2014 primary roles in elementary english education
1. Primary Roles in Elementary
English Education
Foreign Language Activities
2014 Training Seminar
by Adrian Heinel
ALT, Kakegawa Board of Education
2. What is a role?
The purpose, function, or expected behavior of
someone or something in a given situation.
3. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
8. “The Zone” and Scaffolding
Teacher
Student
Student
Learning
9. What is the difference between
young learners and VERY young
learners?
8-14
5-7
10. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
12. What kind of games should we use?
1. Age appropriate games
2. Games they are familiar with
3. Stirring and settling games
4. Simple games
13. Stereo game, Gesture games (in teams), Blackboard sports games,
Evolution (gokiburi) game, Relay games, Shiritori, Karuta, Doubt, Crossfire,
Holiday event games, Bingo, Janken games, Simon says,
Listen and do/move/put in order/identify/take away/odd one out/choose/sort,
Guessing games, Find the difference, Pictionary, What’s missing, Three balls,
Quiz games, Dynamite games, Stand and shout, Go fish, Interview games,
Memory/Concentration, Old Maid (babanuki), Who am I games,
Keyword games(Hajiki/tiddlywinks), Partner find games(or Nakama atsume),
Card collecting games, Fruit basket, Slowly uncover, Crash janken,
Board games, Sticky fingers, What’s in the bag, Ultra Quiz, Clothesline,
Memorize the order, Onomatopoeia games, What time is it Mr. Wolf,
Blackboard slap, Look run say and draw, Draw and say, Crafts,
Make a monster, What’s on your back battle or cooperative,
Newspaper sumo, Role playing, Secret order (make a line), Drawing chain,
Hide and guess/find, More and more round the circle, Circle conversations,
Toss say and take, Aisatsu relay or Aisatsu bakudan game
What kind of games should we
use?
Which games do I use!?
14. • Stereo Game
• Simon Says
• Ultra Quiz
• Circle Conversations
• Nakama Atsumare
• Relay Games
• Quiz Game
• Crossfire
• Aisatsu relay
• Gesture games
• Crash Janken
• Keyword game
• What’s Missing
• 3 balls
• Karuta
• Partner Find
• Concentration
• Bingo Games
• Dynamite Game
• Go Fish
No Preparation Some Preparation
15. 1. Circle conversations
2. Crossfire
3. 3 Balls
4. Stereo Game
5. Quiz Games
6. Keyword Games
7. Nakama Atsumare
8. Hajiki Games
9. Simon Says
10. Karuta
11. What’s missing
12. Crash Janken
• Listen and Notice
9 , 8 , 10
• Listen and Try Saying
6 , 4 , 11, 2, 10, 7, 3
• Practice Saying
4 , 12 , 7, 3
• Use
1 , 2 , 5
Notice – Try – Practice - Use
16. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
17. Why do we use resources and materials?
1. They are student centered
2. They can be shared
3. They can be used many ways
4. They help with group/pair work
18. What kind of resources and
materials should we use?
19. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
20. When and how should we teach
classroom English?
1. Make it meaningful and
purposeful, teach it when they
need it
2. Use body language or Japanese
3. Teach a little at a time
21. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
23. How should we teach pronunciation?
Minimal Pairs: SHE SEA
Odd one out: SHE SHOE DOG
Listen for the sound:
SHE SOLD SEA SHELLS DOWN BY
THE SEA SHORE.
Which word begins with “SH”
SEA, SIT, SHE
25. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
26. Why use songs and chants?
1. Aids vocabulary
2. Students learn chunks
3. Enjoyable
4. Memorable
5. Cultural
28. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
30. How do we use stories?
1. Small part of class
2. Read same story many times
3. Let students join in
4. Use kamishibai/puppets/act
5. Ask students what happens next
6. Pre-teach some words
31. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
33. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
38. Again, how do we link and sequence?
1. From listening to speaking
2. From easier to harder
3. Recycle content
4. Build on past knowledge about
the world
39. 10 Roles
1. The role of age.
2. The role of games.
3. The role of resources.
4. The role of classroom English.
5. The role of pronunciation.
6. The role of music.
7. The role of story telling.
8. The role of team teaching.
9. The role of linking and sequencing.
10. The role of evaluation and assessment.
40. How should we evaluate our classes?
1. Were the learners focused?
2. Did they enjoy the lesson?
3. Did they learn the material?
4. Was English used to
communicate?
5. Was there a clear goal?
41. How should students be assessed?
1. Self evaluation
2. Speaking / listening tests
3. Projects / presentations
4. Teacher’s subjective
assessment
5. Peer subjective assessment
6. Combination of all of the above
42. By the way, what are the objectives of
the Foreign Language Activities?
1. Increase students communication abilities
through the use of foreign languages.
2. Develop understanding of languages and
cultures through various experiences.
3. Foster a positive attitude toward
communication
4. Familiarize students with sounds and
expressions of foreign languages.