1 / 44

Customizing Teaching by Developing Appropriate Materials

Customizing Teaching by Developing Appropriate Materials. Carlos Lizárraga. Why customize ?. Customize: to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference, e.g. to customize an automobile (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/customize). Why customize ?.

ulric-chen
Download Presentation

Customizing Teaching by Developing Appropriate Materials

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. CustomizingTeachingbyDevelopingAppropriateMaterials Carlos Lizárraga

  2. Whycustomize? • Customize: to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference, e.g. to customize an automobile (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/customize)

  3. Whycustomize? • Customize: to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference, e.g. to customize an automobile (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/customize)

  4. Whycustomize? • Customize: to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference, e.g. to customize an automobile (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/customize)

  5. Thelegacy of CLT • Meaningful communication • Fluency & accuracy • Innovation and variety • Integrated skills development • Scientific body of knowledge

  6. DissatisfactionwithMethod • One-size-fits-all, cookie-cutter approach • Top-down processes • Emphasis on technical aspects of teaching • Teacher as a technician

  7. PostmethodCondition • Bottom-up process • Reconfiguration of theorizer and practitioner • Practitioners generate location-specific, classroom-oriented innovative strategies

  8. Anideologicalawakening • Critical pedagogy • Teachers as transformative intellectuals • Sociocultural relevance • Global consciousness

  9. Availablematerials • Textbooks • Reflect “a social construction that may be imposed on teachers and students and that indirectly constructs their view of a culture.” (Cortazzi and Jin, 1999) • Spread globally = not grounded in local sociocultural milieu • Changing, but not quite there yet

  10. Whatto do? • Teaching English as an International Language (TEIL) • An international language: one which is used by people of different nations to communicate with one another. Smith (1976) quoted by McKay (2002)

  11. TEIL – Assumptions (McKay 2002) • English is used globally for international communication, and locally as a language of wider communication within multilingual societies. • The use of English is no longer connected to the culture of Inner Circle countries. • English becomes embedded in the culture of the country in which it is used. • As English is an international language in a global sense, one of its primary functions is to enable speakers to share with others their ideas and culture.

  12. TEIL – Assumptions (McKay 2002) • English is used globally for international communication, and locally as a language of wider communication within multilingual societies. • The use of English is no longer connected to the culture of Inner Circle countries. • English becomes embedded in the culture of the country in which it is used. • As English is an international language in a global sense, one of its primary functions is to enable speakers to share with others their ideas and culture.

  13. TransformativeIntellectuals • Situate the class in the words, concerns, and experience of the students. • Are sensitive to pluralism. • Are concerned with the affective dimension of human beings.

  14. Cultural content • L2 culture • L1 culture • Global culture Cortazzi and Jin (1999) quoted by Kumaravadivelu (2003)

  15. What’smissing? • L1 culture • L2 culture • Global culture Cortazzi and Jin (1999) quoted by Kumaravadivelu (2003)

  16. L1 CultureMaterials • Which themes could we teach our students?

  17. SampleThemes • Celebrations • Violence at school  • Crime and public welfare • Urban tragedies: accidents, kidnappings, insecurity • Urban tribes • Poverty and its consequences • Teenage Suicide • Rites of passage • Public transportation • New technologies • Cyber bullying • Regional endangered species • History of tango

  18. Developingourown material • Finding a suitable text • Producing a text • Designing the lesson plan

  19. Finding a suitabletext

  20. http://www.buenosairesherald.com/ http://www.argentinaindependent.com/

  21. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/argentina http://m24digital.com

  22. Producing a text • Simplification • Adaptation • Producing the text from L1 sources

  23. SIMPLIFICATION of authentic texts

  24. Ragan’scriticismtosimplification Drawbacks Potential Benefits

  25. Strategiestosimplify a text (Alex Ragan and D. Young) • Substitution of technical or infrequent vocabulary • Shortening sentences • Deletion or rephrasing of idiomatic expressions • Restructuring sentences to reduce complexity, i.e. using simpler syntax.

  26. Characteristics of elementarytexts • Genre • Text structure • Language and literary features • Sentence complexity • Illustrations and graphics

  27. Substitution of technicalorinfrequentvocabulary ORIGINAL: A new conditiondubbed "Facebook depression" mayaffectteenagerswhospend a significantamount of time onthe social-networkingsite, researcherswarned in thelatestissue of PediatricsJournal. SIMPLIFIED: Thereis a new conditioncalled "Facebook depression”, which can affectteenagerswhospend a longtime onthe social network, scientistssay.

  28. TextAdaptation

  29. Producing a text from L1 sources

  30. Let’sdesignourLesson Plan!

  31. From Omaggio, A. Phillips’ 5 stages for lesson planning 1) PRE-TEACHING / PREPARATION STAGE: Anticipation and prediction. • Activities: • Brainstorming • Lookingatvisuals, headline, titles, graphics, etc. • Predictingfromtitle or first lines

  32. 2) SKIMMING / SCANNING STAGES: Getting the gist (skimming) and locatingspecific info. (scanning) • Activities: • Identifyingtopic sentence and main ideas • Multiple choice on best paraphrase • Matchingsubtitles and paragraphs • Filling in charts • Creating headlines for different sections • Making global judgements or reacting

  33. 3) DECODING / INTENSIVE READING: Guessingmeaning of unknownwordsfromcontext. Harmeraddresses the ‘vocabulary question’

  34. 4) COMPREHENSION STAGE: • Wh-questions • True/False questions • Multiple choice • Gap-fillingexercises • Tables/charts to complete • Sorting/grouping • Sequencing • Matching

  35. Comprehension Questions • Types of comprehension questions: • Literal • Reorganization • Inference • Evaluation • Forms of questions: • Yes/No • Alternative • True or False • Wh- • Multiple choice

  36. 5) TRANSFERABLE / INTEGRATING SKILLS: Exercises to go beyond the confines of the specific passage. Afterinteractingwith the text, Ss argue, reflect on content and givetheir point of view. • Summarizing • Discussing • Relatingtopics to own reality • Think-pair-share • Responsejournals • Extension activities of variouskinds

  37. SampleLessonPlans

  38. Suicide: Today’s World Epidemic • Patagonian Brothers’ Adventurous Jobs • The Coquena Legend • El Apóstol – The First Animated Film • The Family Dog – An Urban Myth • Of Trees and Men - South American Bonsais • Pato, Our National Sport

  39. Usefultips • Collaborative work • Brainstorm to select theme, and types of text • Search for texts • Divide up the task • “There are no problems we cannot solve together, and very few that we can solve by ourselves.” –Lyndon Johnson

More Related