جواهر ستار التعليمية |
أهلا وسهلا بك زائرنا الكريم ، في منتديات جواهر ستار التعليميه المرجو منك أن تقوم بتسجـيل الدخول لتقوم بالمشاركة معنا. إن لم يكن لـديك حساب بعـد ، نتشرف بدعوتك لإنشائه بالتسجيل لديـنا . سنكون سعـداء جدا بانضمامك الي اسرة المنتدى مع تحيات الإدارة |
جواهر ستار التعليمية |
أهلا وسهلا بك زائرنا الكريم ، في منتديات جواهر ستار التعليميه المرجو منك أن تقوم بتسجـيل الدخول لتقوم بالمشاركة معنا. إن لم يكن لـديك حساب بعـد ، نتشرف بدعوتك لإنشائه بالتسجيل لديـنا . سنكون سعـداء جدا بانضمامك الي اسرة المنتدى مع تحيات الإدارة |
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جواهر ستار التعليمية :: منتديات الجامعة و البحث العلمي :: منتدى البحوث العلمية والأدبية و الخطابات و السير الذاتيه الجاهزه |
الأحد 30 أبريل - 19:20:24 | المشاركة رقم: | |||||||
جوهري
| موضوع: Equipment and Teaching Aids Equipment and Teaching Aids Equipment and Teaching Aids The Board Definition of a Teaching Aid A teaching aid is any piece of equipment that can be used to help the students learn. Examples of teaching aids include : the blackboard, a tape recorder, a CD player, computers or a language laboratory. The Board The most fundamental teaching aid and the most versatile piece of equipment is the board whether this is of the more traditional chalk-dust variety or the withboard, written on with marker pens. Interestingly, boards provide a motivating focal point during whole-class grouping. 2.1 Uses of the Board We can use boards for a variety of different purposes, including : Giving instructions : teachers often use boards to reinforce oral instuctions. For example, just writing up the page number and the exercise on the board in a large class saves a lot of repetition. Note pad : teachers frequently write things up on the board as these come up during the lesson. They might be words that they want students to remember, phrases which students have not understood or seen before, or topics and phrases which they have elicited from students when trying to build up a composition plan, for instance. Explanation aid : boards can be used fopr explanation too, where, for example, we show the relationship between an affirmative sentence and a question by drawing connecting arrows. We can show where words go in a sentence by indicating the best positions diagrammatically, or we can write up phonemic symbols (or fraw diagrams of the mouth) to show how a word or a sound is pronounced. Picture frame : boards can be used for drawing pictures of course, the only limitation concerns our (artistic ability). But we do not have to be genuis at drawing to use pictures and drawings with our students. In fact, the worse the drawing are .. the more fun they are ! Try to master basic stick men and faces with expressions, especially if your students are younger learners. Drawing pictures on the blackboard is an essential skill for explaining texts and stories to our students. Pr(actise story-telling with basic pictures on the board. Remember you can ask your students out to the board to draw too – this is a fun activity at whatever level. You can create picture stories with your students and use these for further oral or written work. Other visuals which are useful to draw are large-scale pictures such as maps, a plan of a town, a plan of a house/school/new buidling etc. Displaying : you can use the large surface of your board to display all sorts of items – posters, pictures and charts. Use large pictures for class oral work but have students come out to the board to point to or talk about various items. Magazine pictures can be used for a variety of oral activities. Try to encourage students to come out to the board to choose, select, order or describe pictures. All of these will make your classroom more interactive and avoid too much teacher talking time. You can display other items such as authentic materials – e.g. maps, adverts, photos, as well as learners’ own work. Playing games : a number of games can be played using just the board. With noughts and crosses, for example, teachers can draw nine box frames and write different words or categories in each box. Teams have to make sentences or questions with the words, square to draw their winning straight line. A popular spelling game involves two team who start off with the same word. Each team had half the board. They have to fill up their side with as many words as possible, but each new word has to start with the last letter of the word before. At the end of a given period of time the team with the biggest number of correct words is the winner. 2.2 Board Basics Your students should have a clear, uninterrupted view of the board. Becareful that you do not block learners sitting at the sides of the room. When you write something on the board move away quickly so that students can see what you have written. Especially with classes of young learners you need to develop the ability to write on the board with eyes in the back of your head. Do not turn your back on the class for too long. This tends to de demotivating and may cause the class to become restless. Good teachers have the ability to write on the board while still keeping a sharp eye on their students, and it would be better to invilve the students with the board as much as possible, either getting to tell us what to write or using them to do the writing themselves. Write clearly on the board and make sure that you have written words/text big enough for everyone to see from the back of the class. With chalk and blackboard make sure that you wash the board often so that writing stays clear. With a withboard make sure that the pen you are using is in a colour that everyone can rea – black or blue are best. Check what you write as you write. Many students have visual memories so we must becareful about accuracy of spelling and grammar, especially if we intend students to copy it down in their notebooks to learn. Check with your students that they are ready for you to clean the board. If you are waiting for some students to finish copying or doing an exercise do not leave the others twiddling their thumbs. Ask them to make a personalised example or start the warm-up for the next exercise orally. 2.3. Organising the Board If your board is messy and untidy then what your students write in their notebooks will be messy too. It is a good idea to divide your board into sections. Have one part for use during the explanation of the lesson which can be cleaned off and reused. Use another part for important information which can stay ther for the whole lesson. For example, you could write up a list of the basic aims/activities for the lesson so that your students know what is coming. Tick items off as they are achieved during the class. At the end you can review the lesson aims for students to evaluate what they have leart. Final Tips Try to make your board as interactive as possible. Ask students to come out to draw, write, present or even work. You could allow one group to work at the board when doing a group task. Use your board as support for your voice – to give instructions, examples and feedback. You can use board activities as an aid to discipline – settle a noisy class for example by giving a quick copying exercise or work game. Your board is an organisational tool too. Use it as a memory store for things to do or keep you on track with a lesson. Remember the more organised you are on your board, the more organised your students will be too. When the class is over, courteous teachers clean the board and lave it ready for their colleagues to use. The Language Laboratory What is a Language Laboratory The language laboratory is an audio-visual installation used as an aid in modern language teaching. They can be found, amongst other places, in schools, universities and academies. Perhaps the first lab was at the University of Grenoble. In the 1950s up until the 1990s, they were tape based systems using reel to reel or (latterly) cassette. Current installations are generally multimedia PCs. The modern language laboratory has between ten to twenty booths, each equiped with a tape deck, heaphones, microphone, and now computers. The technology is organised in such a way that students can work on their own, can be paired or grouped with other students, or can interact (through their headphones and microphones) on a one-to-one basis with the teacher. The teacher can broadcast the same taped or filmed material to each booth, or can have different students or groups of students work with different material. Students can interact with each other, and written texts can be sent to each computer. Characteristics e lage ool/new buidling etc. pictures such as maps, a plan of atownritten work. nger learners. 3. of language labratories Language labratories have three special charactersitics which mark them out from other learning resources and teaching aids : 2.1 Double track : the design of tapes and machiones means that students can listen to one track on their tapes and record on another. They can listen back not only to the original recording on the tape, but also to what they themselves said into the microphones which is attached to their headset. 2.2 Teacher access : apart from the the separate language booths, labratories also have console and/or computer terminal manned by a teacher who can not only listen in to individual students, but can also talk, with the use of microphones and headsets, with one student at a time. Modern systems allow teachers to join booths in pairs or groups, irrespective of their position in the laboratory, by selecting them oin the screen. This can be done on the same basis as we create pairs and groups ion classrooms, or by selecting the right command computer randomly. 2.3 Different modes : in computer-equipped labratories, students can all watch a video which the teacher is broadcasting to their individual monitors. An alternative is to have students working with the same material, but at their own individual speed. Thus teachers may broadcast an audiotape which records onto each individual tape at each booth. Each student now can work at his/her leisure. The teacher can also send the same text to each machine for students to read and/or manipulate according to their own needs. Finally, since teachers can group students machanically, each pair or group can be given different material to work with. Advantages of the language laboratory Language labratories have special advantages which make them a welcome addition to any school’s resources : Comparing : the double track allows students to compare the way they say things with the correct pronounciation on a source tape. In this way they can monitor and get feedback on their own performance, even without the intervention of a teacher. Privacy : students can talk to each other (through their microphones), record onto the tape, wind nad rewind tapes or types on computer keyboards without disturbong their colleagues. Since every student is cocooned by his/her headphones, he/she is guaranteed some privacy, and are free from the intrusion that the work of others would cause in a normal classroom setting. Individual attention : when teachers want to speak to individual students in a laboratory, they can do that from the console. Unlike the situation in the classroom where this is difficult because it stops them from working with the rest of the class – who may resent such private conversation – in a laboratory all the other students are working away on their own. The attention that the teacher gives to one student does not distract the others. Learner training : the language laboratory helps students to train some students to really listen to what they say and how they say. When they compare their pronounciation with the correct version on the tape, they begin to notice the differences, and this awareness, over a period of time, helps them to hear and pronounce English better. However, not all students find comparisons easy. Different students are better or worse at hearing sounds. It will be up to the teacher, from the console, to guide individual students who are are experiencing difficulties into noticing differences and similarities. Learner motivation : a worry about learner autonomy in general is that some students are better at working on their own than others. The language laboratory (where teachers take the whole group into the laboratory) offers a good half-way house between teacher control and learner autonomy since, although students work at their own pace, they are more open to the guidance of the teacher. Activities in Language Laboratories Repetition : the simplest use of a double track laboratory is repetition. Students hear a work, phrase, or sentence on the tape. A space (indicated by a bleep or buzz signal) is left for them to repeat what they have heard, and the work, phrase, or sentence is then said again, so that they get instant feedback on whether they have spoken correctly. Tape voice : information Buzz signal : ... (Pause of 3 seconds) Tape voice : information Drills : based on Audio-lingual methodology, language laboratories have often been used for subsitution drills, using the same basic model as the repetition. The difference is that students have to work out what to say (based on a cue) before the tape voice then gives the correct response. Tape voice : Do you watch television every night ? Cue : Three nights. Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : No, I have not watched TV for three months. Tape voice : Do you listen to the radio every day ? Cue : Last Monday. Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : No, I have not listened to the radio since last Monday. Speaking : language laboratories can give students the opportunity of speaking (apart from repetition and drilling) in a number of ways. They can record their own talks and speeches and then listen back to them and make adjustments in the same way as they draft and redraft written text in a process-writing approach. But the tape can also ask them a series of questions which encourages them to practise language which they have recently been focusing on as in the following example for beginners : Tape voice : What is your last name ? Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : What is your first name ? Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : Where do you live ? Buzz signal : (pause) The teacher can also prepare a topic for students to discuss (in pairs) and ask them to record their discussion on the tape (in this case, one tape recorder with two headsets necessary – if not a monologue will do) and then when they have finished, the teacher may analyse their recordings and look for their strengths and weaknesses with respect to accuracy, fluency, interaction etc. (This exercise is usually a success with more advanced learners). Parallel speaking : Adrian Underhill gives examples of parallel speaking, where students are encouraged to imitate the way the teachers says something and because of the double-track system, do so at the same time as the teacher is speaking. From the console the teacher can record a story (first in separate, but late as a whole) onto all the individual stuent machines. At first, as the material recorded the students just listen. But then, once they have the recording of (all or part of) the story, they speak along with the teacher's taped voice, doing their best to imitate the teacher’s pronounciation and the speed at which he/she speaks. According to Underhill, the aim is to try and do the same as the teacher, not because the teacher is right but as an exercise in attention and noticing and to gain insight from experience. Later they record the material independently onto their machines, at later which point the teacher can listen in and give feedback where appropriate. Listening : listening of all kinds can be practised in the language laboratory. Activities such as note taking, dictation, finding differences between a written text and taped account of the same events, and answering conmprehension questions can all be performed successfully in the laboratory setting. Tapes can be accompanied by written worksheets and/or students can be asked questions on the tape which hey have recorded their answers to on the student track. In computer-equipped laboratories, questions and texts can be provided on the computer screen. Reading : students can read texts and then record their answers on tape. In computer-equipped laboratories both text and answers can be supplied on the computer screen itself. The teacher can aslo have all students reading material from the same Internet website. Writing and correcting writing : language laboratories allow teachers to give individual, private spoken feedback on students’ written work. In computer-equipped laboratories students can write at their individual machines and the teacher can then correct their work either orally or in writing since he/she can look at each student’s work from the console. The Overhead Projector/Bits and Pieces The Overhead projector Mechanism An overhead projector typically consists of a large box containing a very bright lamp and a fan to cool it. On top of the box is a large Fresnel lens that collimates the light. Above the box, typically on a long arm, is a mirror and lens that focuses and redirects the light forward instead of up. Transparencies are placed on top of the lens for display. The light from the lamp travels through the transparency and into the mirror where it is shore forward onto a screen for display. The mirror allows both the presenter and the audience to see the image at the same time, the presenter looking down at the transparency as if writing, the audience looking forward at the screen. The height of the mirror can be adjusted, to both focus the image and to make the image larger or smaller depending on how close the projector is to the screen. History The first overhead projector was used for police identification work. It used a cellophane roll over a 9-inch stage allowing facial characteristics to be rolled across the stage. The U.S. Army in 1945 was the first to use it in quantity for training as World War II wound down. It began to be widely used in schools and businesses in the late 1950s and early 1960s. A major manufacturer of overhead projectors in this early period was the company 3M. As the demand for projectors grew, Buhl Industries was founded in 1953, and became the leading US contributor for several optical refinements for the Aid to Education program stimulated overhead sales which remained high up to the late 1990s and into the 21st Century. Use in Education Overhead projectors (OHPs) are extremely useful pieces of equipment since they allow teachers to prepare visual or demonstration material. They require little technical knowledge, and they are usually easy to carry around. Therefore, it is not surprising they have been widely used. Just about anything can go on overhead transparencies (PHTs): We can show whole texts or grammar exercises, pictures or diagrams, or student’s writing. Because they can be of a very high quality. Especially where teachers are unimpressed by their handwriting, the overhead transparency offers the possibility of attractive well-printed script. One of the main advantages of the overhead projector is that we do not have to show everything on an OHT all at once. By covering some of the transparency with a piece of card or paper we can blank out what we do not want the students to see. So, for example, we might show the first two lines of a story to ask students what is going to happen next, before revealing the next two lines and then the next, gradually moving the paper or card downwards. We might have questions on one side of the transparency and answers on the other. We start the teaching sequence with the answers covered, and use the same ‘gradual revelation’ technique to maintain interest. Because transparencies are, as their name suggests, transparent, they can be put on top of each other so that we gradually build up a complex picture, diagram, or text. This is done by putting down the first transparency, say of a room, and asking students what kind of a room it is and what happens there. Then a new transparency can be laid over that one with pictures of a person in that room who the students can speculate about, before we lay down another transparency on top of that with more people. A diagram can start with one simple feature and have extra elements added to it in the same way. We can put up a gapped text and have students say what they think goes in the blanks before putting a new transparency with some or all of the filled-in items on top of the gapped one. Decline in Use Overhead projectors were once a common fixture in most classrooms and business conference rooms, but today are obviously being replaced by document cameras, dedicated computer projection systems and interactive whiteboards. Such systems allow users to make animated, interactive presentations with movement and video, typically using software like Microsoft PowerPoint. There are certain reasons for this gradual replacement. The primary reason is the deeply ingrained use of computing technology in modern society and the inability of overheads to easily support the features that modern users demand. While an overhead can display static images fairly well, it performs poorly at displaying moving images. The standards of users have also increased, so that a dim, fuzzy overhead projection that is too bright in the centre and too dim around the edges is no longer acceptable. The optical focus, linearity, brightness and clarity of an overhead generally cannot match that of a video projector primarily due to the plastic Fresnel lens, which can only approximate what would normally be an extremely large and heavy glass lens. Bits and Pieces Of course there is no limit to the various bits and pieces which we can bring into the classroom. It might be photographs of our family, letters we have received, or even a pet. Just as children in primary school are often asked to show and tell about objects they hold dear, so we can base lesson sequences on objects that we think our students might find interesting – though of course this has to be done with discretion and a large dose of common sense about what will be appropriate in terms of age and culture. Realia In education, realia are objects from real life used in classroom instruction by educators to improve students’ understanding of other cultures and real life situations. A teacher of a foreign language often employs realia to strengthen student’s association between words for everyday objects and the objects themselves. Realia are also used to connect learners with the key focal point of a lesson by allowing tactile and multidimensional connection between learned material and the object of the lesson. Best utilized for simple objects lending themselves to classroom settings and ease of control with minimum risk of accident throughout the student object interaction. Objects that are intrinsically interesting can provide a good starting-point for a variety of language work and communication activities. We can find an object with an obscure use and ask students to speculate what it is for (it might be/could be/probably is) and or design various explanations to account for it (it is used for-ing). The class could vote on the best idea. Where we bring in more than one object, especially where they are not obviously connected, students can speculate on what they have in common or they can invent stories and scenarios using the various objects. They can choose from a collection of objects which three they will put in a time capsule, or which would be most useful on a desert island, etc. Some teachers use a soft ball to make learning more enjoyable. When they want a student to say something, ask a question, or give an answer, they throw a ball to the student who then has to give the answer. The student can then throw the ball to a classmate who, in his/her turn, produces the required response before throwing the ball to someone else. However, not all students find this appealing, and there is a limit of how often the ball can be thrown before students get fed up with it. The only limitations on the objects which we bring to class are the size and the quantity of the objects themselves and the students’ tolerance, especially with adults who may think they are being treated childishly. As with so many other things, this is something we will have to assess on the basis of our students’ reactions. Interestingly, technology has begun to impact the use of realia by adding the virtual realia option whereby three dimensional models can be displayed through projection or on computer screens allowing the learner to see detail otherwise difficult to acquire and to manipulate the object within the medium on which it is displayed. The option of zooming tool in technical environments where it may be difficult or impractical to examine an object in as much detail manually, such as the workings of living organs or machinery containing hazardous parts such as combustion engines. Language Cards Many teachers put a variety of cards and posters around the classroom. Such posters can have notes about language items on them, or be a collection of ways of apologizing or inviting, for example. Sometimes, with new groups, teachers get students to write about themselves on a card and put their photograph next to what they have written so that the class all know who everyone is. Students can also make presentation posters of projects they have worked on. In multinational classes, for example, many students enjoy providing short guides to their countries. Cards are useful for matching activities, where students have to find another student in the class with a similar card or one that has the answer to the question on his or her card. They can be asked to place cards in the correct column for sounds, or with the correct lexical group on a board or on a poster. Students can each be given word card to hold in front of them and then be asked to move around until they form a line where all the cards together form a question or a sentence. Cuisenaire Rods These are blocks of wood of different lengths. Each length is a different colour. The rods are featureless, and are only differentiated by their size and colour. Simple they may be, but they are useful for a wide range of activities. For example, we can say that a particular rod is a pen or a telephone, a dog or a key so that by holding them up or putting them together a story can be told. All it takes is a little bit of imagination. We can also assign a word or a phrase to each of, say five rods and the students then have to put them in the right order (e.g. I usually get up at six o’clock). By moving the usually rod around and showing where it can and cannot occur in the sentence, the students get a clear visual display of something they are attempting to fix in their minds. Rods can be used to teach prepositions. Teachers can model with the rod sentences like: The red one is on top/beside/over/behind (etc) the green one. They can show rods in different relative positions and ask students to describe them. Students can then position the rods for other students to describe (in ever more complex arrangements). Cuisenaire rods are also useful for demonstrating colours (of course), comparative, superlatives, and a wide range of other semantic and syntactic areas, particularly with people who respond well to visual activities. Using Computers in the Foreign Language Classroom “If you think of learning as a path, you can picture yourself walking besides her rather than either pushing or dragging or carrying her along” -Polly Berrien Berends Quite apart from their use in language laboratories, computers used in education generally and in teaching foreign language and communications in particular, continue to increase at an extraordinary speed. As with any technological advance such as the language lab, video, and even the tape recorder, the proper place for the various riches which computers have to offer is still under discussion. Using a computer for/as... A computer is a handy tool for many school assignments. To that end, the following section focuses on some ways you can use a computer in your studies. Currently, the main uses of a computer in language teaching and/learning includes the following: Reference Use One of the chief uses of computers and connected technology is as a reference tool. There are already a number of popular encyclopaedias available on CD-Rom or on the INTERNET. The availability of all sorts of material means that we can send students to the computer to prepare their projects, following up references in course books or to find answers to some particular questions that are not of general interest. Many of the programs have visual and audio support that makes the research work very attractive. The greatest potential for the computer as a reference tool is, of course, the Internet, where by accessing directories and search engines (such as ‘Alta Vista’, ‘Google’, etc), users can look for information on just about any subject under the sun. However, as any regular surfers will attest, these searches often throw up a huge amount of irrelevant material so that simple search can become a protracted trawl through a number of useless websites (Harmer, 2001). P. Sweeney (2000) underlines that letting your students completely independent in their search activity is far more time consuming that he and his colleagues anticipated. It is the teacher’s one of the most important task to prepare the background by suggesting search methods and/or and narrowing the focus of the enquiry so that students do not waste a whole class period searching. We also need to keep an eye on a proceedings to avoid a situation in which students just surf the net, becoming distracted by what they find there, and thus lose sight of the original task (Harmer, 2001). However, if these drawbacks are taken into account, the Internet is an extraordinary resource which has changed the face of information gathering both in and outside the classroom. Communicating Your Instructor with other Students a. a. E-mail Exchange With an Internet connection, you can easily communicate with anyone who has an e-mail address. You can send e-mail messages to your instructor or to other students. In fact, “getting students from different countries to write to one another has greatly increased both their English development and especially their motivation” (Harmer, 2001:148). You can also attach files to an e-mail message. For example, you can proactively e-mail an assignment to your instructor if you must miss a class. Your instructor may, in response, e-mail you what you’ve missed during your absence and tell you what homework you need to complete. Importantly, students should be encouraged to write to their teacher. According to Harmer (2001), such types of messages are often written in a special speaking like informal style. There is less of an obligation for grammatical correctness or even correct spelling, but students can improve their fluency. So e-mailing with less of correctness and formality can be turned into an advantage, a motivation for writing and having a real unstressed communication. Of particular interest is the fact that computer communication might become a teaching “channel” if students can send word-processed work to their teachers who can send feedback in the same way, in a short time. a.b. Instant Messaging (IM) Another way to communicate is by using Instant Messaging (IM). You set up a list of your buddies and their screen names. If one of these students is online when you are, you’ll be notified. You can then send text messages to each other by typing and sending the message. This can be helpful if you want to ask a classmate for clarification about an assignment. You can also use Instant Messaging to talk to and make new friends online (within your school and beyond school). Keep in mind that you can easily get distracted by messaging. If you are studying, keep the messaging to a minimum or log off so that you can focus on your work. Teaching and Testing Programs Language software packages, often supplied on CD-ROMS, offer students the chance to study conversations and texts, to do grammar and vocabulary exercises, and even to listen to texts and record their own voices. Although some teachers have criticised computer-based programs of this kind being only dressed-up workbook exercises, it would be unwise to underestimate their usefulness for variety and motivation. As Harmer (2001:147) puts it: Students who have been sitting behind their desks for hours might well find going over to a computer to ‘play’ with some language exercises a welcome relief. A trend which will almost gather pace is the attachment of CD-ROM-based packages to accompany course books, full of extra input material and exercises. Some of these will be available too on the Internet. However, there are also websites where students can sign up for complete self-study courses, which include all regular features of a course book together with the possibility of sending work to a tutor who will monitor progress. In order to reduce evaluation time some tests may be posted and taken on computer and feedback/results are instantaneous. The Word Processor In an article published in 1987, Alison Piper suggested that the most educational use of the computer at that time was as a word processor, with students grouped around a screen drafting and redrafting collaboratively (Piper 1987). Using a word processor program for any kind of written work provides many benefits, including the following: You can easily compose as you think. You can easily correct mistakes, either as you type (using the Backspace or Delete key) or when you review your work. You can reorganise the contents of the writing. Sometimes, when you review your work, you find that one sentence or paragraph belongs before another. Or your conclusion may actually work better as an introduction. With a word processing program, you can easily add more information to a different location. You can also delete sentences, paragraphs, and words (to get rid of repetition or to correct mistakes) and copy passages (if you want to use them again in the same or another document). You can make formatting changing to improve the appearance of the document. For example, in a research paper, you can make the section headings bold and bigger so that they stand out. You can emphasize new terms by italicizing them. You can create bulleted or numbered lists, add a border to a paragraph, change the page margins, create headers and footers, and more. Check your spelling and grammar. You can use the spelling checkers to make sure your paper doesn’t include any typographic errors. Most words processing programs also enable you to check your grammar. Note, however, that neither these tools is foolproof. The spelling checker on flags. The Teacher as an Aid A teacher affects eternity; you can never tell where his influence stops Henry Adams Apart from the different roles we adopt in the classroom, and how these roles are performed, we are a kind of teaching aid ourselves, a piece of equipment in our own right. In particular, we are especially useful when using mime and gesture, as language models and providers of comprehensive input. Furthermore, we may be helpful when using movement, body language, eye contact, facial expressions, speech, student talk, and names. Mimes and Gestures One of the things that we are uniquely able to do on the spot is to use mime, gesture and expression to convey meaning and atmosphere. It is not difficult to pretend to be drinking, or to pull a sad face. The ability to demonstrate words like frightened or old is fairly easy for many teachers, just as shrugging shoulders can be used to indicate indifference. Mime and gesture work best when they are exaggerated since this makes their meaning explicit. However, gestures do not have necessarily universal meanings, and what might seem acceptable in one situation or place will not be appropriated in another. We need, therefore, to use them with care. Importantly, arms and hands are a very expressive visual aid. They can be used to describe shapes, actions, movements etc, but remember to keep still while listening to a student. Otherwise the message sent to the student is that he is being longwinded or boring. In other words, habits such as fiddling with notes and books, playing with pens, key chains, or doodling with chalk on the black board can be both distracting and irritating for the student. One gesture which is widely used, but which teachers should employ with care, is the act of pointing to students to ask them to participate in drill or give some other form of response. Though it is quick and efficient, especially when we are having trouble with our students’ names, it may seem aggressive and depressingly obvious to the students that, in having failed to learn their names, we are less than respectful to their identity. Language Model One way in which we can model dialogues is to put up two faces on the board and then stand in front if each of them when required to speak their lines. For such activities, we should make sure that we can be heard, and we should animate our performance with much enthusiasm as is appropriate for the conversation we are modelling. Reading aloud is a skill which some teachers have tended to ignore. Yet the reading aloud of a particularly or interesting excerpt can be extremely motivating and enjoyable for a class, especially when students have been encouraged to predict what they are going to hear. Poems too, are very engaging for many students when teachers read them to the class. Anyone who doubts the power of such activities only has to look at the reading circles in primary classes where learners group enthusiastically around the teacher to enjoy the experience of listening to a story. Story-telling and story/poem-reading can work with adults too, though the content and the way it is handled will be significantly different. Reading passages aloud to students can capture imagination and mood like nothing else, but in order for this to work we need to ‘perform’ the reading in an interesting and committed way and, as with so many activities, we must be careful not to use this activity too frequently (Harmer, 2001). Provider of Comprehensible-Input An issue that confronts many teachers in classrooms is how much they themselves should talk, and what kind of talk this should be. On most training courses, a distinction is made between student-talking time (STT) and teacher-talking time (TTT). It is the concern to maximise the former that leads many teachers to use pair and group work; it has been assumed that on the whole we want to see more STT than TTT, since as trainers frequently point out to their student teachers, you don’t need the language practice; they do. Advantageous for their students, especially since those teachers are unlikely to be permanently interesting. However, it is widely accepted that a vital ingredient in the learning of any language is exposure to it. The American linguist Stephen Krashen described the best kind of language that students could be expressed to as comprehensible input, that is language which students understand the meaning of, but which is nevertheless slightly above their own production level. For instance, if the learners’ stage ‘I’, then acquisition occurs when they are exposed to comprehensible input that constitutes ‘i+1’, provided they understand the language containing ‘i+1’. Krashen (1982: 84) writes: ... Language acquisition ... happens in one way, when the acquirer understands input containing a structure that the acquirer is ‘due’ to acquire, a structure at his or her ‘i+1’. Yet where can they go for such language input? In the world outside the classroom, English if they have access to it, will frequently appear incomprehensible, especially when they are at a low level. They need someone to provide language which has been roughly-tuned to be comprehensible to them, and there is someone right there in the classroom to give them just that. As teachers we are ideally placed to provide comprehensible input since we know the students in front of us and can appropriately react to them in a way that a course book or a tape, for example, cannot. We know how to talk at just the right level so that even if our students do not understand every word we say, they do understand the meaning of what is being said. At such times the language gains, for the student, are significant. However, we do need to be aware of how much ourselves are speaking. If talk all the time, however, ‘comprehensible’ our language is, the students are denied their own chance to practise production, or get exposure through other means (from reading or listening to tapes, for example). They may also become bored by listening to the teacher all the time. Movement Sitting behind a desk or standing on a dais creates a “distance” between the teacher and the students. Try to have an aisle and enough space between the rows so that you can easily reach those at the back. This way you can talk to individual students, allow the shy ones to ask questions quietly without the fear of embarrassment, as well as check their work and help them. Some movement on your side is essential, because it allows the students to focus on you. Remember that stepping forward to emphasize a point, small steps genuine interest in what he or she is saying. Body Language Your body should be in your control. Hold it in such a way that you look alert and awake. Avoid slumping and sagging. Just as too little movement is boring, too much movement can be a distraction. When your posture is erect, it puts you in control of the situation and the students realise this. It also encourages the students, subconsciously, to become alert as well. You may notice the lazy ones sitting up and paying more attention to what is happening around them. Eye Contact Make an effort to keep eyes lively, aware and interested. Move them around to take in everything. Fix them on specific students, but not for so long that they become uncomfortable! Avoid focusing on the worst or bust students. Knowing that the teacher demands eye contact keeps the students alert. It also gives the teacher a feedback on the impact of what he or she is saying. This is particularly important in large classes, where “distance” between the teacher and learner is greater, and individual attention is more difficult. An effective teacher can control class behaviour to a great extent by the expression of his or her eyes. Make sure that you make eye contact with each student, so that it seems you are talking to him or her individually. Facial Expressions There is nothing worse than a constant frown, which discourages students from asking questions, feeling free to discuss a problem or coming for help. A smile can work wonders. It encourages the student to participate more actively and dispels the notion that the teacher is over critical. Look interested while a student is speaking. A smile, a grimace, a curl of the lips, raised eyebrows etc... at appropriate moments will and messages as needed. Send positive vibes and cultivate a sympathetic and encouraging expression! Speech Have you even heard yourself speak? Do you know what your voice sounds like to others? A low monotone or a high-pitched voice can be difficult to understand or grating to the ears. Does the sound of your voice send students to sleep or running for earplugs? Be critical of yourself. Try taping your voice – listen to yourself. Where are you slipping up? Make your own personal checklist: Are you speaking at the right volume? Does the end of your sentence fall so low that students sitting at the back cannot hear? Are you hemming and hawing too much? Are you speaking too fast? Student Talk Break the monotony and give students plenty of time to talk! It will keep them alert. Make small jokes, be friendly. Names Call students by their names. It sounds warmer and friendlier and lessens the distance between the teacher and learner. Native-Speaker Teachers and Non-Native Speaker Teachers For many years an opposition has been created between native-speaker teacher of English and non-native speaker teacher. However, the world is changing, and English is no longer owned by anybody in particular least of all the native speakers of the world who are in a minority which is becoming daily less significant at least in numerical terms. Non-native speaker teachers differ from native-speaker teachers in the following way. Non-native speaker teachers have the advantage of having the same experience of learning English as their students are now having, and this gives them an instant understanding of what their students are going through. Native speaker teachers, on the other hand, often have the advantage of a linguistic confidence about their language in the classroom, which non-native speaker teachers sometimes lack indeed. It may be differences in linguistic confidence which account for some differences in teaching practices between the two groups. As a recently as ten years ago it would have been impossible to find a single non-native speaker teacher working in a language school in, say, Britain or Australia. Yet, that is no longer the case. Progress may be slow in this respect, but there are signs of such progress. In the end, provided teachers can use the language, is it the quality of their teaching that counts not where they come from or how they learnt or acquired English. Conclusion The teacher is the best teaching aid. Be sure that you are using yourself to the full effect. Most of us send up with no more than five or six people who remember us. Teachers have thousands of people who remember than for the rest of their lives. Andy Rooney الموضوعالأصلي : Equipment and Teaching Aids // المصدر : ممنتديات جواهر ستار التعليمية //الكاتب: لبنى الجزائرية
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الأحد 30 أبريل - 19:21:24 | المشاركة رقم: | |||||||
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| موضوع: رد: Equipment and Teaching Aids Equipment and Teaching Aids Equipment and Teaching Aids The Board Definition of a Teaching Aid A teaching aid is any piece of equipment that can be used to help the students learn. Examples of teaching aids include : the blackboard, a tape recorder, a CD player, computers or a language laboratory. The Board The most fundamental teaching aid and the most versatile piece of equipment is the board whether this is of the more traditional chalk-dust variety or the withboard, written on with marker pens. Interestingly, boards provide a motivating focal point during whole-class grouping. 2.1 Uses of the Board We can use boards for a variety of different purposes, including : Giving instructions : teachers often use boards to reinforce oral instuctions. For example, just writing up the page number and the exercise on the board in a large class saves a lot of repetition. Note pad : teachers frequently write things up on the board as these come up during the lesson. They might be words that they want students to remember, phrases which students have not understood or seen before, or topics and phrases which they have elicited from students when trying to build up a composition plan, for instance. Explanation aid : boards can be used fopr explanation too, where, for example, we show the relationship between an affirmative sentence and a question by drawing connecting arrows. We can show where words go in a sentence by indicating the best positions diagrammatically, or we can write up phonemic symbols (or fraw diagrams of the mouth) to show how a word or a sound is pronounced. Picture frame : boards can be used for drawing pictures of course, the only limitation concerns our (artistic ability). But we do not have to be genuis at drawing to use pictures and drawings with our students. In fact, the worse the drawing are .. the more fun they are ! Try to master basic stick men and faces with expressions, especially if your students are younger learners. Drawing pictures on the blackboard is an essential skill for explaining texts and stories to our students. Pr(actise story-telling with basic pictures on the board. Remember you can ask your students out to the board to draw too – this is a fun activity at whatever level. You can create picture stories with your students and use these for further oral or written work. Other visuals which are useful to draw are large-scale pictures such as maps, a plan of a town, a plan of a house/school/new buidling etc. Displaying : you can use the large surface of your board to display all sorts of items – posters, pictures and charts. Use large pictures for class oral work but have students come out to the board to point to or talk about various items. Magazine pictures can be used for a variety of oral activities. Try to encourage students to come out to the board to choose, select, order or describe pictures. All of these will make your classroom more interactive and avoid too much teacher talking time. You can display other items such as authentic materials – e.g. maps, adverts, photos, as well as learners’ own work. Playing games : a number of games can be played using just the board. With noughts and crosses, for example, teachers can draw nine box frames and write different words or categories in each box. Teams have to make sentences or questions with the words, square to draw their winning straight line. A popular spelling game involves two team who start off with the same word. Each team had half the board. They have to fill up their side with as many words as possible, but each new word has to start with the last letter of the word before. At the end of a given period of time the team with the biggest number of correct words is the winner. 2.2 Board Basics Your students should have a clear, uninterrupted view of the board. Becareful that you do not block learners sitting at the sides of the room. When you write something on the board move away quickly so that students can see what you have written. Especially with classes of young learners you need to develop the ability to write on the board with eyes in the back of your head. Do not turn your back on the class for too long. This tends to de demotivating and may cause the class to become restless. Good teachers have the ability to write on the board while still keeping a sharp eye on their students, and it would be better to invilve the students with the board as much as possible, either getting to tell us what to write or using them to do the writing themselves. Write clearly on the board and make sure that you have written words/text big enough for everyone to see from the back of the class. With chalk and blackboard make sure that you wash the board often so that writing stays clear. With a withboard make sure that the pen you are using is in a colour that everyone can rea – black or blue are best. Check what you write as you write. Many students have visual memories so we must becareful about accuracy of spelling and grammar, especially if we intend students to copy it down in their notebooks to learn. Check with your students that they are ready for you to clean the board. If you are waiting for some students to finish copying or doing an exercise do not leave the others twiddling their thumbs. Ask them to make a personalised example or start the warm-up for the next exercise orally. 2.3. Organising the Board If your board is messy and untidy then what your students write in their notebooks will be messy too. It is a good idea to divide your board into sections. Have one part for use during the explanation of the lesson which can be cleaned off and reused. Use another part for important information which can stay ther for the whole lesson. For example, you could write up a list of the basic aims/activities for the lesson so that your students know what is coming. Tick items off as they are achieved during the class. At the end you can review the lesson aims for students to evaluate what they have leart. Final Tips Try to make your board as interactive as possible. Ask students to come out to draw, write, present or even work. You could allow one group to work at the board when doing a group task. Use your board as support for your voice – to give instructions, examples and feedback. You can use board activities as an aid to discipline – settle a noisy class for example by giving a quick copying exercise or work game. Your board is an organisational tool too. Use it as a memory store for things to do or keep you on track with a lesson. Remember the more organised you are on your board, the more organised your students will be too. When the class is over, courteous teachers clean the board and lave it ready for their colleagues to use. The Language Laboratory What is a Language Laboratory The language laboratory is an audio-visual installation used as an aid in modern language teaching. They can be found, amongst other places, in schools, universities and academies. Perhaps the first lab was at the University of Grenoble. In the 1950s up until the 1990s, they were tape based systems using reel to reel or (latterly) cassette. Current installations are generally multimedia PCs. The modern language laboratory has between ten to twenty booths, each equiped with a tape deck, heaphones, microphone, and now computers. The technology is organised in such a way that students can work on their own, can be paired or grouped with other students, or can interact (through their headphones and microphones) on a one-to-one basis with the teacher. The teacher can broadcast the same taped or filmed material to each booth, or can have different students or groups of students work with different material. Students can interact with each other, and written texts can be sent to each computer. Characteristics e lage ool/new buidling etc. pictures such as maps, a plan of atownritten work. nger learners. 3. of language labratories Language labratories have three special charactersitics which mark them out from other learning resources and teaching aids : 2.1 Double track : the design of tapes and machiones means that students can listen to one track on their tapes and record on another. They can listen back not only to the original recording on the tape, but also to what they themselves said into the microphones which is attached to their headset. 2.2 Teacher access : apart from the the separate language booths, labratories also have console and/or computer terminal manned by a teacher who can not only listen in to individual students, but can also talk, with the use of microphones and headsets, with one student at a time. Modern systems allow teachers to join booths in pairs or groups, irrespective of their position in the laboratory, by selecting them oin the screen. This can be done on the same basis as we create pairs and groups ion classrooms, or by selecting the right command computer randomly. 2.3 Different modes : in computer-equipped labratories, students can all watch a video which the teacher is broadcasting to their individual monitors. An alternative is to have students working with the same material, but at their own individual speed. Thus teachers may broadcast an audiotape which records onto each individual tape at each booth. Each student now can work at his/her leisure. The teacher can also send the same text to each machine for students to read and/or manipulate according to their own needs. Finally, since teachers can group students machanically, each pair or group can be given different material to work with. Advantages of the language laboratory Language labratories have special advantages which make them a welcome addition to any school’s resources : Comparing : the double track allows students to compare the way they say things with the correct pronounciation on a source tape. In this way they can monitor and get feedback on their own performance, even without the intervention of a teacher. Privacy : students can talk to each other (through their microphones), record onto the tape, wind nad rewind tapes or types on computer keyboards without disturbong their colleagues. Since every student is cocooned by his/her headphones, he/she is guaranteed some privacy, and are free from the intrusion that the work of others would cause in a normal classroom setting. Individual attention : when teachers want to speak to individual students in a laboratory, they can do that from the console. Unlike the situation in the classroom where this is difficult because it stops them from working with the rest of the class – who may resent such private conversation – in a laboratory all the other students are working away on their own. The attention that the teacher gives to one student does not distract the others. Learner training : the language laboratory helps students to train some students to really listen to what they say and how they say. When they compare their pronounciation with the correct version on the tape, they begin to notice the differences, and this awareness, over a period of time, helps them to hear and pronounce English better. However, not all students find comparisons easy. Different students are better or worse at hearing sounds. It will be up to the teacher, from the console, to guide individual students who are are experiencing difficulties into noticing differences and similarities. Learner motivation : a worry about learner autonomy in general is that some students are better at working on their own than others. The language laboratory (where teachers take the whole group into the laboratory) offers a good half-way house between teacher control and learner autonomy since, although students work at their own pace, they are more open to the guidance of the teacher. Activities in Language Laboratories Repetition : the simplest use of a double track laboratory is repetition. Students hear a work, phrase, or sentence on the tape. A space (indicated by a bleep or buzz signal) is left for them to repeat what they have heard, and the work, phrase, or sentence is then said again, so that they get instant feedback on whether they have spoken correctly. Tape voice : information Buzz signal : ... (Pause of 3 seconds) Tape voice : information Drills : based on Audio-lingual methodology, language laboratories have often been used for subsitution drills, using the same basic model as the repetition. The difference is that students have to work out what to say (based on a cue) before the tape voice then gives the correct response. Tape voice : Do you watch television every night ? Cue : Three nights. Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : No, I have not watched TV for three months. Tape voice : Do you listen to the radio every day ? Cue : Last Monday. Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : No, I have not listened to the radio since last Monday. Speaking : language laboratories can give students the opportunity of speaking (apart from repetition and drilling) in a number of ways. They can record their own talks and speeches and then listen back to them and make adjustments in the same way as they draft and redraft written text in a process-writing approach. But the tape can also ask them a series of questions which encourages them to practise language which they have recently been focusing on as in the following example for beginners : Tape voice : What is your last name ? Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : What is your first name ? Buzz signal : (pause) Tape voice : Where do you live ? Buzz signal : (pause) The teacher can also prepare a topic for students to discuss (in pairs) and ask them to record their discussion on the tape (in this case, one tape recorder with two headsets necessary – if not a monologue will do) and then when they have finished, the teacher may analyse their recordings and look for their strengths and weaknesses with respect to accuracy, fluency, interaction etc. (This exercise is usually a success with more advanced learners). Parallel speaking : Adrian Underhill gives examples of parallel speaking, where students are encouraged to imitate the way the teachers says something and because of the double-track system, do so at the same time as the teacher is speaking. From the console the teacher can record a story (first in separate, but late as a whole) onto all the individual stuent machines. At first, as the material recorded the students just listen. But then, once they have the recording of (all or part of) the story, they speak along with the teacher's taped voice, doing their best to imitate the teacher’s pronounciation and the speed at which he/she speaks. According to Underhill, the aim is to try and do the same as the teacher, not because the teacher is right but as an exercise in attention and noticing and to gain insight from experience. Later they record the material independently onto their machines, at later which point the teacher can listen in and give feedback where appropriate. Listening : listening of all kinds can be practised in the language laboratory. Activities such as note taking, dictation, finding differences between a written text and taped account of the same events, and answering conmprehension questions can all be performed successfully in the laboratory setting. Tapes can be accompanied by written worksheets and/or students can be asked questions on the tape which hey have recorded their answers to on the student track. In computer-equipped laboratories, questions and texts can be provided on the computer screen. Reading : students can read texts and then record their answers on tape. In computer-equipped laboratories both text and answers can be supplied on the computer screen itself. The teacher can aslo have all students reading material from the same Internet website. Writing and correcting writing : language laboratories allow teachers to give individual, private spoken feedback on students’ written work. In computer-equipped laboratories students can write at their individual machines and the teacher can then correct their work either orally or in writing since he/she can look at each student’s work from the console. The Overhead Projector/Bits and Pieces The Overhead projector Mechanism An overhead projector typically consists of a large box containing a very bright lamp and a fan to cool it. On top of the box is a large Fresnel lens that collimates the light. Above the box, typically on a long arm, is a mirror and lens that focuses and redirects the light forward instead of up. Transparencies are placed on top of the lens for display. The light from the lamp travels through the transparency and into the mirror where it is shore forward onto a screen for display. The mirror allows both the presenter and the audience to see the image at the same time, the presenter looking down at the transparency as if writing, the audience looking forward at the screen. The height of the mirror can be adjusted, to both focus the image and to make the image larger or smaller depending on how close the projector is to the screen. History The first overhead projector was used for police identification work. It used a cellophane roll over a 9-inch stage allowing facial characteristics to be rolled across the stage. The U.S. Army in 1945 was the first to use it in quantity for training as World War II wound down. It began to be widely used in schools and businesses in the late 1950s and early 1960s. A major manufacturer of overhead projectors in this early period was the company 3M. As the demand for projectors grew, Buhl Industries was founded in 1953, and became the leading US contributor for several optical refinements for the Aid to Education program stimulated overhead sales which remained high up to the late 1990s and into the 21st Century. Use in Education Overhead projectors (OHPs) are extremely useful pieces of equipment since they allow teachers to prepare visual or demonstration material. They require little technical knowledge, and they are usually easy to carry around. Therefore, it is not surprising they have been widely used. Just about anything can go on overhead transparencies (PHTs): We can show whole texts or grammar exercises, pictures or diagrams, or student’s writing. Because they can be of a very high quality. Especially where teachers are unimpressed by their handwriting, the overhead transparency offers the possibility of attractive well-printed script. One of the main advantages of the overhead projector is that we do not have to show everything on an OHT all at once. By covering some of the transparency with a piece of card or paper we can blank out what we do not want the students to see. So, for example, we might show the first two lines of a story to ask students what is going to happen next, before revealing the next two lines and then the next, gradually moving the paper or card downwards. We might have questions on one side of the transparency and answers on the other. We start the teaching sequence with the answers covered, and use the same ‘gradual revelation’ technique to maintain interest. Because transparencies are, as their name suggests, transparent, they can be put on top of each other so that we gradually build up a complex picture, diagram, or text. This is done by putting down the first transparency, say of a room, and asking students what kind of a room it is and what happens there. Then a new transparency can be laid over that one with pictures of a person in that room who the students can speculate about, before we lay down another transparency on top of that with more people. A diagram can start with one simple feature and have extra elements added to it in the same way. We can put up a gapped text and have students say what they think goes in the blanks before putting a new transparency with some or all of the filled-in items on top of the gapped one. Decline in Use Overhead projectors were once a common fixture in most classrooms and business conference rooms, but today are obviously being replaced by document cameras, dedicated computer projection systems and interactive whiteboards. Such systems allow users to make animated, interactive presentations with movement and video, typically using software like Microsoft PowerPoint. There are certain reasons for this gradual replacement. The primary reason is the deeply ingrained use of computing technology in modern society and the inability of overheads to easily support the features that modern users demand. While an overhead can display static images fairly well, it performs poorly at displaying moving images. The standards of users have also increased, so that a dim, fuzzy overhead projection that is too bright in the centre and too dim around the edges is no longer acceptable. The optical focus, linearity, brightness and clarity of an overhead generally cannot match that of a video projector primarily due to the plastic Fresnel lens, which can only approximate what would normally be an extremely large and heavy glass lens. Bits and Pieces Of course there is no limit to the various bits and pieces which we can bring into the classroom. It might be photographs of our family, letters we have received, or even a pet. Just as children in primary school are often asked to show and tell about objects they hold dear, so we can base lesson sequences on objects that we think our students might find interesting – though of course this has to be done with discretion and a large dose of common sense about what will be appropriate in terms of age and culture. Realia In education, realia are objects from real life used in classroom instruction by educators to improve students’ understanding of other cultures and real life situations. A teacher of a foreign language often employs realia to strengthen student’s association between words for everyday objects and the objects themselves. Realia are also used to connect learners with the key focal point of a lesson by allowing tactile and multidimensional connection between learned material and the object of the lesson. Best utilized for simple objects lending themselves to classroom settings and ease of control with minimum risk of accident throughout the student object interaction. Objects that are intrinsically interesting can provide a good starting-point for a variety of language work and communication activities. We can find an object with an obscure use and ask students to speculate what it is for (it might be/could be/probably is) and or design various explanations to account for it (it is used for-ing). The class could vote on the best idea. Where we bring in more than one object, especially where they are not obviously connected, students can speculate on what they have in common or they can invent stories and scenarios using the various objects. They can choose from a collection of objects which three they will put in a time capsule, or which would be most useful on a desert island, etc. Some teachers use a soft ball to make learning more enjoyable. When they want a student to say something, ask a question, or give an answer, they throw a ball to the student who then has to give the answer. The student can then throw the ball to a classmate who, in his/her turn, produces the required response before throwing the ball to someone else. However, not all students find this appealing, and there is a limit of how often the ball can be thrown before students get fed up with it. The only limitations on the objects which we bring to class are the size and the quantity of the objects themselves and the students’ tolerance, especially with adults who may think they are being treated childishly. As with so many other things, this is something we will have to assess on the basis of our students’ reactions. Interestingly, technology has begun to impact the use of realia by adding the virtual realia option whereby three dimensional models can be displayed through projection or on computer screens allowing the learner to see detail otherwise difficult to acquire and to manipulate the object within the medium on which it is displayed. The option of zooming tool in technical environments where it may be difficult or impractical to examine an object in as much detail manually, such as the workings of living organs or machinery containing hazardous parts such as combustion engines. Language Cards Many teachers put a variety of cards and posters around the classroom. Such posters can have notes about language items on them, or be a collection of ways of apologizing or inviting, for example. Sometimes, with new groups, teachers get students to write about themselves on a card and put their photograph next to what they have written so that the class all know who everyone is. Students can also make presentation posters of projects they have worked on. In multinational classes, for example, many students enjoy providing short guides to their countries. Cards are useful for matching activities, where students have to find another student in the class with a similar card or one that has the answer to the question on his or her card. They can be asked to place cards in the correct column for sounds, or with the correct lexical group on a board or on a poster. Students can each be given word card to hold in front of them and then be asked to move around until they form a line where all the cards together form a question or a sentence. Cuisenaire Rods These are blocks of wood of different lengths. Each length is a different colour. The rods are featureless, and are only differentiated by their size and colour. Simple they may be, but they are useful for a wide range of activities. For example, we can say that a particular rod is a pen or a telephone, a dog or a key so that by holding them up or putting them together a story can be told. All it takes is a little bit of imagination. We can also assign a word or a phrase to each of, say five rods and the students then have to put them in the right order (e.g. I usually get up at six o’clock). By moving the usually rod around and showing where it can and cannot occur in the sentence, the students get a clear visual display of something they are attempting to fix in their minds. Rods can be used to teach prepositions. Teachers can model with the rod sentences like: The red one is on top/beside/over/behind (etc) the green one. They can show rods in different relative positions and ask students to describe them. Students can then position the rods for other students to describe (in ever more complex arrangements). Cuisenaire rods are also useful for demonstrating colours (of course), comparative, superlatives, and a wide range of other semantic and syntactic areas, particularly with people who respond well to visual activities. Using Computers in the Foreign Language Classroom “If you think of learning as a path, you can picture yourself walking besides her rather than either pushing or dragging or carrying her along” -Polly Berrien Berends Quite apart from their use in language laboratories, computers used in education generally and in teaching foreign language and communications in particular, continue to increase at an extraordinary speed. As with any technological advance such as the language lab, video, and even the tape recorder, the proper place for the various riches which computers have to offer is still under discussion. Using a computer for/as... A computer is a handy tool for many school assignments. To that end, the following section focuses on some ways you can use a computer in your studies. Currently, the main uses of a computer in language teaching and/learning includes the following: Reference Use One of the chief uses of computers and connected technology is as a reference tool. There are already a number of popular encyclopaedias available on CD-Rom or on the INTERNET. The availability of all sorts of material means that we can send students to the computer to prepare their projects, following up references in course books or to find answers to some particular questions that are not of general interest. Many of the programs have visual and audio support that makes the research work very attractive. The greatest potential for the computer as a reference tool is, of course, the Internet, where by accessing directories and search engines (such as ‘Alta Vista’, ‘Google’, etc), users can look for information on just about any subject under the sun. However, as any regular surfers will attest, these searches often throw up a huge amount of irrelevant material so that simple search can become a protracted trawl through a number of useless websites (Harmer, 2001). P. Sweeney (2000) underlines that letting your students completely independent in their search activity is far more time consuming that he and his colleagues anticipated. It is the teacher’s one of the most important task to prepare the background by suggesting search methods and/or and narrowing the focus of the enquiry so that students do not waste a whole class period searching. We also need to keep an eye on a proceedings to avoid a situation in which students just surf the net, becoming distracted by what they find there, and thus lose sight of the original task (Harmer, 2001). However, if these drawbacks are taken into account, the Internet is an extraordinary resource which has changed the face of information gathering both in and outside the classroom. Communicating Your Instructor with other Students a. a. E-mail Exchange With an Internet connection, you can easily communicate with anyone who has an e-mail address. You can send e-mail messages to your instructor or to other students. In fact, “getting students from different countries to write to one another has greatly increased both their English development and especially their motivation” (Harmer, 2001:148). You can also attach files to an e-mail message. For example, you can proactively e-mail an assignment to your instructor if you must miss a class. Your instructor may, in response, e-mail you what you’ve missed during your absence and tell you what homework you need to complete. Importantly, students should be encouraged to write to their teacher. According to Harmer (2001), such types of messages are often written in a special speaking like informal style. There is less of an obligation for grammatical correctness or even correct spelling, but students can improve their fluency. So e-mailing with less of correctness and formality can be turned into an advantage, a motivation for writing and having a real unstressed communication. Of particular interest is the fact that computer communication might become a teaching “channel” if students can send word-processed work to their teachers who can send feedback in the same way, in a short time. a.b. Instant Messaging (IM) Another way to communicate is by using Instant Messaging (IM). You set up a list of your buddies and their screen names. If one of these students is online when you are, you’ll be notified. You can then send text messages to each other by typing and sending the message. This can be helpful if you want to ask a classmate for clarification about an assignment. You can also use Instant Messaging to talk to and make new friends online (within your school and beyond school). Keep in mind that you can easily get distracted by messaging. If you are studying, keep the messaging to a minimum or log off so that you can focus on your work. Teaching and Testing Programs Language software packages, often supplied on CD-ROMS, offer students the chance to study conversations and texts, to do grammar and vocabulary exercises, and even to listen to texts and record their own voices. Although some teachers have criticised computer-based programs of this kind being only dressed-up workbook exercises, it would be unwise to underestimate their usefulness for variety and motivation. As Harmer (2001:147) puts it: Students who have been sitting behind their desks for hours might well find going over to a computer to ‘play’ with some language exercises a welcome relief. A trend which will almost gather pace is the attachment of CD-ROM-based packages to accompany course books, full of extra input material and exercises. Some of these will be available too on the Internet. However, there are also websites where students can sign up for complete self-study courses, which include all regular features of a course book together with the possibility of sending work to a tutor who will monitor progress. In order to reduce evaluation time some tests may be posted and taken on computer and feedback/results are instantaneous. The Word Processor In an article published in 1987, Alison Piper suggested that the most educational use of the computer at that time was as a word processor, with students grouped around a screen drafting and redrafting collaboratively (Piper 1987). Using a word processor program for any kind of written work provides many benefits, including the following: You can easily compose as you think. You can easily correct mistakes, either as you type (using the Backspace or Delete key) or when you review your work. You can reorganise the contents of the writing. Sometimes, when you review your work, you find that one sentence or paragraph belongs before another. Or your conclusion may actually work better as an introduction. With a word processing program, you can easily add more information to a different location. You can also delete sentences, paragraphs, and words (to get rid of repetition or to correct mistakes) and copy passages (if you want to use them again in the same or another document). You can make formatting changing to improve the appearance of the document. For example, in a research paper, you can make the section headings bold and bigger so that they stand out. You can emphasize new terms by italicizing them. You can create bulleted or numbered lists, add a border to a paragraph, change the page margins, create headers and footers, and more. Check your spelling and grammar. You can use the spelling checkers to make sure your paper doesn’t include any typographic errors. Most words processing programs also enable you to check your grammar. Note, however, that neither these tools is foolproof. The spelling checker on flags. The Teacher as an Aid A teacher affects eternity; you can never tell where his influence stops Henry Adams Apart from the different roles we adopt in the classroom, and how these roles are performed, we are a kind of teaching aid ourselves, a piece of equipment in our own right. In particular, we are especially useful when using mime and gesture, as language models and providers of comprehensive input. Furthermore, we may be helpful when using movement, body language, eye contact, facial expressions, speech, student talk, and names. Mimes and Gestures One of the things that we are uniquely able to do on the spot is to use mime, gesture and expression to convey meaning and atmosphere. It is not difficult to pretend to be drinking, or to pull a sad face. The ability to demonstrate words like frightened or old is fairly easy for many teachers, just as shrugging shoulders can be used to indicate indifference. Mime and gesture work best when they are exaggerated since this makes their meaning explicit. However, gestures do not have necessarily universal meanings, and what might seem acceptable in one situation or place will not be appropriated in another. We need, therefore, to use them with care. Importantly, arms and hands are a very expressive visual aid. They can be used to describe shapes, actions, movements etc, but remember to keep still while listening to a student. Otherwise the message sent to the student is that he is being longwinded or boring. In other words, habits such as fiddling with notes and books, playing with pens, key chains, or doodling with chalk on the black board can be both distracting and irritating for the student. One gesture which is widely used, but which teachers should employ with care, is the act of pointing to students to ask them to participate in drill or give some other form of response. Though it is quick and efficient, especially when we are having trouble with our students’ names, it may seem aggressive and depressingly obvious to the students that, in having failed to learn their names, we are less than respectful to their identity. Language Model One way in which we can model dialogues is to put up two faces on the board and then stand in front if each of them when required to speak their lines. For such activities, we should make sure that we can be heard, and we should animate our performance with much enthusiasm as is appropriate for the conversation we are modelling. Reading aloud is a skill which some teachers have tended to ignore. Yet the reading aloud of a particularly or interesting excerpt can be extremely motivating and enjoyable for a class, especially when students have been encouraged to predict what they are going to hear. Poems too, are very engaging for many students when teachers read them to the class. Anyone who doubts the power of such activities only has to look at the reading circles in primary classes where learners group enthusiastically around the teacher to enjoy the experience of listening to a story. Story-telling and story/poem-reading can work with adults too, though the content and the way it is handled will be significantly different. Reading passages aloud to students can capture imagination and mood like nothing else, but in order for this to work we need to ‘perform’ the reading in an interesting and committed way and, as with so many activities, we must be careful not to use this activity too frequently (Harmer, 2001). Provider of Comprehensible-Input An issue that confronts many teachers in classrooms is how much they themselves should talk, and what kind of talk this should be. On most training courses, a distinction is made between student-talking time (STT) and teacher-talking time (TTT). It is the concern to maximise the former that leads many teachers to use pair and group work; it has been assumed that on the whole we want to see more STT than TTT, since as trainers frequently point out to their student teachers, you don’t need the language practice; they do. Advantageous for their students, especially since those teachers are unlikely to be permanently interesting. However, it is widely accepted that a vital ingredient in the learning of any language is exposure to it. The American linguist Stephen Krashen described the best kind of language that students could be expressed to as comprehensible input, that is language which students understand the meaning of, but which is nevertheless slightly above their own production level. For instance, if the learners’ stage ‘I’, then acquisition occurs when they are exposed to comprehensible input that constitutes ‘i+1’, provided they understand the language containing ‘i+1’. Krashen (1982: 84) writes: ... Language acquisition ... happens in one way, when the acquirer understands input containing a structure that the acquirer is ‘due’ to acquire, a structure at his or her ‘i+1’. Yet where can they go for such language input? In the world outside the classroom, English if they have access to it, will frequently appear incomprehensible, especially when they are at a low level. They need someone to provide language which has been roughly-tuned to be comprehensible to them, and there is someone right there in the classroom to give them just that. As teachers we are ideally placed to provide comprehensible input since we know the students in front of us and can appropriately react to them in a way that a course book or a tape, for example, cannot. We know how to talk at just the right level so that even if our students do not understand every word we say, they do understand the meaning of what is being said. At such times the language gains, for the student, are significant. However, we do need to be aware of how much ourselves are speaking. If talk all the time, however, ‘comprehensible’ our language is, the students are denied their own chance to practise production, or get exposure through other means (from reading or listening to tapes, for example). They may also become bored by listening to the teacher all the time. Movement Sitting behind a desk or standing on a dais creates a “distance” between the teacher and the students. Try to have an aisle and enough space between the rows so that you can easily reach those at the back. This way you can talk to individual students, allow the shy ones to ask questions quietly without the fear of embarrassment, as well as check their work and help them. Some movement on your side is essential, because it allows the students to focus on you. Remember that stepping forward to emphasize a point, small steps genuine interest in what he or she is saying. Body Language Your body should be in your control. Hold it in such a way that you look alert and awake. Avoid slumping and sagging. Just as too little movement is boring, too much movement can be a distraction. When your posture is erect, it puts you in control of the situation and the students realise this. It also encourages the students, subconsciously, to become alert as well. You may notice the lazy ones sitting up and paying more attention to what is happening around them. Eye Contact Make an effort to keep eyes lively, aware and interested. Move them around to take in everything. Fix them on specific students, but not for so long that they become uncomfortable! Avoid focusing on the worst or bust students. Knowing that the teacher demands eye contact keeps the students alert. It also gives the teacher a feedback on the impact of what he or she is saying. This is particularly important in large classes, where “distance” between the teacher and learner is greater, and individual attention is more difficult. An effective teacher can control class behaviour to a great extent by the expression of his or her eyes. Make sure that you make eye contact with each student, so that it seems you are talking to him or her individually. Facial Expressions There is nothing worse than a constant frown, which discourages students from asking questions, feeling free to discuss a problem or coming for help. A smile can work wonders. It encourages the student to participate more actively and dispels the notion that the teacher is over critical. Look interested while a student is speaking. A smile, a grimace, a curl of the lips, raised eyebrows etc... at appropriate moments will and messages as needed. Send positive vibes and cultivate a sympathetic and encouraging expression! Speech Have you even heard yourself speak? Do you know what your voice sounds like to others? A low monotone or a high-pitched voice can be difficult to understand or grating to the ears. Does the sound of your voice send students to sleep or running for earplugs? Be critical of yourself. Try taping your voice – listen to yourself. Where are you slipping up? Make your own personal checklist: Are you speaking at the right volume? Does the end of your sentence fall so low that students sitting at the back cannot hear? Are you hemming and hawing too much? Are you speaking too fast? Student Talk Break the monotony and give students plenty of time to talk! It will keep them alert. Make small jokes, be friendly. Names Call students by their names. It sounds warmer and friendlier and lessens the distance between the teacher and learner. Native-Speaker Teachers and Non-Native Speaker Teachers For many years an opposition has been created between native-speaker teacher of English and non-native speaker teacher. However, the world is changing, and English is no longer owned by anybody in particular least of all the native speakers of the world who are in a minority which is becoming daily less significant at least in numerical terms. Non-native speaker teachers differ from native-speaker teachers in the following way. Non-native speaker teachers have the advantage of having the same experience of learning English as their students are now having, and this gives them an instant understanding of what their students are going through. Native speaker teachers, on the other hand, often have the advantage of a linguistic confidence about their language in the classroom, which non-native speaker teachers sometimes lack indeed. It may be differences in linguistic confidence which account for some differences in teaching practices between the two groups. As a recently as ten years ago it would have been impossible to find a single non-native speaker teacher working in a language school in, say, Britain or Australia. Yet, that is no longer the case. Progress may be slow in this respect, but there are signs of such progress. In the end, provided teachers can use the language, is it the quality of their teaching that counts not where they come from or how they learnt or acquired English. Conclusion The teacher is the best teaching aid. Be sure that you are using yourself to the full effect. Most of us send up with no more than five or six people who remember us. Teachers have thousands of people who remember than for the rest of their lives. Andy Rooney الموضوعالأصلي : Equipment and Teaching Aids // المصدر : ممنتديات جواهر ستار التعليمية //الكاتب: لبنى الجزائرية
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