Author Archives: commonsenseesl

• Entering a Lesson with Predictions (Part 1: Pre-Listening Activities)

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(This article was originally published in MET (Modern English Teaching) in Spring 1986.)  MET website

It mat come as a surprise to any number of teachers to realize that most students do not view their ESL class as the number one preoccupation in their lives. Students come into the class with a myriad number of matters on their minds: weekend plans, family problems, the test in the next class. To foster a classroom atmosphere conducive to students’ leaving behind their outside world and to their focusing attention on the lesson at hand (not to speak of their becoming personally involved in the subject material!) can be an exacting task. Many of us as teachers have seen the otherwise well-planned lesson go “awry”, or just not fulfill our expectations. It may always remain open to speculation as to the reasons why, but most would probably agree that a thoughtfully-prepared lesson does indeed deserve a proper “entry”.

In order to help students to focus on a particular day’s material and to become personally involved in its content, I have found a “prediction process” useful as just such an “entry” into listening and speaking activities. In brief, in the “prediction procedure,” my students make predictions about the content of an upcoming activity and then share their predictions, first in small groups and then with the class as a whole. By so doing, students end up not only focusing on the topic of the material at hand, but also investing a part of themselves in it; they have a “stake” in what follows

Following are detailed examples of this procedure as it was used in four actual classroom settings.  In this Part 1. the two  examples portray the “prediction procedure” acting as an “entry” to listening activities.

In my next posting, Part 2, the two examples describe the procedure as it leads into discussion activities.

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• Short, High-Interest Readings: # 4: “Starting a Conversation With an Attractive Stranger”

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

You are standing with a couple of friends at a party talking. Across the room, you notice someone who looks kind of attractive, and you think that you’d like to meet that person. Maybe if he or she likes you, you’ll be able to get a phone number, or perhaps have a date. You feel a bit excited but also nervous about approaching this good-looking person.

Feeling nervous is a common emotion in this kind of situation. We are often afraid that if we try to start a conversation, the other person will reject us. According to Jean Smith, a social and cultural anthropologist, fear of rejection is the most common reason why we decide not to start a conversation with an attractive person whom we’d like to meet.

However, according to Smith, we can overcome that obstacle if we think in a different way about our goal of being liked or of getting a phone number or having a date. (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the fourth article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

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• Teacher-Friendly Technique to Keep Conversation Items Current, Relevant and Personalized for Students

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Imagine that you are teaching an ESL Conversation class. You put students in groups of three and give each member a different list of discussion questions to ask each other. Which of these questions do you think would be most relevant and interesting to answer today, December 16, 2023?
     -Do you like to go to concerts?
     -Are you a fan of Bad Bunny?
Or which of these two:
     -Do you worry about money these days?
     -Next term, our college’s tuition will increase. Will this be a problem for you?
Or which of these two:
     -What is the best age to get married?
     -Did you hear that our classmate, Silvia, got engaged yesterday?

Naturally, we’d like to make our discussion questions as relevant and personalized as possible for our students.  But that can be a special challenge for a couple of reasons:
    1) It would take a lot of time and mental energy to write up a new list of 15 current and personalized discussion questions every term.
    2) In the short time that we spend with a new group of students who are often from a different generation from us, it’s very difficult to know what they are currently interested in or what are recent trends among them.

Surprisingly, there is an easy way to make exercises current and personalized. And best of all, the teacher DOES NOT have to revise or update the items in the exercise every term.

This DOES NOT mean that we just tell students to get into groups and talk about anything they want. Instead, we still include structure to the activity.

Here is how we can do that.

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• Short, High-Interest Readings:# 3 “Why Some Products Are Less Likely To Make It To The Recycling Bin”

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

A researcher used to get upset. He often saw people throwing things in the wastebasket, for example soda cans or gum wrappers, that they should have put in the recycling bins. Then he became interested in why they do that. As a result, he set up some experiments.

In one study, 150 volunteer students were asked to give their opinion about a pair of scissors. (The students thought the study was about the scissors, but actually, the researchers were secretly studying recycling.)  They gave each of the students a sheet of paper. They told half of them to practice with the scissors by cutting the paper into eight pieces. The other half were told to just hold and practice squeezing the scissors but not cut the paper. (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the third article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

Continue reading