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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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Overture1928
Joined: 12 Jan 2014
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Posted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 4:50 am Post subject: Listen Speaking Activities for Grade 8s |
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| I have a class of 6 students who have all lived abroad for at least 1-3 years. Their English is quite good. I have a 3 hour listening/speaking class with them once a week. So far we have been watching TED talk videos and taking notes/answering questions, doing a debate or speech, and recently I also started watching and dissecting speech in TV shows with them. We have watched 2 episodes of Seinfeld so far which they really enjoyed. I chose Seinfeld (aside from it being one of my favorite shows) because there is a very reliable website I can stream it from and it is a show that doesn't need to be watched in chronological order. I can torrent if needed but I was wondering what other shows would be good for this age group? I am going to run out of Seinfeld episodes rather quickly since a lot of them contain sexual content. I thought of listening and dissecting music lyrics, perhaps watching TV shows from the UK, Australia, and other countries would give them practice with other accents, radio shows might be useful because you can't see lip movement. Anybody else have some good activities related to listening/speaking that I could use? They are at the age where they know if class is useful to them or not. I don't want them to quit my class. Any help would be appreciated. |
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jvalmer

Joined: 06 Jun 2003
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Posted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 7:29 am Post subject: |
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| The Simpsons, the cultural references probably will give them a hard time, since they've only spent a few years overseas. You can try to explain it them. Although if your not American, or Canadian, it might go over your head. |
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wanderkind
Joined: 01 Jan 2012 Location: Japan
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Posted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 5:11 pm Post subject: |
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| jvalmer wrote: |
| The Simpsons, the cultural references probably will give them a hard time, since they've only spent a few years overseas. You can try to explain it them. Although if your not American, or Canadian, it might go over your head. |
I second jvalmer, and I'd further recommend sticking to the 'Golden Age' Simpsons (Seasons 3-...8/9/10ish?). The ones lately are very pop-culture / flavor of the week heavy, but the early stuff has much more pan-cultural humor, and I think, is better layered such that kids and adults can enjoy it equally without the humor targeted outside their demographic getting in the way.
There are loads of very kid-friendly episodes in there based around moral lessons and whatnot that will make for good discussion. |
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le-paul

Joined: 07 Apr 2009 Location: dans la chambre
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Posted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 5:36 pm Post subject: |
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So, just to re-itterate, your lessons consist of watching tv and talking about tv and youre worried that sooner (probably sooner) or later theyre going to figure out that theyre basically paying you for nothing?
For listening and speaking, i find preparing topics/articles and then making a list of say, two sides of A4 questions that we can use to discuss all aspects of the article. That should be adequate for 3 hours, but it would take preparation.
Why don't you just watch movies, then you wont have to do hardly anything for 2-2.5 hours? |
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Overture1928
Joined: 12 Jan 2014
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Posted: Thu Jun 26, 2014 2:23 am Post subject: |
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| le-paul wrote: |
So, just to re-itterate, your lessons consist of watching tv and talking about tv and youre worried that sooner (probably sooner) or later theyre going to figure out that theyre basically paying you for nothing?
For listening and speaking, i find preparing topics/articles and then making a list of say, two sides of A4 questions that we can use to discuss all aspects of the article. That should be adequate for 3 hours, but it would take preparation.
Why don't you just watch movies, then you wont have to do hardly anything for 2-2.5 hours? |
Please remember this is purely listening speaking. No reading. We have another literature class that covers reading. You are oversimplifying it. TED talks use higher level/scientific/specific language. TV offers more colloquial language. They are note taking while we watch it. Don't tell me that if you were taking a Korean class it wouldn't help you to go through a movie/drama with a Korean teacher to talk about the language/vocab that is being used. I also test them on the vocabulary/phrases and the content covered. Preparing topics/articles and talking about it is essentially what I am doing with the TED talks. |
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le-paul

Joined: 07 Apr 2009 Location: dans la chambre
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Posted: Thu Jun 26, 2014 4:36 am Post subject: |
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Well, the way I plan is I read a a short article, maybe a small paragraph say, from a science magazine about a robot that went crazy or what ever - I use that as an ice breaker sort of thing to get the lesson focussed on todays topic. Then I spend the next 'x' amount of time taking about special effects, the future, AI etc etc. - following my 2/3 sides of questions pertaining to the topic of the day. I see myself as a a kind of DJ - coaxing the conversation along and promting with more questions.
But since the rule is 'no reading allowed', I suppose that wouldn't be allowed?
Anyway, I cant say whether or not Id like to be taught colloquialisms if I were in their situation - I dont know what the intended outcome of your lessons are. In most cases, its to pass a test of some description or other. You didnt specify that in the OP. |
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