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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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summer33ny
Joined: 10 Aug 2006
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 7:51 pm Post subject: High School Summer Classes |
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I will be teaching summer classes for my high school students 4-5 classes a day for 4 weeks...
This is not a one week summer camp where I can show movies the whole time. I have to pick out textbooks according to the various levels of students and make several new lessons plans everyday for each grade and level I am teaching!
I am excited to have classes full of my best students who have chosen to take my class. I enjoy my students and I am glad to weed out the ones who are unmotivated or whose abiltities are too low. But this a lot of work!!!
For anyone in the same boat, I am wondering what do you have planned????
I bought one textbook "Small Group Discussions for Korean High School Students". I thought it was the greatest. Simple readings about issues relevant for Korean students that we could then discuss! I like the idea of a "free talking" class. But my co-teacher for some reason does not approve of this. And I also found out that I will have over 20 students per class! Much bigger than a small discussion group. She suggested some really lame & dull textbooks that I have no desire to use... so I rather not have any book in that case.
Anyone else have experience with this? How are you structuring your classes? Textbooks your using? etc. |
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moptop
Joined: 05 Jul 2005 Location: Gangwondo
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 8:29 pm Post subject: high school class |
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I would suggest a more structured approach if this is what your korean teacher is looking for. some good books for this are "Talk Your Head Off (...and write,too)" by Branna Rish West, ISBN # 0134762010. it has Vocabulary, Usage (activies), Listening, A conversation question section, and surveys, activities, and comprehension at the back of each topic.
for lower level students, you could use "A Conversation Book: English in Everyday Life 4th Ed." by Tina Kasloff Carver and Sandra D. Fotinos-Riggs. ISBN # 0131500457. it has a mini-picture dictionary at the beginning of each topic, practice conversations, activities, chants, and fill in the blanks.
some other good books are:
"More Picture Stories" by Fred Ligon, Elizabeth Tannenbaum, and Carol Richardson Rodgers. ISBN # 0801308399. it has units that give pictures for students to describe, and you can pre-teach a lot of vocab and have them match it to the picture stories and make sentences. there is ordering, comprehension questions, re-writing the stories in your own words, activities, etc.
Also the "Can you Believe it?" series is good. by Jann Huizenga. ISBN # 0194372758. there are 3 leveled books. there is a short article with idions and expressions, a "comic strip" where students use the expressions, comprehension quesions, discussion questions, and a fill-in-the-blanks to practice. it can easily be adapted for different levels.
hope these help! |
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Yu_Bum_suk

Joined: 25 Dec 2004
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 8:33 pm Post subject: |
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Are these 4-5 different classes a day or the same students for 4-5 blocks a day? |
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summer33ny
Joined: 10 Aug 2006
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 10:17 pm Post subject: |
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These are 4-5 different classes for 50 minutes each day. It will be the same students everyday. |
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oldfatfarang
Joined: 19 May 2005 Location: On the road to somewhere.
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 10:43 pm Post subject: Re: high school class |
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moptop wrote: |
I would suggest a more structured approach if this is what your korean teacher is looking for. some good books for this are "Talk Your Head Off (...and write,too)" by Branna Rish West, ISBN # 0134762010. it has Vocabulary, Usage (activies), Listening, A conversation question section, and surveys, activities, and comprehension at the back of each topic.
for lower level students, you could use "A Conversation Book: English in Everyday Life 4th Ed." by Tina Kasloff Carver and Sandra D. Fotinos-Riggs. ISBN # 0131500457. it has a mini-picture dictionary at the beginning of each topic, practice conversations, activities, chants, and fill in the blanks.
some other good books are:
"More Picture Stories" by Fred Ligon, Elizabeth Tannenbaum, and Carol Richardson Rodgers. ISBN # 0801308399. it has units that give pictures for students to describe, and you can pre-teach a lot of vocab and have them match it to the picture stories and make sentences. there is ordering, comprehension questions, re-writing the stories in your own words, activities, etc.
Also the "Can you Believe it?" series is good. by Jann Huizenga. ISBN # 0194372758. there are 3 leveled books. there is a short article with idions and expressions, a "comic strip" where students use the expressions, comprehension quesions, discussion questions, and a fill-in-the-blanks to practice. it can easily be adapted for different levels.
hope these help! |
Wow! Thanks for the info. I've had all my beach time cancelled and I, too, am babysitting high schoolers this summer break (sob).
Are these books available in Korean stores???????????/ |
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moptop
Joined: 05 Jul 2005 Location: Gangwondo
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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 11:10 pm Post subject: books |
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yes, i bought them in seoul. i went to the express bus terminal in Gangnam and bought the "Talk your head off" at the Youngpoong Bookstore. i don't remember if they sell the others there, but you could check their website: www.ypbooks.co.kr . i would probably try the Kyobo Bookstore for all the rest. you also might be able to order them from What the Book in Itaewon. I got the "Can you believe it?" one used for 5,000 won there! |
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