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cspitzig
Joined: 01 Nov 2007 Posts: 56
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Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2011 10:01 am Post subject: TEFL books(for teaching children) |
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I've been teaching English in Taiwan for a few years. I want to improve my skills. I've read a few books about teaching, but a lot of it doesn't seem very relevant given (some of the classes') English level. All the books I get when I do searches seem to be about specific lessons. I'd like something broader than that.
Classroom management is one issue I'd like to read about. Another is how to deal with the most basic learners. At my last job, I never had students that low, and I'm the ONLY English or foreign teacher at my current school-I don't get much feedback. Also, how to make a good lesson plan-I recently took a CELTA class, but much of it is irrelevant for children. At, my last job, the lesson plans were done for me. |
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tttompatz

Joined: 06 Mar 2010 Posts: 1951 Location: Talibon, Bohol, Philippines
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cspitzig
Joined: 01 Nov 2007 Posts: 56
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Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2011 10:36 am Post subject: |
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They are Primary level. I've taught students this age, but they've always had a little higher level English. Some of these students have never had an English class.
Also, another problem is the number of students. There are 22 students in the class(though many don't come because of summer vacation). This makes a lot of the games I know not work as well. |
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tttompatz

Joined: 06 Mar 2010 Posts: 1951 Location: Talibon, Bohol, Philippines
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Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2011 11:13 am Post subject: |
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cspitzig wrote: |
They are Primary level. I've taught students this age, but they've always had a little higher level English. Some of these students have never had an English class.
Also, another problem is the number of students. There are 22 students in the class(though many don't come because of summer vacation). This makes a lot of the games I know not work as well. |
Very low level and primary age = TPR, tasked based activities, listen/see/do.
Songs with actions (appropriate to the song) Introduce basic vocabulary, follow it up with some activity that uses it and repeat yourself often.
Toss out your CELTA training and watch some of the videos on young learners - this type of student requires TEACHER centered rather than student centered learning for, depending on the specific ages, 6-16 weeks). |
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cspitzig
Joined: 01 Nov 2007 Posts: 56
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Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2011 12:18 pm Post subject: |
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It sounds like maybe the books we're using for the lower levels are not very appropriate for the age level, then. One book is a reading book, the other is a phonics book(which also focuses on handwriting). While the reading book sometimes has TPR appropriate vocabulary, the phonics book has none. The vocabulary in the phonics book is all nouns.
I've been adding one or two songs at the beginning of class(trying to make them relevant to the vocab). I'm not sure it's useful to give out copies of the songs to the phonics class-since they probably can't read them, maybe the paper is just something to play with. Actually, the songs were something my girlfriend suggested as a way to get their attention and say "it's English time!"(mentally) at the beginning of class. |
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