1 / 22

Korean 135 Beginning Korean for heritage learners

Korean 135 Beginning Korean for heritage learners. Joyhanna Yoo Garza ( joyhannayoo@gmail.com ) Soohee Kim (soohee.kim@gmail.com). Korean 135 Beginning Korean for heritage learners. Hybrid class

field
Download Presentation

Korean 135 Beginning Korean for heritage learners

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners JoyhannaYooGarza (joyhannayoo@gmail.com) SooheeKim (soohee.kim@gmail.com)

  2. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Hybrid class • Two days’ worth (2 x 50 minutes) of online assignments and activities for scaffolding & reinforcement (low stakes!) • Three 50-minute in-class meetings for cultural affirmation, socio-linguistic lessons and practice activities • Students • Heritage students placed by self-assessment, background survey, and an individual face-to-face interview, : Mostly Novice High ~ Intermediate Low with a few Intermediate High(ACTFL OPI - performing at sentence level surrounding me & my family)

  3. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Course objective • Cultural affirmation and rapport building • Reading speed and comprehension improvement • Vocabulary expansion an building • Confidence in functional Korean (e.g. orthography, basic conjugation, markers, verbal endings) • Proficiency in socio-pragmatic aspects of the language (e.g. use of honorifics, different levels and styles in speech and writing) • Preparation for connected thinking, paragraph-level writing

  4. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Theme of the week: Food • Student interest • Korean movies, dramas, K-POP • Familiarity with the culture and vocabulary • Good for cultural bonding; Smooth transition to broader, higher-level vocabulary • More time for grammar foundation & practice • Practical, authentic! • Material • Recent cable TV drama clips focused on and devoted to eating

  5. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners

  6. Drama Let’s Eat – Teaser (Monday)

  7. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Activity 1 - Building rapport • What stands out most to you in this teaser? • Activity 2 - Building rapport (cont.): Watch two other video clips and discuss • What did the mother call her daughter? What was/is your “nickname?” • What is food to Koreans? (Give one word that describes what food means to you: love, medicine, connection, etc.)

  8. 식샤를합시다 (라면 & 집밥 먹방) 생선

  9. 식샤를합시다 (라면 & 집밥 먹방) 떡볶이

  10. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Activity 3 - Bringing awareness to sentence-endings • Watch the teaser again, this time, looking for any writings you recognize; Write them down, then check with a partner. (Can be submitted as an exit card.)

  11. Drama Let’s Eat – Teaser (Monday)

  12. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Activity 4 - speech levels and styles • Do you know when to say each of these? Check your familiarity and give a simple situation or an example. Who might says these to whom? (5=most certain); (KWL – exit card)

  13. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Activity 5 - Use the experts! • Teacher spot-checks with a show of hands for those with most 4’s and 5’s and creates 3-4 centers with the experts. Less advanced students visit one center and hear explanations, complete their write-example task in a different color pen. • (Less advanced students will see a lot more situations and real-life examples online to learn the nuances and usage differences between different endings – still all passive discerning and no actual “conjugation tests”) • Activity 6 - Korean-American identity building • What do you see that is a typical Korean eating style in the following clip?

  14. 식샤를합시다 (라면 & 집밥 먹방)

  15. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Activity 6 (cont.) • What is typical “American” eating etiquette? • Have you been embarrassed by your family’s Korean eating style or do you have experience being picked out and teased because of your way of enjoying food? How did/does that make you feel? What did/do you do? • Activity 7 - reading practice, vocabulary building • Write the names of the dishes you recognize in the following video in Korean. • Find someone who knows the name of the food you have never had and ask him/her about its ingredients; write them down. (Can be submitted as an exit card.)

  16. 식샤를합시다 (라면 & 집밥 먹방)

  17. Online & activities for other days • Who do you think each of the following ads are targeting? • How can you tell? What would happen if you used different endings?

  18. Online & activities for other days • Group activity (teacher-graded, medium stake assessment; rubric provided) • Form groups of 3 and either create an advertisement for a product of your choice or write a menu with a description for each dish (your restaurant specializes in only 2-3 dishes) • Role play (peer-graded, medium stake assessment) • Red card: You are a recently hired waiter/waitress in this restaurant. Welcome a pair of customers and take their orders (Be sure to use a humble form so you won’t get fired!) • Green card: You are a customer at this restaurant. Order what you would like. (18 yrs old) • Yellow card: You are a customer at this restaurant. Order what you would like. (46 yrs old) • Tale of two restaurants • Survey to find out your classmates’ top two restaurants near the university. Find out why and the price of each person’s favorite food.

  19. Online & activities for other days • Tale of two restaurants: http://www.firegop.com/

  20. Online & activities for other days • Tale of two restaurants: http://wowmiodio.blog.me/220031396658 • Many Korean sites with pop up ads: Force students to navigate pages or continue reading to mine relevant information good practice!) • http://www.naver.com/ Type in 맛집 in the 검색창

  21. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners • Assessments • Diagnostic • For the course: placement interview, survey, self-assessment • For classroom activities: KWL chart card • Formative • Continuing online work (formative, low- to medium-stake assessments) • In class: “Can you recall what you read?” “Are you familiar with these endings?” • Summative • Peer-graded role-play activity; teacher-graded menu/ad-making activity • One written test either online or in class on levels, verb conjugation (high stake)

  22. Korean 135Beginning Korean for heritage learners

More Related