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wix
Joined: 21 Apr 2003 Posts: 250 Location: Earth
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 10:47 am Post subject: dogme |
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I just discovered this interesting article about "dogme" which is a method of teaching English. It seems to be something like a freestyle or natural English teaching method.
Does anybody know anything more about dogme? I would be interested to have any ideas, opinions or experiences.
Related link: Yahoo! Groups: dogme |
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chinasyndrome

Joined: 17 Mar 2003 Posts: 673 Location: In the clutches of the Red Dragon. Erm...China
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 12:40 pm Post subject: |
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Hey Wix, thanks for the links. I had a look and am also curious. I hope there's someone out there who has actually taught using this method (?) consistently and can shed some light on the subject. I'll do some hunting and see if I can turn up more. Cheers. |
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leeroy
Joined: 30 Jan 2003 Posts: 777 Location: London UK
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 3:03 pm Post subject: dogme |
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Yeah, I dabbled with this a little while ago. A fellow teacher a while back was really into the idea of materials-free lessons.
Although it seems like an excellent idea on the surface, in practice I found it a little hard to implement. A bit like communism... |
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dduck

Joined: 29 Jan 2003 Posts: 422 Location: In the middle
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 4:13 pm Post subject: |
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I've just started teaching in Mexico. In some of my classes, students don't bother turning up with pen or paper and for some reason I don't understand the school seems to have a policy of not using any course books of any kind. Thank God, this doesn't happen in all my classes! I have yet to see a student bring a dictionary to class. I suspect this is teaching on the cheap cheap cheap.
It's quite interesting/terrifying creating lessons plans from thin air, I can tell you!
Iain |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 5:02 pm Post subject: |
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leeroy--how did you give the class without material. Did you improvise every day or did you have some plan? what was the level of your students?
dduck--it is amazing how little people have in other countries. here most kids get one or two pencils and they have to last a whole year. and if notebooks "cuadernos" go up in price one or two cents, it is written up in the papers. are you in a small town? |
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dduck

Joined: 29 Jan 2003 Posts: 422 Location: In the middle
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 7:48 pm Post subject: |
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PanamaTeacher wrote: |
dduck--it is amazing how little people have in other countries. here most kids get one or two pencils and they have to last a whole year. and if notebooks "cuadernos" go up in price one or two cents, it is written up in the papers. are you in a small town? |
Well, I'm in Quer�taro, which isn't that small plus some of my students are businessmen and women.
As I said above, I've just started teaching here, so even though I don't understand the school's policy I don't want to rock the boat by asking awkward questions - I look on it as a challenge
Furthermore, in this part of the world, it seems, that what Mexicans want the most is to be able to speak; like most people, they consider grammar to be a right pain. If they can learn English without having to put up with hours upon hours of grammar sessions so much the better.
I'm currently reading the dogme mailing list to figure out how to do this.
Iain |
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leeroy
Joined: 30 Jan 2003 Posts: 777 Location: London UK
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Posted: Mon Jun 30, 2003 8:12 pm Post subject: dogme |
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I think the idea stems back to the idea of students each having their own 'inbuilt curriculum', and that lesson content should evolve from the student's apparent needs, instead of saying "Today we're doing the 2nd conditional, whether you like it or not."
In essence, it is taking "student centredness" to ridiculous extremes.
Instead of, say, doing a listening on p.57 about "Mike & Julie's holiday plans", students should talk about their own holiday plans, past or future. The point being that the world of coursebooks is a fictional one, more or less irrelevant to the students and only related vaguely linked to their 'reality', whatever that may be.
Whatever a student says in the class (be it about politics, Britney Spears, or whatever) is an indication of what the student is willing to talk about, and this should be the class 'topic'.
And whatever language point the students need to communicate this idea should be the language focus of the class. Such things can't be planned as such, they just happen. This is the idea of dogme (as I understand it).
There should be nothing 'artificial' about the class, no 'props' should be used, and no b*llshit questions like "Is there a clock on the wall?". In the real world we don't do gap fills, and as the classroom should be as realistic as possible in its emulation of natural communication, neither should there be in the lesson.
I found that although it was a nice concept, often students like the idea of the teacher having something 'pre-planned'. Especially Asians, they like the idea of photocopies, of a planned lesson structure which makes them feel like the teacher knows what he/she is doing and the direction that the lesson is going to go.
We also have to follow curricula sometimes, there are tests to be passed, and sometimes (God forbid) students want teacher-led lessons. There is a discussion forum about dogme on yahoo groups. I think it's
www.groups.yahoo.com/groups/dogme
But the likes of Scott Thornbury and many others far more esteemed that myself all seem to think dogme is great, perhaps it is indeed more implementable than I perceive it to be.
(Apologies for any errors in this post, spelling or otherwise. I am half drunk and in a hurry.) |
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Dr.J

Joined: 09 May 2003 Posts: 304 Location: usually Japan
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 4:21 am Post subject: |
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This is quite interesting but...it's not the first time I've read a theory by someone who thinks he's discovered the secret of the universe.
I think he's found one piece of the puzzle behind the sofa, and gets so worked up that all the other pieces are forgotten. There is no one 'key' to teaching, there's lots and lots of little keys, one for each student.
Damn, did I just contradict myself? |
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Marcoregano

Joined: 19 May 2003 Posts: 872 Location: Hong Kong
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 4:30 am Post subject: |
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Dogme...sounds like dogma. Don't bother trying it on Asians....it'll go down like a lead balloon....splash!! |
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Sherri
Joined: 23 Jan 2003 Posts: 749 Location: The Big Island, Hawaii
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 8:56 am Post subject: |
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Can I ask a very primitive question? After reading the posts here and some articles on Dogme, I can't really find the difference between Dogme and a Type B, process syllabus. What am I missing? |
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dduck

Joined: 29 Jan 2003 Posts: 422 Location: In the middle
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 3:29 pm Post subject: Re: dogme |
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leeroy wrote: |
I found that although it was a nice concept, often students like the idea of the teacher having something 'pre-planned'. Especially Asians, they like the idea of photocopies, of a planned lesson structure which makes them feel like the teacher knows what he/she is doing and the direction that the lesson is going to go. |
I'm still trying to understand dogme. My current impression is that is about the teacher engaging his or her brain and teaching the students, not teaching the book. I read the terms "Reactive teaching" and "Proactive teaching" somewhere. It seems like common sense to me that all students learning paths won't follow the path laid out by any course book. If teachers rely on books too rigidly then the students are unlikely to be fully engaged in the lessons. I think books need to be adapted to fit the students and not the other way around.
I think dogme is about extending the scope of lessons beyond mere course books; it advocates using any authentic material as a teaching aid, as I understand it.
Iain |
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