Post
by revel » Wed Sep 12, 2007 7:03 am
Hey fluffy and all!
Fluffy said “none of these are functionally that vital or hard to grasp” and there I agree with him. A word or two might need to be looked up in the dictionary or asked of the teacher, if the student is really going to use that word it will be remembered for future use and very little class time will be needed for such. Give the student a long list of vocabulary for br**sts and then tell him (usually a man, women would use other, more polite words) that he can choose the one or two that most suit him when talking about them with other men over a beer or when seeing some big ones float by the office window (as in zeppelins). In any case, such is vocabulary building and doesn’t usually involve instructions in my class.
Now that is a lie, I do say “note that word on your New Words Sheet, it’s pronounced this way (here I put a phonetic transcription on the board) and it means this or is used in these circumstances.” Vocabulary work is part of many classes, as I like my students to ask, with a basic question like “What does xxx mean?” (And not the textbook, lengthy and artificial sounding “What is the meaning of xxx?” which does not offer a real practice of the do auxiliary in a question that will get a real response from the listener and not simply a parrot response from the practice partner) so that I am sure that the majority of the nouns and verbs that they will encounter in the ensuing exercises will not be “greek” to them and that they will concentrate on the manipulation of sound and structure instead of beating their heads against vocabulary. You can imagine how many teenagers, for example, claim not to understand entire texts simply because there are two or three unfamiliar words in such. If such texts are taken apart structurally, without explaining the unknown words, students can often guess the meanings or at least get the gist of the text without exact meanings. This process has helped so many of my review students pass those silly exams they have to take to prove that they have studied English in school, when they have actually studied it at home and in the academy where I work.
I’ve been away a while, it’s true. Bought a house in a village where internet was either a 26k modem or a thing of the 22nd century, until I finally got the city hall to turn on the Wifi dish, (it had been installed for six months before they got around to plugging it in). I had checked in at work a couple of times back in February, but quit that job and have had to move my arse to find other work, which I have found, in an academy where there are no bosses, just fellow teachers, all working to make sure there are students in their classrooms, that those students learn and thus repeat the next year. Lots of stress has flaked off of me leaving that bossy boss (there’s a thread here called something like “Quitting my Job” where I had given details a couple of years ago). So, yes, I’m back, with my free comments and my avoidance of addressing other members directly. Interesting to see that we are the same old five or six who use this forum despite the vast number of members who could give their $.02! After nearly a year without writing a post, I’m still number 12 on the ranking of posters….and heading towards number ten again!
peace,
revel.
**[I can't believe that word is censured here! What if I were giving a recipe for chicken *beep* in green sauce? Please, someone, do something about the parental control on this forum, I'm a grown-up now and respect my fellow posters by trying not to use too harsh of language, like "br**st". For those who don't get it, ** is ea] {I've just discovered that if it is singular, that is, breast, it gets by the auto-cesure, but if you make it plural, it becomes *beep*. Hmm, are those "double standards" working there?}