marking: you ‘split’ total marks, and give a proportion for each of
the following:
– organization (plan, paragraphing,
etc.)
– accuracy (grammar and spelling)
– appropriacy (style, register)
– content (relevance).
Depending
on what form of writing it is, you adjust the proportion of total marks given
for each category. (For example, a business letter would need a low proportion
of marks for content, and higher than usual for appropriacy and accuracy). You
could also add or subtract a few marks for neatness, layout, etc.
For example,
org.
3/4 acc.
3/6
appr.2/7 content
3/3 total: 11/20
4. Basing composition work on reading texts: creating
skeleton plans for writing
—Find
a reading passage in your textbook that would be suitable for essay writing.
Then, write a skeletal outline for writing the essay. Here’s an example of a
skeletal writing plan for a discussion/argument type essay (x =
something/action that the subject does, ¶ = paragraph):
Skeleton plan[5]
¶1: Many people do x (+ advantages of doing x).
Doing x, however, has disadvantages.
¶2: Reasons for doing y (alternative to doing x).
¶3: Many people prefer doing x (+ reasons).
Anecdote/example of such a person.
Conclusion: Doing x as well as y is perhaps
the answer.
(Keep
in mind that alternative skeletal outlines to the one given here could also be
created for non-argument type essays).
5. Training in exam techniques
—In
the year or term of the examination, practice in examination techniques is
essential. Give students exam practice in class. This has two advantages:
(a)
They get used to being timed and working under pressure.
(b)
You can see where they are likely to go wrong and devote more time to that area
in another lesson.
Techniques specific to exams:
·
read and carry out instructions on
the exam paper
·
work to time, on their own and
silently
·
select (the right number of)
questions
·
interpret the essay title – meaning,
purpose, aim
·
select relevant information and
appropriate style or register for task
·
plan, organize clearly and logically
·
leave time to correct own mistakes
6. Essay/paragraph writing (preparing students for ‘free’
writing)
—When
teaching ‘free’ writing, follow the same steps as your students should take
when writing for an examination. Then they will get into good habits and are
less likely to go wrong in the exam. (In addition, they will have less
surprises and develop higher confidence in writing).
Steps (after
reading the instructions, planning out the time and selecting a title):
(1)
Read the title, underline the key words, identify what form of writing is
required.
(2)
What is the purpose of the piece of writing? Who is it for? What style is
appropriate, formal or informal?
(3)
List possible main points – note form.
(4)
List necessary subsidiary points – to back up the main points; examples, anecdote,
opinion, etc.
(5)
Express (to yourself or in written form) each main point in full, as simply and
clearly as you can.
(6)
Jot down any useful words, phrases, structures, idioms you think you might
forget when actually writing.
(7)
Select and organize relevant main points into a plan, with relevant subsidiary
points – note form. Do not include any information that is not asked for.
(8)
Add link words, phrases, discourse markers to plan (trying to say the whole
thing through to yourself in your head).
(9)
Write it, clearly and simply.
(10)
Check it through, once for relevance, again for accuracy (subject/verb
agreement, tenses, spelling, punctuation, etc.).
When
first preparing students for ‘free’ writing, you will need to show them how to
tackle each step. Encourage student participation. While going through the
steps, have them work in groups or by themselves, then discuss it together as a
class. Nearer the exam, you can get them to do Steps 1-5 on their own before
you discuss anything, and so on, gradually withdrawing guidance. (NB:
Never ask a student to write an essay that you haven’t written or at least
fully planned yourself).
Notes
[1] A sign-post question is a question that asks for the gist,
the most important idea of the listening passage.
[2] If a sentence or phrase is confusing for the students,
simplify it by breaking it up into chunks. Then have the students to repeat the
chunks; first as single chunks, then all together. A similar process could also
be done with complex words but working with syllables instead. Adjust the speed
of repetition, and pay attention to syllable stress. While doing listening and
repeating, focus on their pronunciation, intonation, and fluency,
trying to avoid a ‘robotic’ voice whenever possible.
[3] The reason you should listen to individuals repeat is to
check for errors in pronunciation, intonation, fluency, etc. In addition, other
students can listen for the same mistakes that they would probably make. As a
rule, a student who is strong in speaking should be called upon first; a weaker
student should go next. That way the weaker student can try to mimic the first
student and have an opportunity to correct any errors that the first student
made. This also develops confidence among shy and lower-level students. After
checking 2 or 3 students individually, have all of the students practice the
dialogue in pairs. Monitor the pair work but do not interrupt them often since
this is mostly a fluency exercise. If students make any mistakes, make a mental
note and go over the mistakes after the students have completed the exercise.
[4] Have them perform in front of class as this will help the
class to redirect their attention on the pair; in addition, the pairs can
practice speaking under pressure. Provide corrections if necessary, but use constructive
feedback. While coaching their speaking, try to imitate their voice so they
can listen for any errors; then use your model speaking voice so they can hear
how it is naturally done. Allow the students to compare the two versions and
decide which one is better. Then, have the students to repeat the correct
version. Alternatively, you can record their performances, so you can provide a
more accurate feedback. This also allows the students to get in the habit of
listening more carefully and doing self-corrections in speaking.
[5] Let us imagine that the topic of the essay is on ‘ways
people get to work.’ Let us assume that x = ‘driving to work.’ After
writing a skeleton plan, paragraph 1 of the essay might look like the following
(suitable discourse markers in brackets):
‘Many people drive to work because it is more convenient.
They do not have to wait for the bus, especially out in the cold, nor do they
have to wait for a taxi or a train. With a car, they can leave whenever they
want and drive at their own pace. [However], driving to work has certain disadvantages.
[First], it creates much air pollution which can be bad for our health.
[Second], there can be high oil and gas expenses after much driving. [Third],
…’
The
second paragraph could discuss an alternative to driving to work (x),
such as walking to work (y). The third paragraph could explain why many
people prefer driving to work. It should also provide several anecdotes or examples
of people that prefer driving. Finally, the conclusion of the essay should give
the author’s opinion about getting to work, and perhaps give a complementary
answer like, ‘I believe that driving and walking are both convenient ways of
getting to work, depending on the individuals’ needs and the situation that
they are in…’