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		klement
 
 
  Joined: 15 Jan 2006 Posts: 10
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 11:10 am    Post subject: AEON interview - conversation vs. vocab | 
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				I have an interview with AEON in two weeks, and the demo lesson only gives a very vague objective:
 
 
"teach a lesson focusing on english conversation"..
 
 
 
does this require me to teach a dialogue type conversation 
 
 
eg. "how are you?" "good, and yourself" etc etc...
 
 
or do you think it would be okay if i taught vocab - in particular, i wanted to make my demo lesson about animals, but wasn't sure if this is classified as "english conversation" | 
			 
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		guest of Japan
 
  
  Joined: 28 Feb 2003 Posts: 1601 Location: Japan
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 12:03 pm    Post subject:  | 
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				Teach functional English for a communicative situation.   A conversation about animals is really only good for zookeepers.  Useful situations include: restaurants, stores, hotels, business meetings, customs. on the airplane, in a taxi, subway, hotel, bus (are you getting bored yet?).
 
 
Focus on the vocabuary and grammar necessary to succeed in one of these situations.  The show an example dialog from that situation.  Then have a role play portraying that situation.    Review the key points, pat yourself on the back and get through the rest of the interview process. | 
			 
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		Temujin
 
 
  Joined: 14 Sep 2005 Posts: 90 Location: Osaka
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 9:02 pm    Post subject:  | 
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				They will ask for 80% student talking time, which is very difficult to pull off in a demo lesson so design it with that in mind.  Keep it functional and go for style over substance.
 
 
I had an activity where the "students" got up and asked each other questions based on a handout I had prepared.  I hardly said a word - I just introduced the activity and then watched them get on with it.  I was successful in this stage of the interview and my lesson certainly went down a lot better than the more teacher centred lessons. | 
			 
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		angiestar
 
  
  Joined: 16 Mar 2006 Posts: 17 Location: shiroi-shi, chiba prefecture, japan
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				 Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:49 am    Post subject:  | 
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	  | Temujin wrote: | 
	 
	
	  | I had an activity where the "students" got up and asked each other questions based on a handout I had prepared.  I hardly said a word - I just introduced the activity and then watched them get on with it.  I was successful in this stage of the interview and my lesson certainly went down a lot better than the more teacher centred lessons. | 
	 
 
 
 
Great idea!  (I have an interview coming up on Sunday and I'm scared as hell.) | 
			 
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		Jazz1975
 
 
  Joined: 14 Feb 2006 Posts: 301 Location: Zama, Kanagawa
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				 Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2006 5:05 am    Post subject:  | 
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	  | Temujin wrote: | 
	 
	
	  | I had an activity where the "students" got up and asked each other questions based on a handout I had prepared.  I hardly said a word - I just introduced the activity and then watched them get on with it.  I was successful in this stage of the interview and my lesson certainly went down a lot better than the more teacher centred lessons. | 
	 
 
 
 
I've thought about something like this as well.  Mind you, I had a few ideas, but this will probably work best if they're expecting 80% student talking time.  Come to think about it, I can adapt my activity to fit this format.  Now let me just get an invite first for an interview... | 
			 
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