Objectives & Reading Week 2
Objectives & Reading Week 2
Objectives & Reading Week 2
October 7, 2011
Lesson plan Why do we need lesson plans? How detailed should a lesson plans be? How to write objectives Acceptable wording & unacceptable points
Lesson Plans
Lesson plan is a proposal for action. Some teachers allow the coursebook to do the lesson
planning for them; they take a lesson/unit and teach it as it is offered in the book. Some teachers scribble a few notes down in folders or notebooks. Some prepare detailed description of what to do, so that someone else may take the plan and teach it.
landscape: confidence For teachers in training, it is a good idea to try to follow the plan: justification
Rules
Objectives should be
Specific
Show cognitive process (not an activity) Student-centered
Observable
Address a change in students
Behavior
Condition Degree
By the end of the lesson, the students will have identified the advantages and disadvantages of living in a city after reading the text on city life.
Audience- your learners
Behavior - what you expect the students to perform Condition- under what circumstances and restrictions Degree- how much will be accomplished
By the end of the lesson, the students will have identified the advantages and disadvantages of living in a city after reading the text on city life.
(Audience) the students (Behavior) identify (Condition)
by the end of the lesson, after reading the text on city life
exemplify at least 5 vocabulary items related to environmental pollution using their own words.
Within 20-minute group work, the students will
students will have supported their ideas to reduce the crime rate in big cities.
Problematic Objectives
Students will understand the meaning of the words.
Students will be able to pick out a topic to discuss in class. The instructor will explain the effects of fossilization in learners'
language.
Goals
In bullet form, explain the general pedagogical goals
Examples: S will develop phonological awareness of the th sound. S will be familiarized with greeting expressions S will increase their familiarity with conventions of telephone conversations. Students will understand the usage of present perfect tense.
TEACHING READING
IMPORTANT CONCEPTS
TO KNOW BEFORE ONE STARTS TEACHING READING
EXTENSIVE READING
The teacher encourages the students to choose for themselves what they read for pleasure and general language improvement outside the class. The students should read materials on the topics they are interested in and materials appropriate for their level. Original fiction and non-fiction books, simplified works of literature, staged books, magazines can all be used. In order to encourage extensive reading we can build up a library for suitable books, provide them extensive reading tasks and encourage them report back on the reading in different ways.
INTENSIVE READING
It is a classroom oriented activity to have students focus on the semantic and linguistic details. In order to encourage students to read enthusiastically in class, teachers need to create interest in the topic and tasks. Teachers need to tell students the reading purpose, the instructions and time allocated. While the students are reading, the teachers may observe their progress but should not interrupt. When the teachers ask students to give answers, they should always ask them to say where in the text they found the relevant information. The teachers should focus on strategies to deal with the unknown vocabulary items.
BOTTOM-UP PROCESSING
Readers must recognize the linguistic signals (letters, syllables, words, phrases, discourse markers) This data-driven processing requires a sophisticated knowledge of the language. From the data, the reader selects the meaningful signal.
TOP-DOWN PROCESSING
Readers must refer to their own intelligence and experience to predict probable meaning and to understand a text.
This conceptually-driven processing requires readers to infer meaning. Both are important for interactive reading.
Formal schemata: what we know about the discourse structure as background knowledge.
knowledge of language and linguistic conventions, containing knowledge of how texts are structured and what the key characteristics of a particular genre of writing are (Alderson, 2000; Carrell, 1987; Carrell & Eisterhold, 1983) texts with familiar rhetorical organization should be easier to read and comprehend than texts with unfamiliar rhetorical organization (Carrell, 1987:464 revised in Etern and Razi, 2009).
The love of reading has propelled learners to successful acquisition of reading skills. The autonomy and self-esteem gained through reading strategies has been shown to be a powerful motivator.
Culture plays an important role in motivating and rewarding people for literacy.
TEACHING VOCABULARY
Pre-teaching some of the vocabulary items from the text help reading comprehension for top-down processing. Pre-teaching vocabulary helps students (i)understand the text and (ii)learn the items
Focusing on some of the vocabulary items after reading the text provides a detailed analysis of the text through bottom-up processing.
LEARNING GREEK
READ AND
. . .
GUESSING VOCABULARY
It helps readers develop strategies to do not only intensive but also extensive reading.
Oral reading helps students correspond between spoken and written English in beginner levels. It can serve as a pronunciation check activity and add some extra student participation for short reading segments in the beginner and intermediate levels It is not an authentic activity and while one student is reading, the others may easily lose attention.
SILENT READING
Silent reading allows readers interact with the text themselves. Silent reading allows students to read at their own rate and to identify more than one word at a time.
The schemata and background knowledge, and affective domain help the reader interact with the text.
Sustained silent reading develops a fluency in reading.
AUTHENTIC TEXTS
Texts that are devised in the real world. They are genuine and not prepared for teaching purposes. They can be simple or difficult.
Exploitability
Readability
They are formed through the simplification of an existing reading material. If the simplification must be done, it is important to preserve the natural redundancy, humor, wit and other features. The simplification may be useful to use a text with early proficiency levels.
LITERAL MEANING
IMPLIED MEANING
This has to be derived from processing pragmatic information through sophisticated top-down processing.
SQ3R: This is an effective procedure of reaching a text: Survey- question - read - recite and review
Check students comprehension: It is important to assess the development of students reading skills through some responses: doing , choosing from alternatives, transferring, answering questions, condensing, extending, duplicating, modeling and conversing
Predicting Activating schemata Previewing a text (Title, author, source, layout) Skimming Scanning Pre-teaching Vocabulary B. While- Reading Reading for a purpose Reading for details of the text Reading to identify the cause-effect relations, to categorize ideas, to compare-contrast C. Post-Reading Identifying the authors purpose and style Examining the language (grammar or vocabulary) A follow-up writing or speaking exercise
QUESTIONS?
AGENDA FOR NEXT WEEK
TEACHER DEMONSTRATIONS