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MIXED-ABILITY CLASS. How to teach heterogeneous groups. Heterogeneous/Mixed-ability class:. It is a group in which children of varied abilities are taught together rather than being set apart in groups according to level. Adapting materials for mixed-ability classes can take different forms :.
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MIXED-ABILITY CLASS How to teach heterogeneous groups
Heterogeneous/Mixed-ability class: It is a group in which children of varied abilities are taught together rather than being set apart in groups according to level.
Adapting materials for mixed-ability classes can take different forms: • Rewrite reading texts and grade the language accordingly for different levels. • However it is extremely time consuming and not many teachers can actually go to this lenght to adapt materials. • A danger that children will instantly realise that they have been labelled as a weak or strong student.
READING Stronger students: - rewrite a part of the text in a different tense/person - write their personal opinion/a summary of the text - write question about the text - write new vocabulary up on the board with definitions Weaker students: - if there are gaps, give students the answers in a jumbled order - break the text into chunks and give the opinion of only reading some of the texts - pre-teach difficult vocabulary and leave it written on the board for students to refer to
LISTENING Stronger: - focus on the accents or of the speakers and get students to copy chunks - if it´s a true/false activity, follow on by asking why/why not? - give out the tape script and look up tricky words/expressions in a dictionary to then explain to the group Weaker: - pre-teach vocabulary, use visual if possible - give them time to discuss answers before feeding back to the class - give them the tape script on second listening - if it´s a gap fill, supply the words with a few extras
WRITING Stronger: - give creative tasks that students can do at their own level - increase the word limit - indicate where they could use more interesting ways of saying something - indicate mistakes using correction code to give students a chance to self correct Weaker: - reduce the word limit - encourage use of dictionaries - correct the draft together before students copy up it - pair or group weaker students with stronger students
SPEAKING Stronger: - ask students to justify/defend their opinions - ban easy words like „nice“ to push their vocabulary to a higher level - get students to record themselves and self-correct - pair students of higher level together so they really go for it Weaker: - give them time to rehearse their ideas before a role play or discussion - pair weak and strong together - let them make notes before the speaking - give them more listening and thinking time before calling on them to answer questions
Tips for good classroom management with M-A groups: • GROUPING: - depending on the task and the class dynamics - there are usually opportunities for both types of grouping - to experiment with mixing up the strong and weak students
GIVING INSTRUCTIONS: - giving clear instructions - use hand gestures as well as words to explain the tasks - use stronger students to check back the instructions
ERROR CORRECTION: - don´t over correct weak students - encourage students to correct one another
SETTING GOALS: - it will help to focus the students - the goals can be different for each student and depending on their level
SOME STRATEGIES: • DISCUSSION AND NEEDS ANALYSIS: • have an open class discussion about the classroom situation • to ensure the best for everyone • to agree how to deal with it • it is the best to stage and structure the discussion • to prompt thestudents to reflect upon their learning style, learning strategies, language needs, enjoyment, motivation, language strenght and weaknesses
Questions: • What kinds of class activities do you enjoy/benefit from? • Which language skills do you most wish to develop? • Do you prefer working individually or with a partner? • Would you rather sit and listen to the teacher all lesson or participate in group work?
STUDENT SELF-AWARENESS: - encourage students to develop an awareness of their own language abilities and learning needs
RANGE OF TASKS: - this involves creating or providing tasks for different levels
EXTRA WORK/HOMEWORK: • give different students different homework • for weaker students HW which really does consolidate the class work • for stronger students work that will widen their knowledge or put it to the test a little more – they need the feedback • writing tasks are great for HW
ERROR CORRECTION: • have different expectation of the language the different students produce • it can push stronger students if you correct them heavily, although be sensitive about it! • for weaker students, be more selective in your error correction
WORK GROUPINGS: You may consider dividing your class into groups by level for the whole lesson, enabling you to give a different level or number of tasks to each group
PAIR WORK: strong with strong, weak with weak or strong with weak – variety in the pairings is the key • GROUP WORK: groups could be of mixed levels or similar ones • WHOLE CLASS-MINGLES: is a favoured strategy. Involves students talking/interacting with many different members of the class in a short period of time in order to achieve a task ->this supports the weaker students and provides opportunities for the stronger ones