CHAPTER II: SAMPLE GAMES TO MOTIVATE 10 TH -FORM STUDENTS IN SPEAKING LESSONS………... It has been proved that students in these groups have some problems with speaking activities such as:
Trang 1TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART A: INTRODUCTION
1 Rationale
2 Aims of the study
3 Design of the study
PART B: DEVELOPMENT
CHAPTER I: LITERATURE REVIEW
1 Stages of a CLT speaking lesson………
2 Characteristics of a successful speaking activity………
3 Problems with speaking activities………
4 Types of language games
CHAPTER II: SAMPLE GAMES TO MOTIVATE 10 TH -FORM STUDENTS IN SPEAKING LESSONS………
1 Warms-up
2 Pre-speaking stage
3 While-speaking stage
4 Post-speaking stage
CHAPTER III: DATA ANALYSIS OF THE 10 TH -FORM SURVEYED STUDENTS 1 Students’ feelings and attitudes towards language games exploited by the teacher………
2 Data analysis of the 10th-form surveyed students………
a At the beginning of the school year (Before using language games) b At the end of the school year (After using language games ) PART C: CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Trang 3PART A: INTRODUCTION
1 Rationale.
In the globalization age today, English is considered as a global means ofcommunication When someone is able to communicate well in English, they not onlyeasily connect with people in many different cultures around the world but they alsohave greater job opportunities Therefore, in some recent years, the focus of teaching hasbeen promoting oral skills in order to respond to the students' needs for effectivecommunication
However, due to some objective and subjective reasons, teaching and learningEnglish in general and teaching and learning speaking in particular does not come up tothe study aims Despite teachers' efforts to provide students with opportunities todevelop their communicative skills, how to teach and learn speaking effectively is still achallenging question to both teachers and students at many high schools in Vietnam
At Đào Duy Từ high school, the situation is the same For most students in 2groups 10B5 and 10B6 I am allotted to teach in the school year 2017-2018, they findspeaking especially important yet most challenging one It has been proved that students
in these groups have some problems with speaking activities such as: inhibition, nothing
to say, low or uneven participation, mother-tongue use and some students got into a
habit of learning “mute English” which is obviously harmful to a language learner It
also seems to me that the techniques exploited during a speaking activity such as:simulations, discussions are not really effective Therefore, it is a necessity to find asupplementary technique used in teaching speaking In language teaching, language
games have proved themselves not merely as "time filler activities" but as an important
factor which can create more chances and interest to motivate students to speak
All the above-mentioned reasons and factors have inspired me to write the study
with the title "Using language games to motivate the 10-form students in speaking
lessons at Đào Duy Từ high school"
2 Aims of the study.
The study is aimed at providing some suggestions and implications for theimprovement of speaking teaching at Đào Duy Từ high school by using language games
Trang 4in addition to other techniques.
3 Design of the study
This paper is divided into three main parts:
Part A is the INTRODUCTION In this part, the rationale, the aims, and also its design
are presented
Part B is the DEVELOPMENT which includes 3 chapters Chapter I deals with the
literature review that is relevant to the purpose of the study: speaking skill and language
games Chapter II is by far the most dominant one in which some suggestions on using
language games are made and some sample language games exploited during all stages
of the lessons are provided Chapter III is the data analysis of the 10th-form surveyedstudents
Part C is the CONCLUSION which includes the summary of the study.
Trang 5PART B: DEVELOPMENT
CHAPTER I: LITERATURE REVIEW
1 Stages of a CLT (Communicative Language Teaching) speaking lesson.
According to Methodology course 1- Teaching The Skills (Hanoi 2002) page 42-43,
a CLT speaking lesson should have warm-up and three main stages: pre, while and post
Warm- up is often a short and fun game which the teacher can use with his students.
The purpose of warms up is to prepare them to learn by stimulating their minds Thisstage prepares students by getting them to think about the topic or situation before theyspeak about it
The pre-speaking stage: Pre-speaking tasks can be brainstorming or discussion tasks,
where students collect all their ideas on the topic; vocabulary preparation tasks, wherethe teacher pre-teaches key vocabulary to help students express their ideas more easily
or train students with pronunciation drill so that they can speak English in good stressand intonation and this will help them speak out their ideas in English easily and fluently
In this stage, the teacher will have to set up a pre task, organize pair/group work and giveclear instructions about the task
The while-speaking stage: At this stage the teacher lets students work with each other
without interfering with correcting any mistakes in order not to stop students from beinginfluent She/ he just gives assistance when/if necessary At the while-speaking stage,the teacher doesn't have to do a lot of teaching because his/her students will be working
on the while-task by themselves, individually or in groups In stead, the teacher will have
to do a lot of monitoring and assisting weaker students who are having difficultycompleting the task
The post-speaking stage: The post-speaking stage is like "the follow-up stage”.
After students have practised speaking skill in the while-speaking stage, they do anextension speaking activity This helps students take the information from other groups
or whatever they have produced in the while-speaking stage, and do somethingmeaningful with it At this stage, the teacher gets students to report their work and letsthe whole class share what they have got from pair/group work The teacher might give
Trang 6feed back, correct serious mistakes here and give students marks.
2 Characteristics of a successful speaking activity
There are many characteristics of a successful speaking activity which are introduced
by Ur (1996) as follows:
• Learners talk a lot: As much as possible of the period time allotted to the activity
is in fact occupied by learner talk This may seem obvious, but often most time istaken up with the teacher and talk and pauses
• Participation is even: Classroom discussion is not dominated by a minority of
talkative participants: all get a chance to speak and contributions are fairly evenlydistributed
• Motivation is high: Learners are eager to speak because they are interested in the
topic and have something new to say about it, or because they want to contribute
to achieving a task objective
• Language is of an acceptable level: Learners express themselves in utterances that
are relevant, easily comprehensible to each other and of an acceptable level oflanguage accuracy
In practice, however, few classroom activities succeed in satisfying all the criteriamentioned above Therefore, language teachers should make great efforts to employ avariety of effective techniques to create some of the mentioned-above criteria
3 Problems with speaking activities
According to Ur (1996), there still exist some problems with speaking activities asfollows:
Inhibition: Unlike reading, writing and listening activities, speaking requires some
degree of real-time exposure to an audience Learners are often inhibited about trying tosay things in a foreign language in the classroom: worried about making mistakes,fearful of criticism or losing face, or simply shy of the attention that their speechattracts
• Nothing to say: Even if they are not inhibited, you often hear learners complain
that they cannot think of anything to say: they have no motive to express themselvesbeyond the guilty feeling that they should be speaking
Trang 7• Low or uneven participation: Only one participant can talk at a time if he or she is
to be heard, and in a large group this means that each one will have only very little timetalking This problem is compounded by the tendency of some learners to dominate,while others speak very little or not at all
• Mother-tongue use: In classes where all, or a number of, the learners share the
same mother tongue, they may tend to use it: because it is easier, because it feelsunnatural to speak to one another in a foreign language, and because they feel less
"exposed" if they are speaking their mother tongue If they are talking in small groups itcan be quite difficult to get some classes-particularly the less disciplined or motivatedones- to keep to the target language
In order for the learners to develop their communicative skills, it is advised thatthe language teachers should help the learners to overcome these problems withspeaking activities
4 Types of language games.
Classifying language games into categories can be very difficult becausecategories often overlap Therefore, different linguists use different ways to classifylanguage games According to Hadfiled (1987), "language games can be divided intotwo further categories: Linguistic games and communicative games Linguistic gamesfocus on accuracy, such as applying the correct antonym On the other hand,communicative games focus on successful exchange of information and ideas, such astwo people identifying the differences between their two pictures which are similar toone another but not exactly alike Hadfield (1987) also classifies language games intomany more categories as follows:
Sorting, ordering or arranging games For example, students have a set of cards
with different products of them, and they sort the cards into products found at a grocerystore and products found at a department store
• Information gap game: In such games, one student has access to the information
Which is not held by the other student, and this student must acquire the information
to complete the task successfully Information gap games can involve a one-way
information gap or a two way information gap
• Guessing games: In these games, someone knows something and the others must
Trang 8find out what it is.
• Matching games: As a name applies, participants need to find a match for a word,
picture or card
• Labeling games: These are form of matching, in that participants match labels and
pictures
• Puzzle-solving games: The participants in the game share or pool information in
order to solve a problem or a mystery
• Role play games: The terms role play, drama and simulation are sometimes used
interchangeably but can be differentiated Role play can involve students playing rolesthat they do not play in real life, such as dentists, while simulations can involve studentsperforming roles that they already play in real life or might be likely to play, such as acustomer at a restaurant Dramas are normally scripted performances, whereas in roleplays and simulations, students come up with their own words, although preparation isoften useful
Trang 9CHAPTER II: SAMPLE GAMES TO MOTIVATE 10 TH -FORM STUDENTS
IN SPEAKING LESSONS
1 Warm-ups
A warm up activity is often a short and fun game which the teacher can use withhis students The purpose of warms up is to prepare them to learn by stimulating their
minds Warm ups should last about five minutes
Unit 5: Technology and you
Type of games: Matching games Classroom management: Group work
Material: Pictures and cards Time: 3-5 minutes
Procedure: The teacher divides the class into groups of four or five students The
teacher gives each group a set of pictures of modern inventions and slips of papercontaining their names Students work in groups and quickly match each moderninvention with their name Which group finishes first and has all the correct answers will
be the winner The teacher then can ask students what they know about the uses of thesemodern inventions
Trang 10Radio Television Air-conditioner Fridge
Fax machine Electric cooker Cell phone Washing machine
Unit 6: An Excursion
Type of games: Puzzle-solving activity Material: A crossword handout Class management: Group work Time: 5-7 minutes
Procedure: The teacher gives out a crossword which has 7 horizontal lines and one
vertical line The word in the vertical line is made up of 7 letters from the 7 horizontallines The teacher asks students to work in groups and find the words Each correctword in the horizontal line gets 10 points and the one in the vertical line gets 40points
Trang 111 A natural place below the earth surface or in the mountain
2 Light of the sun
3 A large natural stream of water
4 A short journey usually for pleasure
5 A temple or sacred tower in Asian countries
6 The science that studies the surface of the earth and its associated physical,
biological, economic, political features
7 A hill of impressive height
Unit 13: Films and cinema
Type of games: Sorting, arranging games Class management: Pair work Material: film posters and handout Time: 5 minutes
Procedure: The teacher asks students to work in pairs Teacher sticks the
following posters on the blackboard or alternatively print these posters and distributethem to students The teacher then gives the handout to the pairs and asks students tomatch the film with the correct types
R
SRXD
N
H I C A G O
Trang 12Unit 14: World Cup
Type of games: Puzzle-solving activity Material: A slip of charts and cards Class management: Group work Time: 5-7 minutes
Procedure: The teacher divides the class into groups of three or four students and
give each group a copy of chart and a copy of cards in which clues are given Eachgroup has to work to find out who won the cup The first group to find the correctanswer will be the winner
Chart
Fill in the names of the football teams on the chart and thus find out who won the
Trang 13Quarter final Semi-final Final
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0
1
1
2
1
4
1
3
3
0
2
2
3
Clues:
1 England lost one goal in the semi-final
2 France scored 2 goals in the quarter final
3 Brazil beat the Netherlands
4 Germany scored one goal less than the team that beat them in the semi-final
5 Spain played England in the quarter-final
6 Italy beat Argentina by twice as many goals in the quarter final
7 The Netherlands lost 0-1 in the quarter final
2 Pre-pre-speaking stage
This stage is carried out before students actually speak The pre-speaking activities are aimed at preparing students with everything necessary for speaking They also involve thought and reflection, and provide opportunities for students to plan and organize for speaking Normally, pre-speaking stage often lasts from five to fifteen minutes depending on each lesson
Unit 9: Undersea world (speaking task2)
Type of games: Labeling games Class management: Whole class
Material: pictures Time: 7 minutes