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Group
Discussion |
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At a Glance
Students
will: üuse
contextual clues, knowledge of parts of speech and group discussion to
determine missing words from a text |
Purpose: to practise reading for comprehension and increase passive and active vocabulary stocks; and to practise group discussion skills Materials: a selected text, scissors
Preparation: type selected text and make copies (see Step 1 below) Time:
10 minutes or longer depending on modifications |
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Teacher’s Notes |
Procedure You may do this activity for 10 minutes at the end of the class time which allows you to finish up with something fun or you may spend one complete class hour on it for a full-length reading class. 1. Find an interesting text, which you think may appeal to most of your students such as a joke from a magazine, a brochure about Disneyland, or anything that is colourful and fun. Then, type that passage on a page using large margins so that the text itself is not spread from one end to the other but rather it is squeezed up into a thin column. Make
enough copies to go around and cut along a line so that the last one or two
words at the end of each line are cut off. 2. Hand out the papers and ask the students to read the text and try to find the missing word(s) for about five minutes. You can tell them to work in pairs or groups and discuss it. They will engage in a true communicative negotiation while they are attempting to prove to the others that what they have come up with as the answer is correct. After you let them work for a while, you will hear the words they have found. You will be amazed to find out how creative they may become when they shout out words that are not the originals but are quite correct as alternatives. |
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Teacher’s Notes |
Lesson Extension Language
Skills involved:
Level
Perhaps
the second best point about this activity, other than the fact that you
combine very different skills of language learning within one simple task,
may be that you can easily adapt it to the needs of different levels. If you have beginners, you may pick
up an easy passage and you cut out only one word or maybe half off the end of
the lines. With more proficient learners, not only will you choose more
advanced texts but also you may leave out more words or perhaps half of the
sentences, which will bring more challenge and require more creativity as
well as a much better command of the language. Student
Needs
As with all language learning tasks out there, you must
give it a try in your classes before you make the necessary changes according
to the specific needs and attitudes of your own students Follow-up /
Transfer Activities: A
writing component may be added. If you also cut out the last two or three
sentences at the end of the passage, you may assign the students to complete
the rest at home using their imagination. Adapted from an article originally
published in The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. III, No. 10, October 1997 http://iteslj.org/Lessons/Akgun-ReadingComp.html Adapted with permission. |
Additional Resources |