I am looking for good books for speaking classes for small children and very low level adults.
Any ideas or suggestions?
Books for Speaking
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Re: Books for Speaking
scriby wrote:I am looking for good books for speaking classes for small children and very low level adults.
Any ideas or suggestions?
I would love some ideas too. I'm afraid of getting books that are geared toward children...but I need my student to read some simple stories and then we can talk about them.
Simple Conversation Books
Good question!
On the lower levels, I found Conversation Book 1 works for adult students. The book provides a list of 20-25 key words, a handful of questions, and some basic illustrations. Designed for immigrants to the United States, the text focuses on practical "life skills" such as going to a pharmacy, shopping at a supermarket, attending class, etc. Another option for low-intermediate speakers might be "Talking Your Head Off" which provides 10-12 questions on common conversation topics.
My own book, designed for advanced ESL students, includes over 1400 questions, 250 proverbs, and more than 500 quotations to encourage student conversation. You can find some free sample chapters at www.compellingconversations.com .
In the United States, speaking skills often get neglected. Partly this comes from a focus on standardized test scores in adult education programs. It's far easier to test passive skills like reading and listening comprehension than writing and speaking. Class sizes is another factor limiting the creation of enough quality conversation books for ESL students.
Good luck.
Ask more. Know more. Speak more.
Create Compelling Conversations.
Visit www.CompellingConversations.com
On the lower levels, I found Conversation Book 1 works for adult students. The book provides a list of 20-25 key words, a handful of questions, and some basic illustrations. Designed for immigrants to the United States, the text focuses on practical "life skills" such as going to a pharmacy, shopping at a supermarket, attending class, etc. Another option for low-intermediate speakers might be "Talking Your Head Off" which provides 10-12 questions on common conversation topics.
My own book, designed for advanced ESL students, includes over 1400 questions, 250 proverbs, and more than 500 quotations to encourage student conversation. You can find some free sample chapters at www.compellingconversations.com .
In the United States, speaking skills often get neglected. Partly this comes from a focus on standardized test scores in adult education programs. It's far easier to test passive skills like reading and listening comprehension than writing and speaking. Class sizes is another factor limiting the creation of enough quality conversation books for ESL students.
Good luck.
Ask more. Know more. Speak more.
Create Compelling Conversations.
Visit www.CompellingConversations.com