Checklist for Microteaching Lesson Plan
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Check off each aspect the
lesson planning completes.
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Aspect
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Me
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Peer 1
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Peer 2
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Can the objectives really
be achieved in the time allocated?
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Is the stage of writing correctly
addressed?
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Have I planned to make best
use of my resources?
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TOTAL
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Seguidores
lunes, 24 de junio de 2013
Chapter 5Lesson Summary
People write for a variety reasons. Some of your
learners will need to draft texts for academic or business purposes. Others
will write in English strictly for personal reasons (for example, to e-mail a
friend, write notes to a child's teacher, or complete application forms).
Whatever your learners' needs, you should develop activities that mirror what
your students need to do outside of the classroom so that they are able to
transfer the skills they learn to the real world. The objective (or purpose)
for writing should be expressed early in the lesson.
Writing is perhaps the most challenging part of
learning a new language. In his article How to be an Effective EFL Writing
Teacher, David Martin describes several ways to make writing more
"likable" for our students:
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In my view, writing can be a fun and enjoyable
process for both the instructor and students if it is approached positively and
if feedback is constructive and supportive. It is also essential to plan
lessons that will enable students to be successful and to write on their own
outside of the classroom.
Source: http://eltmedia.thomsonlearning.com
viernes, 14 de junio de 2013
Chapter 4
Feedback and Revision
Students need
feedback on their writing. Traditionally, feedback came exclusively from the
instructor and was a series of codes to identify grammatical errors. Students
would learn the codes and make the necessary changes.
In ESL/EFL, this type of feedback can be almost
unmanageable at the lower levels because there are so many errors. Some
instructors mark papers in green instead of red so the corrections won't be as
intimidating. Nevertheless, if the marks are more abundant than the student
writing, it doesn't matter what color the corrections are.
Giving feedback
In the process approach, instructors provide more feedback on the organization
of ideas and the ideas themselves, especially in the early stages. Certainly
this is an improvement because students first focus on ideas and meaning.
However, sometimes the global errors (those that impede understanding because they have a major role in a
sentence) are so extensive that the paper is incomprehensible.
I suggest that instructors limit their feedback to
global errors, along with grammar points that students have just learned or
should know. Of course, there should be a balance between error correction and
discussing and helping students to organize ideas effectively.
Delivering feedback to a student on writing issues
can be very time consuming for the instructor. Scheduling regular
teacher-student conferences is always the most productive way to help students.
They can then ask questions and the instructor can better tell when students
understand. In his article How to be an Effective ESL Writing Teacher,
Martin stresses that the instructor should avoid dominating the conversation
but allow students to talk and express themselves.
Peer editing
In both the
product and process approaches, students can also review and edit each other's
work. This allows students to take the role of the instructor. It also provides
a different audience for the student writer. At first, peer editing like this is
difficult because students are not willing or don't feel qualified to find
problems with their classmates' work.
A good remedy for this is to supply students with
an editing checklist. Peer editors can then follow the checklist so that they are
not overwhelmed with the task. These checklists can refer to mechanical
problems or relate to the message of the writing text itself. These same lists
can be used for self-correction as well.
In reality, the writing process is cyclical and
students can return to revise and edit over and over. There is no rule that
states that there can only be one draft and one final product. Campbell (1998)
makes a distinction between "revising" and "editing." She
describes "editing" as proofreading or correcting errors in spelling,
punctuation, grammar and other similar areas. She describes
"revising" as adding and deleting paragraphs, changing organizations
and adapting text. Both of these are important and should be balanced in
instruction.
Source:
http://eltmedia.thomsonlearning.com
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