TEFL6_week1

TEFL 6 session 1 2019-2020
Introduction
1 / 30
next
Slide 1: Slide
EngelsHBOStudiejaar 2

This lesson contains 30 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 90 min

Items in this lesson

TEFL 6 session 1 2019-2020
Introduction

Slide 1 - Slide

Ask students to log into the lesson on lessonup so you can interact with them and they can keep track of the lesson on their mobile device. They can make screen shots of things to remember and we will share the lesson with them on #OO later.
Learning objectives
  1. You know what the topics of this course entail.

  2. You can rank the topics based on personal preferences

Slide 2 - Slide

This item has no instructions

3 things about you as a learner

Slide 3 - Slide

Introductory slide to introduce the topic of the course: different learners and their preferences.
These are my 3 personal things:
experience
experiment
explain
activating
adaptive
autonomous
brain-friendly
cooperative
innovative
interactive
learner-centred

Slide 4 - Slide

Opening page to arouse curiosity and to introduce the type of course we are starting today: new, different, challenging. This is why we do not provide a complete overview today but start with an introductory class. Briefly run past the characteristics of this course and ask students which of these characteristics appeals to them most > use next slide for inventory.
Which of these characteristics appeals to you most?

activating - adaptive - autonomous - brain-friendly - cooperative - innovative - interactive - learner-centred

Slide 5 - Open question

Ask which of the characteristics makes the students feel most like they will enjoy this course?
The 6 topics
activating methodology for ELT
cooperative learning in ELT
learning English autonomously
brain-friendly learning/teaching English
ELT methodology for dealing with mixed ability
Dealing with mixed ability in ELT using technology

Slide 6 - Slide

Explain that this course is adaptive which means students can make a personal choice of one of these 6 topics which they will hand in at the end of class. They make this choice based on our presentation of the topics today.
1 Activating methodology

Slide 7 - Slide

Intro slide topic 1
activating methodology
what comes to mind?

Slide 8 - Mind map

Ask students to write down their personal idea or piece of info about activating methodology - characteristic or example of its application.
Compare to or refer to reader p. 4-5 for more characteristics.
The learners are actively involved in the learning so they... (reasons) 

… are more motivated
… learn better & have better results
… do more different activities

Slide 9 - Slide

Give some info about the 3 reasons for applying activating methodology.
The learners are actively involved in the learning, because... 
… they can use their own personal situation (personalise)
… they can relate to meaningful & realistic tasks
… they have options
… they are partly responsible for their own learning (success)
… they are stimulated / challenged / triggered.

Slide 10 - Slide

Briefly explain how activating methodology engages learners more: by e.g. making the language personally relevant, etc. Give examples to do with learning & teaching English!
Cooperative learning on language tasks

Slide 11 - Slide

This item has no instructions

What do you think of working together on a language task (pros & cons)

Slide 12 - Slide

Introduce the sample activity for cooperative learning and do the activity by asking students what they think about working together on language tasks (pros and cons).
Cooperative learning

+ better retention of language points
+ develop oral communication & social skills
+ students learn form and with eachother
+ increases self-confidence, motivation and feeling of responsibility

Slide 13 - Slide

Briefly explain that cooperative learning is more than simply working together ; you use specific 'structures' (e.g. placemat, think-pair-share, round Robin, rally Robin).
On slide: some advantages - try to focus on language learning as much as possible (oral skills, retention)

Slide 14 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Learning English autonomously
What elements of autonomy do you see?

Slide 15 - Slide

Ask what students think of learning English independently and ask them to watch the video about SOLE: self organised learning environment. 
Reason to watch: What elements of autonomy do they see?
What elements of autonomy do you see?

Slide 16 - Slide

This item has no instructions

1

Slide 17 - Video

play 0:00-2:27
Discuss what makes these learners autonomous and briefly ask students to think about what it takes to be autonomous as a language learners. Refer to reader p. 19 for basic requirements, e.g. knowing how to learn a language.
02:33
What elements of autonomy do you see?

Slide 18 - Open question

This item has no instructions

0

Slide 19 - Video

play 0:00-2:27
Discuss what makes these learners autonomous and briefly ask students to think about what it takes to be autonomous as a language learners. Refer to reader p. 19 for basic requirements, e.g. knowing how to learn a language.
Brain-friendly learning & teaching

Slide 20 - Slide

Introduce the topic asking what students think is brain-friendly, i.e. good for learning (language). 
A mindmap or a list? Drinking water of dehydrating? Colour or black-and-white? Wide awake or half asleep? etc. 
It is important to use the whole brain - refer to whole brain learning / teaching.

mnemonics
logical organisation
?

Slide 21 - Slide

Give some examples of things that the brain likes, e.g. 
? (can they guess?): digestible chunks
hotspot 1: mnemonics
hotspot 2: logical organisation (vocab.)
hotspot 3: attention span (+ colours)
hotspot 4: brain wave stages
Various states of consciousness are directly connected to the ever-changing electrical, chemical, and architectural environment of the brain. 
Use the alpha (α)-brainwave stage (brain is relaxed but aware) for the cognitive way, but do something different, e.g. at the end of a lesson, when the brain is calm. Increasing alpha brain waves can reduce depressive symptoms and increase creative thinking.
Complete sleep is delta brainwave state; theta is just before waking up or falling asleep – great ideas might arise (also easily forgotten, so should be jotted down). Brain can still absorb info, so great exam preparation stage to use – rehearse vocab/info just before falling alseep.
Characteristics of brain-friendly learning
Learn when ready to learn
(physically, emotionally & mentally)


Memory & repetition
(steps, building blocks, link things up, recycle)


Structure & organisation
(link preknowledge to new info, rituals)


Higher order thinking
(alpha brainwave state, pose a problem)


Stimulate brain
(new thing, colour, music, water, positive expectations)

Slide 22 - Slide

Summary of the characteristics of brain-friendly learning > implications for teaching? (nice to follow-up on for practical task)
ELT methodology for dealing with mixed ability

Slide 23 - Slide

This item has no instructions

What type of person are you?

Slide 24 - Slide

To raise awareness of differences between learners, ask them some questions, e.g. are you a fast/slow learner? do you tackle new things easily or not? do you learn better by talking to others or by studying from a book? etc. Possible refer back to the intro about you as a learner at the start.
Mixed ability
differences in preferences, personal background, learning experience, educational experience, motivation, character, (dis)abilities, social skills, knowledge of English, level of maturity, pace of learning, etc. etc.


You can make everyone TEACH the same,​
but you cannot make everyone LEARN the same!

Slide 25 - Slide

Discuss in what way learners are all different, that it is NOT just about level of English and that it can be quite challenging to deal with for a teacher. One answer is using a variety of activities and approaches and of course differentiation.
Learning styles

Slide 26 - Slide

Give some critical notes on learning styles (tests), referring to research on this topic. People do have different learning styles but applying them (uniquely) does not necessarily make them better learners.
Using learning styles tests 
tests are merely an indication, no 100% match​ so use tests wisely, be aware of the aims! It is good to be aware of your own preferences, as they may also be more prominent in your teaching, where you actually have to offer a more complete repertoire of approaches and types of activities!
ELT methodology for dealing with mixed ability 
using technology

Slide 27 - Slide

same topic and approach, but now using technology to deal with it. Refer to us using Lessonup now, to possible engage some learners more by some interaction, visualisation and variation in approach (not ppt, but different platform.
ELT methodology for dealing with mixed ability 
using technology
                                   Go to socrative.com and login to room 
                               KEUNEN84

Slide 28 - Slide

same topic and approach, but now using technology to deal with it. Refer to us using Lessonup now, to possible engage some learners more by some interaction, visualisation and variation in approach (not ppt, but different platform.
Checkpoint learning objectives
  1. You know what the topics of this course entail.

  2. You can rank the topics based on personal preferences.

Slide 29 - Slide

This item has no instructions

Follow-up
  1. Explore / skimread the reader on the 6 topics.

  2. Bring a note motivating your choices for topics 1 + 2 with personal learning objectives for this course. 

Slide 30 - Slide

This item has no instructions