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English tastes so good! Using food in ESL classes . Elena Shvidko ITESOL Conference Ogden, UT October 23, 2010. Reasons . Fun and interesting Motivates students Delicious Cultural aspect . Traditional use . Teaching process Teaching cooking vocabulary . Non-traditional use .
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English tastes so good! Using food in ESL classes Elena Shvidko ITESOL Conference Ogden, UT October 23, 2010
Reasons • Fun and interesting • Motivates students • Delicious • Cultural aspect
Traditional use • Teaching process • Teaching cooking vocabulary
Non-traditional use • Food is a tool, not the purpose • Implementing in every skill area
Writing • Teaching paraphrasing: “Trip to a grocery store” Procedure: • Take your students to a grocery store • Give them a list of paraphrased items, ask them to find those items in the store and bring them to you. • The activity becomes more exciting when the students are divided into teams.
Writing (cont.) • Crispy salty buddy, the life of every party and is always up for a dip Chips • Grapes with a sunburn Raisins • Honey roasted, salted, or plain... you'll go nuts for these babies Peanuts • Small and chewy fruit flavored animals Gummy bears
Writing (cont.) • At the end of the activity, givea different definition of chocolate to each team. They students will bring it and it will be their treat Examples: • Brown sweet bliss! It melts in your mouth and makes you feel good • Yummy emergency stress reliever for most women
Writing (cont.) • Practicing process words “Making a sandwich” Procedure • Prepare necessary ingredients (depends on a type of sandwich you want to make) • Divide the students into teams • Each team has to write a recipe of how to make a sandwich, describing each step precisely. They have to use transition words describing process. • Each team receives a different recipe and makes a sandwich according to the recipe
Writing (cont.) • First • Second • Then • Next • Following this • At this point • After • Before this • Finally • In the end
Writing (cont.) • Practicing compare and contrast words “Tasting laboratory” Procedure: • Prepare different snacks, for example: • Popcorn • Chips • Peanuts • “Skittles” • Banana chips • Cheddar cheese crackers • Gummy bears
Writing (cont.) • Give two pieces of different snacks to students and ask them to taste them and write a sentence describing a similarity (or a difference) between the snacks. • Then give them another pair of snacks and ask them to write another sentence of comparison (or contrast). • Each time, students have to use compare and contrast words (similarly, likewise, neither… nor, both …and, however, in contrast, on the other hand, whereas etc.) • Example: Both banana chips and cheddar cheese crackers are crunchy. Whereas banana chips are sweet, cheddar cheese crackers are salty.
Other ideas for writing • Use candies (or cookies) wrapped in a topic for writing. Examples: • Questions for a 10-minute paragraph or a class journal • Controversial statement (Ask students to express their opinion in writing) • An interesting quotation (Ask students to reflect on it)
Grammar • Practicing future tense (verb forms and future tense phrases) “Fortune cookies” Procedure: • Divide students into pairs. One student is a fortune teller and the other one is a “person who desires to know his/her future”. • The fortune teller has cards with different fortunes written on them • The other student asks the fortune teller questions about his future using the phrases of future (tomorrow, in 10 days, in 2018, next winter etc). The fortune teller picks up one card and reads the fortune. • At the end of the “session” the fortune teller gives the other student a “fortune cookie”. • The students switch the roles and do the same activity again.
Grammar (cont.) • Practicing past forms of irregular verbs “Bingo” Procedure: • Give a Bingo table and a handful of “Skittles” or “M&Ms” to each student • In each square of the table, students write a base form of an irregular verb • The teacher will read past tense forms of the verbs from the list and those students who have the base forms of the verbs put a candy on the corresponding squares.
Grammar (cont.) • Practicing questions “Tricky candy” Procedure • Prepare a few kinds of candies (different colors or flavors) • Each student will take one candy • Each type of candy is “assigned” to a certain category of questions • The teacher asks each student a question according to his/her candy
Example: Green taffies: “What-questions” What do people in your country do for Christmas? What is your favorite TV program? Why? Blue taffies: “Questions with if-clause” If you could speak three languages well, what would they be? If you had three days to live, what would you do? Etc Orange taffies: “How-questions” How many friends have you got and who are they? How often do you go shopping and where? Brown taffies: “Mixed questions” Which do you prefer, summer or winter? Why? Why are you studying English?
Speaking • Teaching an organization of a formal speech “Hot dog analogy” Procedure: • Prepare hot dog ingredients • Teach students about the parts of a formal speech using the hot dog ingredients • Make hot dogs with the students!
Speaking (cont.)Example: • A speech is like a hot dog
Introduction of a speech Get the attention of a listener Top of the bun
Body of a speech • The subject • Work on it • Add supporting ideas (examples, personal stories, interesting facts, analogies, metaphors etc)
Conclusion of a speech • Summarize the main ideas, provide solutions/give opinions etc. • What people will remember The bottom of the bun
Introduction Body Conclusion Top of the bun Hot dog and condiments Bottom of the bun PARTS OF A SPEECH PARTS OF A HOT DOG
Reading • Text comprehension “Earn your salad!” Procedure: • Prepare ingredients for a fruit salad (different fruits). They will represent different types of questions about a book or another text. • Separate your students into teams. • Each team will choose which fruit they would like to have in their salad and the teacher will ask them a question according to their choice. • The teacher can make it more challenging and exciting by assigning harder questions to a more exotic (and more desirable!) fruit.
Reading (cont.)Example: • The types of questions will depend on a book: • Grape questions (about ideas in the book) • Banana questions (about book characters) • Apple questions (about book events) • Orange questions (about vocabulary) etc. • Get some mangoes for hard questions • If the team cannot answer their question, a different team can answer it and earn a piece of fruit to their salad. • The quality of the salad will depend on the knowledge of the team members
Reading (cont.) • You can do the same activity to practice reading skills. For example: • Grape questions: Find a main idea • Banana questions: Find a topic • Apple questions: Vocabulary in context • Orange question: Make a prediction • Mango questions: Identify the pattern.
Other occasions to use food in class • To divide class into groups or teams: Give to students taffies of different colors • To encourage participation: Bring to class a few treats and assign a price for each treat (a certain number of coupons). During the lesson, students will receive coupons for participation. At the end of the class, students can “buy” the treats with their coupons. The more coupons they have, the better treat they get! • A getting to know activity Each student will take a chocolate candy from a bag. Depending on a candy, they will have to tell others something about themselves:
Example: • Family • Hobby • Unique thing • Country
Practice time!In your groups, come up with two-three activities for teaching your skill area using food. • Writing • Grammar • Speaking • Reading
Thank you so much for coming and participating! Happy Halloween!