1. Trang chủ
  2. » Luận Văn - Báo Cáo

Using visual aids to motivate the 10th form students in practising new grammar structures

20 6 0

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Tiêu đề Using visual aids to motivate the 10th form students in practising new grammar structures
Trường học Dang Thai Mai High School
Chuyên ngành English Teaching
Thể loại Research Paper
Năm xuất bản 2016-2017
Định dạng
Số trang 20
Dung lượng 1,39 MB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

Using visual aids to motivate the 10th form students in practising new grammar structures 1 I INTRODUCTION 1 Reason for choosing the research Nowadays, in Vietnam, English is used more and more widely It brings us chances to keep up with the development of the modern age Therefore, teaching and learning English, especially at upper secondary schools play a very important role In any languages, grammar is considered one of the most essential elements of language We can hardly comprehend the meani[.]

Trang 1

I INTRODUCTION

1 Reason for choosing the research

Nowadays, in Vietnam, English is used more and more widely It brings us chances to keep up with the development of the modern age Therefore, teaching and learning English, especially at upper secondary schools play a very important role

In any languages, grammar is considered one of the most essential elements of language We can hardly comprehend the meaning exactly if we

do not use grammar appropriately So poor knowledge of English grammar can effect both the learning and teaching of English Thus, it is necessary to apply new methods of teaching and learning to improve the situation

The English language is completely different from Vietnamese language system so students have a lot of difficulties in learning and using English in general and grammatical structures Meanwhile, grammatical structures are basic units to build up sentences, paragraphs and essays How

to make grammar lessons more interesting? How can we motivate students?

Visual aids are one of the most effective means of language teaching It makes language class more interesting and communicative Therefore, in this study, I would like to give some suggestions for using visual aids effectively The effort of this study is to try to give some contribution to improve the quality of teaching English at high schools by

“Using visual aids to motivate the 10 th form students in practising new grammar structures”.

2 Aims and objectives of the study

- To study the current visual techniques in practising new grammar

structures

- To investigate the causes of difficulties that teachers are facing with

teaching grammar to the ten form students with the help of visual aids, so that teachers can both improve the advantages and limit the drawbacks of language visuals in teaching grammar lessons

- To introduce some common kinds of visual aids and their roles in

foreign language teaching and learning

- To increase the effectiveness in teaching English grammar.

The study is carried out to answer the following questions:

- What are visual aids?

- What are the roles of visual aids in teaching language and in

practising new grammar structures?

- How to use visual aids suitably in practising new grammar

structures?

Trang 2

3 Scope of the study

In teaching a new structure, visual aids may be used at three stages: the presentation stage, the practice stage and the production stage Within the scope of this study, I would like to focus on practising with visual aids

As time is limited, the survey is carried out on a small scale so the results may not reflect the real situation of using visual aids in teaching grammar to 10th form students: 10A7, 10A9 in the school year 2016 – 2017

4 Method of the study

In order to carry out this study, it is mainly based on the data and information collected from surveys, observation and direct interviews from

my colleagues It is also based on a number of reference books about the use

of visual aids in teaching English Furthermore, my actual teaching at Dang Thai Mai high school provides the great practical contribution to the study

Trang 3

II CONTENTS

1 Theoretical background

Visual aids are anything visible to learners, which teachers use for different teaching purposes in the class They can be photographs, flashcards moved from hand to hand, group to group, real things in the classroom or brought into the classroom or something can be seen through window or the teacher and the students themselves

In fact, students usually find it hard and boring to learn and memorize grammatical structures Meanwhile, some teachers have to spend a lot of time explaining a grammar rule but sometimes, the results are not satisfactory Therefore, it is important for learners to have plenty of examples of the structure and to understand them Visual materials can also contribute to understand

The simplest way to practise a structure is often to show it directly using things the students can see: objects, the classroom, yourself, the student themselves, pictures

The practice of grammar will be much easier and more effective through situations, contexts which visual aids provide Students can understand fully and practise more effectively Moreover, students can communicate successfully as they are exposed to the reality and practise orally more often with the help of visual aids On the other hand, visual aids motivate learners when they are tired of long drill of written grammar As a result, they will be interested and pay attention to grammar activities

2 The status of problem

The informants for the study consists of 82 students in the tenth form (age 16-17) from two classes 10A7 and 10A9, and 8 teachers of English at Dang Thai Mai High School

The first reason for my selection is that my selected participants are accessible All these students have learnt English for more than four years at secondary schools as they started to learn English when they were in grade

6 Most of them have got familiar with teaching and learning methods at middle level

The second reason is our awareness of the completeness and reliability of the data collected We must be well-informed about the real situation of teaching and adapting visual aids in teaching and learning grammar at our school

In addition, the main method used was the Grammar Translation Method The students may be good at writing grammatically correct sentences but they can not communicate in that language During the process of learning, students are not often given chances to work in pairs, groups or to take part in such activities as discussion or playing games, etc

A number of students even find it difficult to learn what they studied at junior secondary school Students have to learn in very large class without

Trang 4

favorable conditions for learning a foreign language such as teaching aids: video, tapes, cassette, etc The lack of these facilities reduces effectiveness

of the teaching and learning process

Most teachers in the survey are female aged from twenty- six to forty They have been teaching English for at least three years They usually teach classes with 39 to 45 students and each of them is in charge of three or four classes Meanwhile, teaching facilities are poor and backward Therefore, the main teaching material of the teachers is the textbook for students

It can be found that the teachers have to work hard but the results seem not to be satisfactory This is a great problem

3 Analysis of the data

There is a quick questionnaire designed for students from two classes 10A7 and 10A9 to gather necessary information about using visual aids to practise new grammar structures in classes Students are encouraged to express their own opinions about their ability to apply new grammar structures in practising and doing grammar exercises

This data is collected from students:

Students

total

Know how to use new grammar structures to practise

Have difficulties in practising new grammar structures

Impossible to practise new grammar structures

Table 1: Analysis of the data collected from students before applying the research

It can be seen from the table that only 36,6% know how to use new grammar structures to practise fluently whereas 26,8% find it difficult 36,6% say they are impossible to practice new grammar structures

The following data is the result of the school year 2015 – 2016 before applying the research:

Class Number of

students

Excellent-good (%)

Average (%) Weak (bad)

(%)

Table 2: Analysis of the data collected from the result of the school year

2015 – 2016 before applying the research

These figures show that it is really necessary to change the way to teach new grammar structures so that students are able to practise effectively

Trang 5

4 Teaching application

It is necessary to give them enough practice after the presentation stage At the practice stage, to work with new language items, the teacher’s main function is to provide them with the maximum amount of practice, which must be both meaningful and memorable so that they can understand and produce examples of it Followings are some suggested practice activities using visual aids

4.1 Using the board

In the practice stage, it can be used for substitution, completion, rearrangement, making sentences, etc In other words, the board provides various activities for grammar practice

4.1.1 Sentence pattern table

To provide cues for students to practice, the teacher should draw a sentence table on the board Substitution can be cued by words added to the columns or by holding up pictures, pointing to parts of a big picture or by sticking small pictures into the columns

Example: to practise the simple future tense in Unit 14 (part E

language focus, page 150) the teacher may draw a table like this:

Comment: This kind of practice is more mechanical than meaningful

so the teacher should spend only some minutes to help students be familiar with the structure To put a creative element into this, the students should be encouraged to propose any words that they like providing the sentences remains grammatically correct In seeing that a suggestion is ridiculous the students experience the meaning of the language used

4.1.2 Questionnaires

The teacher draws a grid on the board and elicits information from students

Example: practising conditional sentence type 1 in Unit 8 (part E

language focus, page 90)

Name Playing

football

Watching television Fishing

Going picnic

Reading book Ly

Dung

Lien

Thao

Trang 6

To fill the grid, the teacher uses the question “what will you do if you don’t have to go to school tomorrow?” By doing so, controlled language can take place because the above question must be asked and answered by each member of the class

Comment: The information and completion in this grid has a meaningful purpose It might be interesting to find out the hobbies of students in the class so they can understand each other better

4.1.3 Table using information from the students

To do this activity, the teacher asks students to note down answers to the following questions:

1 What time do you get up?

2 What do you do to help your parents?

3 How do you get to school?

Then he draws the outline table on the board and selects students to come up to fill their answer:

Using this table, controlled practice can take place For example, “Lien has to get up at 5 o’clock”, “Dung has to go to school by bicycle”, “Thao has to

do the gardening to help his parents” Then, they can practice a lot of structures such as “Lien gets up earlier than Dung” “Lien usually goes to school on foot”

“It takes Lien more time to get to school than Dung” and so on

In addition to these uses of the board in grammar practice, it can be also used for sentence matching, rearrangement

For example:

*Matching a phrase in column 1 with a suitable phrase in column 2

1 He always does his homework a a beautiful house

Key: 1b, 2c, 3a

* Learners are given some groups of words in disorder to rearrange into correct sentence:

a will, a, I, win, buy, I, if, match, sport, the, car

b built, house, ago, was, this, years, five

Key:

Trang 7

a If I win the sport match, I will buy a car

b This house was built five years ago

4.2 Using real objects

Real objects are useful for substitution By giving out objects, students can both practice vocabulary and grammar structures From these objects, a lot of sentences can be created

Example 1: The teacher wants his student to practise comparison in Unit 16

(part E Language focus, page 176) he shows them a watch, a pen and a

ruler

Teacher: What is this?

Students: It is a watch / a pen / a ruler

After saying such sentences, the students compare them as follows:

- The pen is more expensive than the ruler is

- The watch is the most expensive

- The ruler is not as useful as the pen

- The ruler is made of wood

- The watch was produced in Switzerland

Comment: A lot of real objects can be shown to give students more practice This type of exercises helps students use the new words in phrases

or sentences It is also a communicative exercise because it encourages students to give comment on objects, to give ideas using their own words

Example 2: In Unit 6 (part E Language focus, page 70)

Grammar point: the present progressive (with a near future meaning) and be going to

To practise to be going to + V, the teacher follows the coming - up

steps:

Step 1: prepare a collection of small object such as a cup, a stone, a plate, a knife, a piece of string, a nail, a piece of wood, a sheet of paper or a box of matches

Step 2: display one object to all class except for one student, who has to guess what it is The guesser asks:

-What are you going to do with it?

And others will describe their (imaginary) plans for the object:

- I’m going to cut bread with it

- I’m going to drink tea from it

- I’m going to write on it

- I’m going to make a fire with it

To make students pay attention to the activity, after some objects have been guessed, the teacher asks a student: “What will be done with the knife / the cup?”

This activity is also helpful for the practice of the future passive

4.3 Using word cards

4.3.1 Telling about diary

Trang 8

This type of activity is suitable for pair or group work rather than for

the whole class In order to practise the simple past tense in Unit 1 (part E

Language focus, page 21), the teacher gives out word cards filled with notes

of different planned activities

07.30 - 08.00 get

breakfast

07.30 - 09.30 get breakfast

10.30 - 11.30 meet Tom for coffee

08.00 - 09.00 water

flowers Housework

09.00 - 11.00 meet with Mike

11.30 - 12.30 watch end of football Take kids home

Each group should be given different word cards Then, they are asked to expand the notes into full sentences They may use the first or the third person For example, such sentences may be made:

- I was getting breakfast at 7.45 Monday morning

- I went to the office at 9 o’clock yesterday morning

- I was watching the end of the football at 12 o’clock

These cards, then, are used to ask and answer questions This may be done orally first then in writing The content of word cards can be shopping list, activities of a festival or TV programmes Students are expected to use

“then”, “next”, “after”, “before”… to tell about diary If this activity is done orally, the teacher may check other groups’ attention by asking them to recall the plan of a certain person

4.3.2 Giving instruction

This type of activity is suitable for practicing the imperative form of

the verbs in Unit 5 (part D writing, page 58)

Word cards are also used to practise giving instruction:

4.3.3 Jumbled texts

In other activities, word cards are also helpful For instance, word cards are used for jumbled texts Each word card contains a word Then, the teacher asks students to make the longest sentence possible with these words and to build as many sentences as possible in five minutes

To make a call

- Have money ready 2 minutes or 10 minutes lift receiver

- Listen for continuous purring

- Dial number or code and number

- When you hear rapid pips, insert in a coin

Trang 9

Early about Five o’clock An old thin and

Example: An old thin man slowly walked under the yellow bent trees about early five o’clock

4.3.4 Bingo card

Bingo card is often considered to be a useful technique for revising or checking vocabulary However, in grammar practice, bingo card is also effective It can be used in controlled and guided practice stages For example, to practise the present perfect tense and the structure “have you

ever done…?” in Unit 5(part E language focus, page 60), the teacher can

give each student a piece of paper consisting of several squares and in each

of square, there is a word or phrase

The teacher has a pile of separate cue - cards, and offers each one at random, using the questions:

- Who has ever been to Hai Phong?

- Who has seen a ghost?

- Who has gone abroad?

The student who possesses the item answers:

- I have been to Hai Phong

- I have seen a ghost

And receives the card with which he or she covers the item on the sheet The winner is the first to cover all his or her sheet

4.4 Using pictures

Various types of pictures provide a great deal of activities for grammar practice

4.4.1 True / false game

This kind of game is suitable for controlled practice It is introduced

to make students think about meaning and they want to communicate In order to carry out this game, the teacher hangs a picture and makes a number of statements, some of which are true, some of which are false If the statement is true, the students repeat it, if it is false, the students correct it

Example: practise “the present perfect tense” in unit 5(part E

Language focus, page 60)

Trang 10

Teacher: They are in restaurant.

Students: Yes, they are in a café

Teacher: The girl has long hair

Students: No, she has short hair

Teacher: She has already eaten!

Students: No, She is eating

Teacher: The boy is eating with her

Students: No, he is talking with her

Teacher: The boy has drunk a grass of beer

Students: No, he hasn’t

Teacher: The girl’s friend has had lunch with her

Students: Yes, he has left here

If this game is done orally, then the students can correct the teacher when he or she makes a false statement If it is done in writing, then the teacher might write a number of sentences on the board and ask the students

to copy the correct ones and correct the incorrect ones This game can be used to practise any structure the teacher wishes

4.4.2 Say what you see

To practise the past tense (Unit 1, part E language focus, page19), the

teacher prepares some picture flashcards on which reference for students to answer and to ask questions provided:

Ngày đăng: 22/05/2022, 10:02

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

TÀI LIỆU CÙNG NGƯỜI DÙNG

TÀI LIỆU LIÊN QUAN