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Learn about the benefits and strategies of collaborative teaching in the ESL classroom. Discover reading, writing, grammar, listening, and speaking activities that foster collaboration and engage students.
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Meet some students from the IEP at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette!
It’s Not Half the Work, It’s Twice the Reward: Collaborative Teaching Ideas for the ESL Classroom Kristina Dixon, M.S. Mary Klaus, M.A. Intensive English Program University of Louisiana Lafayette, Louisiana November 2007
What is Collaborative Teaching? • Team Teaching: Teachers have equal responsibility • Interdisciplinary Courses: ESL teacher works with content area teachers • Parallel Teaching: Class is divided into two groups with one teacher for each group. • Lead & Support: One teacher mentors another Haynes, J. 2007. Two teachers can be better than one. Essential Teacher 4 (September 2007) 3: 6-7.
Collaborative Teaching IS NOT: • A ‘get-out-of-class’ free card • Spontaneous • Requires in-depth planning & preparation • Requires teacher communication & cooperation • Chaotic • Activities structured around goals and objectives • All students are purposefully engaged
Benefits for Teachers: • Learn from each other and provide support when trying new activities • Improve instruction together • Encourage negotiation; reduce territorialism (Choose the right teacher) • Foster instructional creativity • Provide momentum for extension activities
Benefits for Students: • Opportunity to observe collaboration between teachers • Shift to student-centered instruction and engaged learning • Build self-esteem • Motivate students to push themselves as interest in subject matter increases
Benefits for Students: • Increase critical thinking skills and retention • Develops a sense of community among students • Positively effects students of various abilities and backgrounds • Eases transition of international students into an American university http://tep.uoregon.edu/resources/librarylinks/articles/benefits.html
Reading Writing Grammar Listening/ Speaking Activities For Collaboration
Reading • Storytelling at PJ’s Coffee House • Combine groups of students with mixed levels • Have students from one level tell the others about the novel/story they are reading • Allow everyone in the group to speak until the stories are finished • Great for assessing reading comprehension & oral proficiency
Reading • LSAT Logic Puzzles • Use logic puzzles to challenge students’ • reading comprehension • reasoning skills • inferential thinking • Work collectively or in smaller groups
Writing • Chain Stories • Each student writes the first sentence of a story, then passes it to a classmate, who adds another sentence • Students keep adding sentences until the last one ends the story • Have the original writer read the story to the class – and laugh!
Writing • Short Story Group Picture Writing • Select a picture & study it for 5 minutes • Answer who, what, when, where, & why – Start to write about the picture without thinking. Look at the picture again. • Start writing again. • After a few minutes, a story develops! Adapted from Short Story Group at http://www.shortstorygroup.comhttp://www.
Grammar • Apples to Apples • Matching appropriate nouns with adjectives • Student ‘judges’ choose the best association • Builds vocabulary with adjectives & nouns • Jeopardy! • Friendly competition within a class or between differing levels • Reviews & reinforces grammar concepts
Grammar – Take a progressive walk around Cypress Lake!
Listening & Speaking • Student Debates • Mafia! • Murder Mystery • Art Criticism • Games • Taboo • Twenty Questions
Student Debates • Students suggest & vote on topics that are of interest to them. • Students either choose their ‘side’ or are assigned a particular view to argue. • Once divided, introductions are given on both sides. • All students share their ideas, with a ‘free-for-all’ at the end. • Great for fluency, articulation, cultural assimilation, and confidence building.
Mafia • Students are all members of a town - a doctor, a policeman, regular townspeople – and killers! • Students are assigned an ‘identity’ based on a playing card. • Each night as the town sleeps, a murder is committed, the doctor attempts to save a life, and the policeman does some detective work. • During the day, the townspeople discuss the crime, make an accusation, arrest a suspect, and vote to jail (or execute) those they find guilty!
Murder Mystery • Story – a murder has been committed by someone playing the game • Students are given alibis & ‘secrets’ about other students • Goals: • ask questions about others whereabouts • get ‘secret’ information to solve the mystery • find the killer! • Skills: question formation, logical reasoning, listening & speaking
Becoming an Art Critic ….. • Art critics help viewers interpret and judge artworks to construct meaning from them. • Display sample art work representative of current museum exhibits. • Consider the following questions before going to an art museum. • 1. Description: What do I see? • 2. Interpretation: What is the artwork about? • 3. Judgment: Is it a good artwork?
Au revoir Kentucky! Kristina Dixon & Mary KlausSETESOL 2007