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egwidener

Joined: 13 May 2007 Posts: 43 Location: China
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Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2007 10:18 pm Post subject: Kindergarten KONFUSION! |
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I'm starting to teach Kindergarten lessons tomorrow...I've done it a bit in the past, but only a bit. My problem is that I have a book with almost no information, just a general idea for me to form a lesson on (this part is OK), however, I'm looking at Lesson 7 and it's just the "one, two buckle my shoe" song...how do you make a lesson of this...just teach the song or do a "numbers" door-shutting, shoe-buckling, stick-picking identification lesson?
Maybe I am over thinking this... |
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kev7161
Joined: 06 Feb 2004 Posts: 5880 Location: Suzhou, China
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Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2007 10:34 pm Post subject: |
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How long is your class? If it's kindergarten I'm going to guess . . . 30 minutes? Let's see:
1. Teach them the song, of course, with proper pronunciation
2. Teach them the movements to the song
3. With pictures or drawings, identify the different things in the song: shoes, door, sticks, practice pronunciation, use the words in othe sentences . . .
4. Think of other things you can substitute in the original song: "One, two button my shirt, Three, four, shut the window . . . " It doesn't have to rhyme.
5. Have small groups come to the front (after song is learned) and sing along while the others, uh, watch. Or better yet, have each group sing one part of the song, then it passes to the next group, then the next . . .
6. Have a worksheet of pictures and words from the song they can color.
Well, that's a few ideas. Of course, if your class is around 30 minutes, there is no way you can use all those ideas in one day - - one week, maybe. |
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Anda

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 2199 Location: Jiangsu Province
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 1:34 am Post subject: Um |
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| When you are teaching little kids remember they like to copy you doing funny things like saying funny sounds and body movements gestures etc. Build fun into your lesson otherwise you will bore them. |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 3:27 am Post subject: |
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Here�s the text to that rhyme -
One two buckle my shoe
Three, four, knock at the door
Five, six, pick up sticks
Seven, eight, lay them straight
Nine, ten, a big fat hen
Eleven, twelve, dig and delve
Thirteen, fourteen, maids a-courting
Fifteen, sixteen, maids in the kitchen
Seventeen, eighteen, maids in waiting
Nineteen, twenty, my plate's empty
I think native-speaking kindy kids would have problems understanding some of the language used here!! Any western kindy teacher would use these types of rhymes as an introduction for small Children into the world of music - where a lot of attention is used on rhythm, beat and musical/body expression/interpretation � where you can also add into it a simple counting excercise.
Trying to add this kind of material into basic English learning for Chinese kindy kids just muddies the water - and shows just how out of touch most English teaching material is for this age group. As for stuff like teaching pronunciation - well if you don't understand what your saying what�s the point of pronouncing it any way whatsoever!!!!! So with the pronunciation part focus on the stuff that�s important � the numbers - much of the rest of it is useless � unless the kindy really insists that they want their kids to be able to spout out in perfect Oxford English stuff like � �maids a-courting�
If your bosses insist you have to teach this type of material - then the most important is to teach counting up to 20 around the song - so that the kids enjoy themselves. Then at best - even though 99.9% of the class will not have learnt anything that is directly relevant to being able to build an English conversation based on that old nutmeg of mutual understanding within a two-ways communication - they at least will go away from the lesson feeling it was a fun event, which can equate to liking English that may one day serve as a catalyst to future English acquisition - something that is greatly aided when students gradually go through their schooling obtaining a feeling of like rather than loathing for the subject!!!!
Remember the real purposes of this type of lesson are -
1. Producing a product - little Wang goes home and sings the song and the Wang family are fooled into thinking he's learning English
2. Having a textbook for the children - thus making the parent have to buy this and all the VCD's that go with it - producing extra revenue.
3. Displaying a white teacher doing the kind of the tricks the bosses want 'em to do - asking FT's to come all the way to China to teach this type of krap - really is roll out the monkey time!!!!
By the way on a more constructive note - google up kindergarten counting games - then you have a wealth of material for producing worthwhile counting lessons that will aid English acquisition - but I'm sure your bosses wouldn't approve  |
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Steppenwolf
Joined: 30 Jul 2006 Posts: 1769
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 5:23 am Post subject: |
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| Try to keep your kiddies in motion! THey hate sitting down for whole lessons, and they need to move around! You can act out parts of that song, and you can act in other ways too. Think of the TPR methodology! |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 5:45 am Post subject: |
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If you really want to act this rhyme out (TPR) then it would be far easier if it were edited to include more relevant language (after all think of how you're going TPR bits like - the maids a-courting) - maybe you could change it into something more in the mould of -
One two tie my shoe
Three, four, knock at the door
Five, six, pick up bricks
Seven, eight, the bricks are straight
Nine, ten, a big black pen
Eleven, twelve, book on the shelf
Thirteen, fourteen, children singing
Fifteen, sixteen, cooks in the kitchen
Seventeen, eighteen, children eating
Nineteen, twenty, my bowl's empty
At least here you have a bit more useful vocab - and more easy to make understandable flashcards to go with the words.
But the again this text deviates from that in the textbook - and as the rhyme goes onto say -
twenty one, twenty two, one more Ft in the poo |
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SheZook
Joined: 31 Jan 2006 Posts: 187
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 6:15 am Post subject: |
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But then again this text deviates from that in the textbook - and as the rhyme goes onto say -
twenty one, twenty two, one more Ft in the poo |
ROFL! Oh so funny but so, so true - if you are working in a language training centre that is. At a public kindy there's a bit more leeway but not much. Why not try to adapt a few of the lessons and present your ideas to the boss first - explain why it might be more beneficial this way. Certainly use the textbook as a guide (ie. if they have to learn a counting song either use the adjusted version vikuk suggested or find a more up-to-date song). If you explain that "this is what western children are learning these days" it might go over better (or maybe not depending on the boss) but it's worth a try.
I teach senior high school kids now but have worked at a kindy in China before. I told my boss that the textbook was rubbish and mostly irrelevant (half-expecting/hoping to get the boot as I was frustrated) and she gave me full-reign to teach what I wanted (within reason of course). I just had to meet with her at the beginning of each week and go through what I wanted to do. No problem, so long as I used some of the textbook ideas/themes (so parents didn't complain about wasted money) and the rest of the term was fun. |
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lychee
Joined: 14 May 2007 Posts: 109
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 7:16 am Post subject: |
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Vicuk you got it in a nutshell.
My brief time in kindy ( I broke out in a very serious rash).
For unit 5, page 3 of Kids Castle English textbooks dealing with the serious issue of health.
I taught them, Miss Polly had a dolly who was sick sick sick and so on.
I had the props.
One verse was enough to cover all the material in the Unit.
For their exams I would place flashcards around the room and ask them where is the orange etc. So I know they have understood.
Hats off to all kindy teachers especially the Chinese kindy teachers. It is a tough gig |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 7:18 am Post subject: |
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When looking at the rhyme - an experienced language FT - one whose job it is to support small children during their English learning process - can see that for kindy kids at the very start of English language acquisition - there are at least 10 lessons packed away in version 2 - a lesson for each line.
Just take line number one of the altered rhyme - One two tie my sh | | |