TEACHER: Paulina
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WEEK: 2
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DAY: Monday
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LENGTH: 45 min
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LEVEL OF SS: Pre-Intermediate
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DATE: 08/08/2016 |
TP# 3
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TOPIC/THEME:
School days
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LESSON FOCUS
Listening
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By the end of the lesson
students will have practiced their ability to listen for gist and specific
information with three stories about school days.
Subsidiary Aims:
Students will have also
have practiced and learnt new lexis related to school days to talk about
their memories.
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PERSONAL AIMS
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CLASS PROFILE:
The class consists of 9 students, 3 men and 6 women,
6 Polish and 3 Ukrainians.
The strongest students are Grażyna and Denis and
they like to contribute during OCFB, work in pairs or groups. Andrzej is the
weakest student and prefers working directly with the teacher. He doesn’t
like listening and pair work. Małgorzata and Grażyna work well together.
Denis and Diana check their dictionaries a lot and Andrzej is quite
intolerant of ambiguity, asking lots of questions.
The group as a whole is strong, interested in
lessons and very co-operative.
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ASSUMPTIONS:
In this lesson, I assume students will have already
encountered a range of dependent prepositions (after the lexis lesson) but
may still need some help as they will have been acquainted with them for
approximately 1 hour.
They have probably heard this type of text before.
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ANTICIPATED
PROBLEMS & SOLUTIONS FOR LESSON OVERALL:
e.g. issues with
Classroom management
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ANTICIPATED PROBLEMS
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SOLUTIONS
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Problem 1
Students may arrive late and miss the lead-in
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Solution 1
Put them in pairs/threes with students, let them
join the activity and prepare them for the listening.
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Problem 2
The audio may not work.
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Solution 2
Print the tape script and keep it at hand, read it a
couple of times before the lesson – be prepared to read it.
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Problem 3
Students may use Polish instead of English
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Solution 3
Remind students that the
purpose of the speaking activities is to practice English, not Polish.
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Problem 4
Students may not be able to respond the multiple
choice questions after listening once.
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Solution 4
Play the audio again
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MATERIALS:
handouts students,
pictures, prompts, audio files, tape script, ppt
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Stage Name
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Interaction pattern
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Time
Length of Stage
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Procedure
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Stage Aim/ Rationale
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Generate interest in the Topic
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T-s-s-s
s-s-s
T-s-s-s
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5 min
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Set up: tell students about your best OR worst school days
memory. Ask students to tell their partners about their best OR worst
memories.
Students do activity: Students talk in threes about their best/worst
memories from school days. MONITOR!
Feedback
in open class: BEST/WORST MEMORIES - students share the best stories. Use what you heard during monitoring to trigger the
feedback.
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To generate interest in the topic in a fun and quick way
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Generate interest in the Text
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T-s-s-s
s-s-s
T-s-s-s
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5 min
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Signpost
that in a moment students will listen to three speakers BUT before they do
that you’d like them to predict what the speakers are going to talk about.
Set-up: Tell students that they’re going to work in threes.
Each group will have a set of pictures and they need to guess the story. DEMO with
different pictures. Give students handouts. Ask ICQs!
Students do activity: using a mixture of visuals students predict the
stories
Feedback in open class: elicit right answers from each group. Tell them
they’ll check their predictions in a second.
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To generate interest in the text
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Orientation task and gist task
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T-s-s-s
s
s-s
T-s-s-s
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5 min
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Signpost
that students are going to do the listening now.
Set-up: Tell students they’re going to listen to the text
once. ORIENTATION!
Students need to match the speakers with the topics. Each speaker with one
topic only. ICQs
Students do activity: students listen to the audio and match speakers
with topics
Pair check!
Feedback in open class: show or elicit the right answers
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To prepare students for listening and allow students to deal with the
text
To provide practice in listening for gist to gain a global
understanding of the text
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Pre-teach vocabulary
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T-s-s-s
s
s-s
T-s-s-s
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7 min
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Signpost
that there are some difficult words in the text that you wish to help the
students with
Set-up: give students a handout with a matching task – do a
first example showing how to match
Students do activity: using a mixture of definitions, synonyms, visuals
students match up to the tricky items solo
Pair check!
Feedback in open class: show or elicit the right answers
Ask CCQs
for each of the items to check the meaning; drill pronunciation of the
problematic ones
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To help students with key words in the text
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Detailed comprehension task
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T-s-s-s
s
s-s
T-s-s-s
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12 min
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Signpost
that students are going to listen again.
Set-up: Tell students they’re going to listen again to the
text. This time they need to choose one of the three answers (a, b or c).
Tell students they will listen twice. Give students a minute before the
listening to read the questions and a minute after to think about their
answers. Play audio for the second time and stop after each speaker. Allow
students to Pair check! and elicit
answers. Have a transcript at hand in case of doubts
Students do activity: Students read the questions, listen and choose the
correct answers, think it over, listen one more time, pair check.
Feedback in open class: Check the answers with students. *Analyze wrong
answers.
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To provide practice in listening for specific information
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Personal response to the TEXT -> TOPIC
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T-s-s-s
s-s-s
T-s-s-s
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7 min
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Set up: Tell students that they’re going to talk in threes.
Ask them to answer the questions displayed on the WB.
Students do activity: Students discuss the questions related to the
listening text and the topic of the lesson. MONITOR
Feedback in open class: Ask some of the students about what you’ve heard
while monitoring.
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To provide fluency speaking practice by encouraging students to
respond to issues in the text and make a link to the students’ lives
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PACS
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T-s-s-s
s-s
T-s-s-s
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4 min
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Set up: Write some errors you collected on board, ask pairs
to correct them – set time limit - 1 min.
Pairs discuss possible ways to correct the errors seen on the
board.
Feedback in open class: ask students where the errors are and elicit
correct versions form the students,
change what is on the board.
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To correct any errors heard and to allow the students to participate
in the correction of these
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LANGUAGE ANALYSIS:
LEXIS
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PHONEMIC
SCRIPT
&
WORD
STRESS
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DEFINITION
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MEANS
OF ILLUSTRATION
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CHECKING
MEANING .
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grade
(n.)
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/ɡreɪd/
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a
letter or other symbol indicating the relative quality of a student's work;
mark.
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visuals
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What
is the best grade you can get in Poland? (6)
What’s
the worst grade you can get in Poland? (1)
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subject
(n.)
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/ˈsʌbdʒɪkt/
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a
branch of knowledge as a course of study:
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examples
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What subject are we studying now? (English)
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take
an exam (v.+n.)
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/ˌteɪk ən ɪgˈzæm/
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to
do an exam, to sit an exam
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visual
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Visuals: Two photos – in which picture are students taking an exam?
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brilliant
(adj.)
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/ˈbrɪljənt/
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having
or showing great intelligence, talent, etc.:
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synonyms
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A brilliant idea is a good idea or bad? (good)
Is it just good or very very good? (very very good)
Is a brilliant person intelligent or stupid? (intelligent)
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term
(n.)
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/tɜːm/
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a division
of a school year, during which instruction is regularly provided
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definition
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How many terms do we have in Poland? Winter term and … (summer)
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ANTICIPATED PROBLEMS & SOLUTIONS
GRAMMAR / LEXIS / FUNCTIONAL LG
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Meaning:
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Problem 1
subject – students might confuse it with the word object
Problem 2
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Solution
1
Ask CCQs questions – Is Maths at school a subject or an object?
Is a table a subject or
an object?
Solution 2
Explain that in English
speaking countries grading system is different
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Form
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Problem 1
take an exam – possible L1 interference (come to an exam)
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Solution
1
Explain that word exam collocates with take. It’s a
fixed expression.
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Interesting Article. Hoping that you will continue posting an article having a useful information. Desentupidora em Paulínia
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