1 / 17

Fostering a student-centered classroom to maintain student interest and participation

Fostering a student-centered classroom to maintain student interest and participation . Abigail Bruhlmann English Language Fellow CELI (Center for English Language Immersion) 27 th Annual Panama TESOL Congress September 21-22, 2013 . Student-Centered vs. Teacher-Fronted.

penn
Download Presentation

Fostering a student-centered classroom to maintain student interest and participation

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. Fostering a student-centered classroom to maintain student interest and participation Abigail Bruhlmann English Language Fellow CELI (Center for English Language Immersion) 27th Annual Panama TESOL Congress September 21-22, 2013

  2. Student-Centeredvs. Teacher-Fronted • Teacher-fronted classrooms: • Teacher is the “sage on the stage” • Student-Centered classrooms: • Teacher is the “guide on the side”

  3. Why is a student-centered classroom important? • -Lessons more interesting • -Lessons more memorable • -Students held accountable for their learning • -Enables more informal assessment • -Caters to different learning styles

  4. Student expectations • Prevailing “student is an empty vessel to be filled with knowledge by teacher” model? • Students may be used to a teacher-fronted classroom • Teacher must explain concept of student-centered classroom • Students might need some time to adjust

  5. 1. Needs Analysis • Who are your students? • What do they want to learn? • How do they want to learn? • Why are theystudying English?

  6. 2. Throw things at your students • Stuffed animal ball toss to self-regulate participation

  7. Grammar quiz –subject/verb agreement • 1. I love/lovesteaching English. • 2. Why do students use/usestheir phones in class? • 3. One of my students give/gives me an apple every day. • 4. The teachers is/arelearning a lot at the Panama TESOL Congress. • 5. What a relief that this activity is/areover!

  8. 3. Use interesting material • If you are bored, the students will be too • Use material relevant to the students’ lives • Ex) Facebook posts, Twitter feeds, articles about their country/city • Don´t use thetextbookexclusively • Ridiculouswebsites?

  9. Ridiculous websites! • www.theoatmeal.com • Funny (edgy) grammar and punctuationcartoons • www.hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com • Funny, illustrated, autobiographical blog • www.urbandictionary.com • Slangdictionary

  10. 4. Personalize content • Use students’ names/life experiences in example sentences • Sally took a bus totheconference. vs. • Diego took a Diablo Rojo tothe TESOL Congress.

  11. 5. Use student-generated materials • If you want to have students describe a picture, use a picture of your students vs.

  12. 6. Change partners often feel • Students get to know all their classmates • Match-ups to reinforce class content: • Vocabulary words and definitions • Pronunciation minimal pairs • Questions and responses ship wheel fill sheep will

  13. 7. Involve the students in grammar explanations • The Question Hand: • Great for teachingquestion structure • Have the students trace their own hand (Question Hand courtesyof AaronCorbin)

  14. 8. Use manipulatives to reinforce concepts • Vocabulary review in partners/small groups: • “Memory” game • Hang the spider • Partner fill-in-the-blank • Chainstories P , A , F _______ ___E____ _______ ___O___ ___L___

  15. 9. Givestudentsresourcestopracticeoutside of class • Studentstakecharge of theirownlearning • Share infotheydiscoverwiththeclass

  16. Other ideas?

  17. Thank you! • Abigail Bruhlmann • abigailb@celionline.com • abigail.bruhlmann@gmail.com

More Related