TKT Module 2: Selection and use of supplementary materials and activities Teacher s Notes

Similar documents
Table of Contents. Introduction Choral Reading How to Use This Book...5. Cloze Activities Correlation to TESOL Standards...

Cheeky Monkey COURSES FOR CHILDREN. Kathryn Harper and Claire Medwell

Fire safety in the home

CELTA. Syllabus and Assessment Guidelines. Third Edition. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations 1 Hills Road Cambridge CB1 2EU United Kingdom

Conversation Task: The Environment Concerns Us All

Interpretive (seeing) Interpersonal (speaking and short phrases)

Special Edition. Starter Teacher s Pack. Adrian Doff, Sabina Ostrowska & Johanna Stirling With Rachel Thake, Cathy Brabben & Mark Lloyd

Interview with a Fictional Character

International Examinations. IGCSE English as a Second Language Teacher s book. Second edition Peter Lucantoni and Lydia Kellas

FCE Speaking Part 4 Discussion teacher s notes

5 th Grade Language Arts Curriculum Map

Handbook for Teachers

Abbey Academies Trust. Every Child Matters

1.2 Interpretive Communication: Students will demonstrate comprehension of content from authentic audio and visual resources.

Unit 14 Dangerous animals

IN THIS UNIT YOU LEARN HOW TO: SPEAKING 1 Work in pairs. Discuss the questions. 2 Work with a new partner. Discuss the questions.

PROJECT 1 News Media. Note: this project frequently requires the use of Internet-connected computers

English Nexus Offender Learning

About this unit. Lesson one

Textbook Evalyation:

Replace difficult words for Is the language appropriate for the. younger audience. For audience?

RUSSIAN LANGUAGE, INTERMEDIATE LEVEL

Pre-vocational training. Unit 2. Being a fitness instructor

What the National Curriculum requires in reading at Y5 and Y6

Grammar Lesson Plan: Yes/No Questions with No Overt Auxiliary Verbs

Characteristics of the Text Genre Informational Text Text Structure

How long did... Who did... Where was... When did... How did... Which did...

The Eaquals Self-help Guide for Curriculum and Syllabus Design Maria Matheidesz and Frank Heyworth

5. UPPER INTERMEDIATE

Daily Assessment (All periods)

Author: Justyna Kowalczys Stowarzyszenie Angielski w Medycynie (PL) Feb 2015

Lower and Upper Secondary

Plainfield Public School District Reading/3 rd Grade Curriculum Guide. Modifications/ Extensions (How will I differentiate?)

USING DRAMA IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING CLASSROOMS TO IMPROVE COMMUNICATION SKILLS OF LEARNERS

Name of Course: French 1 Middle School. Grade Level(s): 7 and 8 (half each) Unit 1

Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador Facultad de Comunicación, Lingüística y Literatura Escuela de Lenguas Sección de Inglés

PROGRAMME DE TRAVAIL INTERNE

ANGLAIS LANGUE SECONDE

Teacher: Mlle PERCHE Maeva High School: Lycée Charles Poncet, Cluses (74) Level: Seconde i.e year old students

CREATE YOUR OWN INFOMERCIAL

Loughton School s curriculum evening. 28 th February 2017

English Language and Applied Linguistics. Module Descriptions 2017/18

Advanced Grammar in Use

Characteristics of the Text Genre Realistic fi ction Text Structure

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP

Intensive Writing Class

Films for ESOL training. Section 2 - Language Experience

Polish (JUN ) General Certificate of Secondary Education June 2014

Strategies for Differentiating

Pronunciation: Student self-assessment: Based on the Standards, Topics and Key Concepts and Structures listed here, students should ask themselves...

EVERY PICTURE TELLS A STORY

UCC2: Course Change Transmittal Form

DEVELOPING A PROTOTYPE OF SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL FOR VOCABULARY FOR THE THIRD GRADERS OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

Giga International House Catania, the best place to learn Italian!

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Spanish 2

By Zorica Đukić, Secondary School of Pharmacy and Physiotherapy

The Indices Investigations Teacher s Notes

Primary English Curriculum Framework

Opportunities for Writing Title Key Stage 1 Key Stage 2 Narrative

English for Life. B e g i n n e r. Lessons 1 4 Checklist Getting Started. Student s Book 3 Date. Workbook. MultiROM. Test 1 4

More ESL Teaching Ideas

Study Center in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Foreign Languages. Foreign Languages, General

lgarfield Public Schools Italian One 5 Credits Course Description

Content Language Objectives (CLOs) August 2012, H. Butts & G. De Anda

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District French Grade 7

Institute for Social and Legal Sciences

Learning, Communication, and 21 st Century Skills: Students Speak Up For use with NetDay Speak Up Survey Grades 3-5

Kent Island High School Spring 2016 Señora Bunker. Room: (Planning 11:30-12:45)

Basic: Question Words: Who, What, Where, When week 1

Fountas-Pinnell Level P Informational Text

FOREWORD.. 5 THE PROPER RUSSIAN PRONUNCIATION. 8. УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) 4 80.

CHAPTER IV RESEARCH FINDING AND DISCUSSION

Heritage Korean Stage 6 Syllabus Preliminary and HSC Courses

IMPROVING SPEAKING SKILL OF THE TENTH GRADE STUDENTS OF SMK 17 AGUSTUS 1945 MUNCAR THROUGH DIRECT PRACTICE WITH THE NATIVE SPEAKER

Participate in expanded conversations and respond appropriately to a variety of conversational prompts

Hands-on Books-closed: Creating Interactive Foldables in Islamic Studies. Presented By Tatiana Coloso

Ohio s New Learning Standards: K-12 World Languages

5 Star Writing Persuasive Essay

Spanish IV Textbook Correlation Matrices Level IV Standards of Learning Publisher: Pearson Prentice Hall

MERRY CHRISTMAS Level: 5th year of Primary Education Grammar:

Latin I (LA 4923) August 23-Dec 17, 2014 Michal A. Isbell. Course Description, Policies, and Syllabus

Geographical Location School, Schedules, Classmates, Activities,

Part I. Figuring out how English works

SPRING GROVE AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT

ESL Curriculum and Assessment

Formulaic Language and Fluency: ESL Teaching Applications

Making Sales Calls. Watertown High School, Watertown, Massachusetts. 1 hour, 4 5 days per week

Characteristics of the Text Genre Informational Text Text Structure

OUR GOAL:THE SUCCESS OF YOUR STAY IN FRANCE

Intensive English Program Southwest College

30 Day Unit Plan: Greetings & Self-intro.

LITPLAN TEACHER PACK for The Indian in the Cupboard

Course Outline for Honors Spanish II Mrs. Sharon Koller

RTV 3320: Electronic Field Production Instructor: William A. Renkus, Ph.D.

KOREAN 305: ADVANCED KOREAN I (Fall 2017)

ELA/ELD Standards Correlation Matrix for ELD Materials Grade 1 Reading

Strands & Standards Reference Guide for World Languages

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

Transcription:

Teacher s Notes Description Participants explore the possible sources for supplementary materials to use in the classroom, as well as reasons for supplementing coursebook materials. They then discuss ways of selecting and adapting supplementary materials The selection and use of supplementary materials and activities is tested in TKT Module 2 Part 2. Time required: Materials required: 50 minutes Participant s Worksheet 1 (cut or folded in half, one for each participant) Participant s Worksheet 2 (one for each participant) Sample Task (one for each participant) ims: To consider types of supplementary materials and activities Procedure To provide an opportunity for participants to discuss reasons for using, selecting and adapting supplementary materials To provide practice in completing tasks in which the selection and use of supplementary materials is the testing focus 1. (15 minutes) sk participants: What do we call books, Ds, DVDs and other material teachers bring to the class as extra material/activities to use instead of (or as well as) material in the coursebooks? Elicit supplementary materials and/or write it on the board. In pairs, participants brainstorm and each make a list of all the supplementary materials they can name. 2. When participants have finished, number the pairs and. Put all of the s together to form a group and all of the s together to form another group (if the groups are very large divide them again). Participants share their lists of supplementary materials. 3. Give out Participant s Worksheet 1 Exercise 1 (cut or fold the worksheet first). Participants compare the list with their answers. Tell them that the selection and use of supplementary materials and activities is a syllabus area tested in TKT Module 2 Part 2. 4. (10 minutes) In pairs, participants discuss the reasons for using supplementary materials and activities. They can refer back to their lists from Step 2, discussing what the materials could be used for. 5. Give out or unfold Participant s Worksheet 1 Exercise 2 to compare the reasons given there with their own reasons. use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

6. (10 minutes) Give out Participant s Worksheet 2. Participants continue working in pairs and answer the 3 questions on the worksheet for each activity from supplementary materials. heck answers together (see key below). 7. (10 minutes) Give out Sample Task. Participants complete the sample task on their own, then compare their answers with a partner. heck answers together (see key below). 8. (5 minutes) Round up to summarise points covered. sk participants: What is the TKT Module 2 syllabus area for this lesson? (the selection and use of supplementary materials and activities) What is the testing focus on this syllabus area? (types of supplementary materials and activities, reasons for use and how to select and adapt) What types of supplementary materials have you used as a teacher and as a learner? (allow participants to share opinions) Which did you find the most useful? (allow participants to share opinions) use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

nswer Keys Key to Participant s Worksheet 2 Exercise 1 What type of supplementary activity is it? Where is it from? What is the teacher s aim/ reason for choosing it? 1. Grammar exercise book with language practice activities, or website, or resource book/workbook to provide additional practice in tenses 2. Speaking activity and narrative writing activity book with skills activities to provide additional fluency practice and narrative writing practice 3. Speaking activity book with skills activities to provide fluency practice in the form of a game 4. vocabulary exercise vocabulary practice book or website to teach vocabulary in the lexical set fruit 5. role play/dialogue book with skills activities to provide additional practice of language taught earlier 6. intonation/ pronunciation 7. listening comprehension 8. reading comprehension pronunciation practice book or website D newspaper, magazine or website to provide additional practice of intonation to provide practice in listening for detail using authentic material to provide practice in listening for gist using authentic material Key to Sample Task 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

Participant s Worksheet 1 Exercise 1 Examples of supplementary materials and their uses Websites on the internet for practice activities on grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation practice Websites on the internet for games, puzzles and quizzes to provide extra fun activities Ds with songs for extra listening material Newspapers and magazines, and articles on the internet, for authentic reading texts ooks with skills activities like reading listening speaking or writing for extra skills material ooks with language practice activities or exercises for extra language practice material DVDs of movies or TV programmes for authentic practice of listening and context setting Resource books that come with student s books in coursebook packs for extra skills and language practice material Graded readers for extensive reading material oard games like Scrabble, Monopoly, to provide practice in a fun way omputer games for extra practice material Exercise 2 Reasons for using supplementary materials to add variety to lessons to provide extra practice in grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation to provide extra practice in skills work (speaking, listening, reading or writing) to replace material in the coursebook that the teacher thinks is unsuitable to add something that seems to be missing from the coursebook to respond to learners requests for materials with a particular focus/topic to include fun activities to include more authentic material in lessons use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

Participant s Worksheet 2 Look at the examples of activities from supplementary materials. For each activity say: a) What type of supplementary activity is it? b) Where is it from? c) What is the teacher s reason for choosing it? 1. Write out the sentences, using the most appropriate tense or form of the verb in brackets. 2. Working in groups of two or three, look at the following eight photographs, and choose at least six of them. rrange these in an order that makes a good story. Discuss the development of the story in the group, and invent any details that you need. Then, working individually, write the story. 3. Work in groups of five or six. Each member of the group tells a story that is either completely true or completely false. The other members of the group must decide whether they think the story is true or not. 4. The following are all types of fruit. Fill in the correct words under each picture. 5. You are student. You see an advertisement for an apartment to rent in the newspaper and decide to phone up about it. Student owns the flat. You begin like this: Good morning. I m phoning about the apartment. 6. Listen to these dialogues. Mark the boxes where the intonation goes down when the speaker is simply answering a question. Mark the boxes where the intonation goes up when the speaker is asking a question. 7. Listen to the song and fill in the gaps in the transcript. 8. Read the articles from the lso in the news section and say what they have in common. use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

Sample Task For questions 1 7 look at the supplementary materials for elementary learners and the three possible ideas for exploiting them. Two of the ideas are appropriate in each situation. One of the ideas is NOT appropriate. Mark the idea (, or ) which is NOT appropriate on your answer sheet. 1 The material would be useful for practising present simple questions. prepositions of time. reported speech. 2 The activity would probably work well with teenagers. young children. young adults. 3 The context would revise the vocabulary of places in town. free time activities. train travel. 4 The materials would be suitable for practising requesting. making plans. giving permission. 5 The materials would give practice in reading for gist. reading for specific information. reading for detail. 6 The activity would require the following interaction patterns: pairwork. class mingle. individual work. 7 Useful pre-teaching for this task could include telling the time. giving directions. expressing ability. use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions

use provided no charge is made. For further information see our Terms and onditions