<--Back
Pass the story
This can be used for all levels where the students have at least a basic vocabulary. Depending on class size begin by writing some beginning of stories out. Only the first line or two. For example. I was walking to the store one day. Or I had just bought a lottery ticket when i heard the news on the radio. In groups pass the stories around giving each group time to add 2 to 4 lines to the story. End activity when you think it is appropriate. Move around the class and work on tenses, grammar and vocabulary with students.
Practice Reading and Writing
This highly motivating activity helps students to integrate reading, writing and pronunciation in order to communciate with their classmates and/or volunteers.
Have the students write a page, double-spaced. Either give them a topic of general interest, i.e. My Home, My Hometown, My Work in My Country, or let them choose one they think will be of interest to others.
Indicate errors, make suggestions for correction, and hand it back. Students re-write it until it's error-free.
Make an audiotape of their story and let them take it home to practice the pronunciation.
The whole effort culminates in their reading their story to a volunteer or a group of their classmates (usually I have more than one story going at a time, with one reader and three or so listeners per group). Instruct the listeners to make sure they understand every word, because the grammar is correct and the pronunciation has been practiced. They are usually very keen to hear what their classmates have to say, and ask questions every sentence or so. Both listeners and readers demonstrate great patience and interest in communicating with each other, and the exercise demonstrates the importance of correct grammar and pronunciation. It is particularly beneficial to have a volunteer who is not used to talking with ESL students, as this person provides the best possible test for pronunciation -- can a native speaker understand what the student is saying?
From: http://www.eslcafe.com/idea/index.cgi?Writing
Writing Situations
Write up a bunch situations on slips on paper like "scored the winning goal for my soccer team", "broke up with my girlfriend/boyfriend", "had my bike stolen and I saw the thief", "my aunt gave me $400 and I spent it all today". Have a slip ready for every student, maybe repeat a couple of the situations if you like them. The students chose a slip from your hand and have to write 1 page on the situation that they find themselves with. They have to write as they they were writing to their diary that evening. They'll have to use their imaginations a bit to provide more of a story line and details, plus they can add stuff like "dinner was also really good tonight".
From: http://www.eslcafe.com/idea/index.cgi?Writing
Writing with Objects
Have two students come to the front of the room and draw one picture each. The picture can be anything that they like. Then, you have them sit down and elicit ideas about what the pictures could be. Tell the students that they need to write a composition about an interaction of the two pictures. You can incorporate any specific grammar structure or vocabulary by adding that to the criteria for the composition.
Picture Stories
Procedure:
Cut out interesting pictures. Divide the class into groups of 3-4 students. Give each goup one picture. Have students write an oral chain story about the picture by going around the group and having each student add one new sentence to the story.
Variation: To give the groups a "starter," have the first two sentences of a story given out with the pictures.
Fanny's Dilemma
Instructions: usually your professor assigns you to read a story and then asks you (the students) a bunch silly questions basically to be sure that you did the assignment and make sure that you understood what you read. Here we do it do
it differently. Here are the questions that would have been given to you if you had READ the story, however you must instead WRITE the story. Good luck authors.
1. Why was it five o'clock in the morning when Fanny returned to the dorms at St. Etienne?
2. What was said by the coffee machines and by who?
3. How did Fanny react when she first found the... well you know what ? What were some of the first things that she did?
4. What made you, the reader, think that someone was playing a joke?
5. Where and what on Earth was the Rotonde?
6. Which of the boys was not real? ... or was he?
7. Who was Mystero and what role did he/she play in the story?
8. Julien seemed shocked or decidedly odd when he first spoke to Fanny, why?
9. Why did Fanny decide to go down to the basement and what did she bring with her?
10. What things could Fanny have done differently?
11 Did she consider any of those other alternatives?
12. What happend to Julien?
Print-Outs
This link has many listed grammar and vocabulary notes, as well as print-out activities and on-line excercises:
http://perso.wanadoo.es/autoenglish/freeexercises.htm#TENSES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Have some fun activities/ideas? How about worksheets, review sheets or songs?
Send your ideas to malloryforseth@gmail.com. Please include a short summary of the activity along with any worksheets or extra materials needed for the activity.
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.