Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Pronouncing G and J (Spanish learners) from http://watersdw30.wordpress.com

Pronouncing G and J (Spanish learners) 

from  http://watersdw30.wordpress.com


I've taken the liberty of borrowing this post from Dave Waters' blog so as to get it to a slightly wider audience. I'm sure he won't mind, after all your children take from you even when they're fully grown adults right? It's a word that I feel should be spread.

Dave has been teaching English since 2004. He is qualified to teach in the UK with a Cert Ed and a  level 4 Cert ESOL and also holds the Trinity Cert TESOL.  He completed part of London Southbank University’s postgraduate certificate in ADDS (Adult Dyslexia). He is a fellow of the Institute for Learning.
He has taught all over the world most recently in Germany and Spain.


Pronunciation can drive you to drink.

Among my adult students are designers,engineers and project managers. This being Spain, single gs and js in English words cause frequent pronunciation difficulties and unfamiliar letter clusters like dg in edge render some students speechless. It’s not that they don’t know how to pronounce the sounds, it’s that often they don’t know that they do know.

If your students are d-sih-ners, en-hineers and proyect man-ahers try the following:
Write Gin Tonic on the board, not gin and tonic that is about culture, this is about pronunciation.
Ask the students to read the words aloud, usually one or more will say Gin /ʤɪn/ , if not model the word, chorus and then go round the table asking students to say the words.

When you are happy with their pronunciation write the letter G under the G in Gin, utter the /ʤ/ sound and then ask the students to repeat. If the pronunciation drifts from the target sound point at Gin Tonic and start again.

Then write engine on the board – make sure the g aligns vertically with the other Gs – I underline the letter, or write it in a different colour for emphasis. Then model engine and continue as before.

At some point it is necessary to move from g words to j words, I try to use words that are useful to my students, or familiar or both. Write a number of j words on the board, one under another, then starting at Gin Tonic run through the list, emphasising the /ʤ/ sound each time, chorus and student rounds as before.

The next stage is to tackle mid word /ʤ/ sounds. As before align the relevant letter(s) vertically and chant the words, encouraging the students to join in.

When students are having difficulties with the word written in English I supplement the word with a [this is what it sounds like] collection of letters. I use anything that is familiar to the students so in Spain becomes or k , th sometimes becomes z, and I will say theta, sion, tion, cian become shun and so on. Do emphasise that anything between the square brackets is not a correct English spelling, just something that helps some students pronounce the word correctly.

Tell the students that in all English words the letter j* has the same pronunciation and then move to the alternative /g/ sound, which is used in Spanish in words such as Gloria.
I have found it is necessary to give students a few familiar /g/ sound words to prevent them trying to /ʤ/ everything.

Finally when a student next haitches a j write Gin in a corner of the board and the offending word underneath, they will very quickly self correct ( and correct each other) as you reach for the gin.
Please let me know if gin works for you, or if something else works in your context.
Gin
G
engine
general
gel
gyroscope
jitter
jolt
joist
judder
jerk
edge
gauge Gloria followed by Gin
enjoyment
injection [in jek shun]
inject [in jekt]
project [pro jekt]
jam, jib, juice, January, June, July, Jesus, Jew, gypsy, Egypt, agent, Germany
Gloria – gain, gas, gauge, gear, girder, ground, gradient, grind, guarantee, aggregate
*junta, in English, can be pronounced /ʤ/ or/h/

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

A Little Quiz

As it's getting so close to Christmas I thought I'd give my students a break in disguise. For the really good classes we've been playing poker. With the not so great classes or the ones who had no desire whatsoever to play poker I've been doing a wonderful little quiz which combines trivia, exam practice and Christmas bits and bobs.
It takes about an hour. The trivia answers are on the answer sheet on the below link. The PowerPoint for the quiz is in the very same place.

https://sites.google.com/a/thenglishouse.com/harry/
Christmas Pub Quiz (PPT) Christmas Pub Quiz Answers

Have a great one.

Friday, 13 December 2013

TESOL Spain

So it looks like I'll be speaking at TESOL Spail on Sunday the 9th of March. Get thee down there for some fun and learning; all at the same time. http://www.tesol-spain.org/en/pages/1/convention-2014.html

'til later.

H

Thursday, 12 December 2013

Just a Quick One

One of my favourite fillers is the YES/NO/MAYBE game. It's pretty simple really. Ask students some simple YES/NO questions and try and make them say YES, NO or MAYBE. If they do, they're out. At the end of a few rounds get the students to ask you questions and see if they can trip you up.
It's a great filler and really good for question formation and answer building.

Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Verbal Twins

Have you ever had that argument with your better half as to whose name comes first? Some of them are obvious. Brad and Angelina of course Sonny and Cher another glaringly apparent order. Others are a little less clear. There are some word pairs that just have to go in a certain order. I use this little warmer to make students aware of some of the twins that exist in our ever confusing language. Why do they exist that way? Well....... they just do. Some things are just black and white.

Put your class into pairs and give them 5 minutes to work out which pair goes with which and in what order.

Happy Teaching

'til the next time.

For more updates follow me on twitter @sirhofthebomb.

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Riddle me this

Whilst puzzling out interesting ways to spice up my classes I popped onto eslprintables.com in search of ideas. I was reminded by an ESL veteran about the joy of riddles. Making students think outside the box to get them focused on class and not just throwing them in with a grammar exercise or speaking exam part jazzed up as a game. I found students used lots of the speculation language we went over last week without using the prompt sheet.
I'd done a riddle of the day a few years ago with an intensive FCE class and it had worked wondrfully well and by the end of the four week course the riddles were taking less and less time because students had started to think so far out of the box that the box had become a dot on the horizon. 
I started with this little one yesterday as we've been working on stereotypes this week.

Acting on an anonymous phone call, the police raid a house to arrest a suspected murderer. They don't know what he looks like but they know his name is John and that he is inside the house. The police bust in on a carpenter, a lorry driver, a mechanic and a fireman all playing poker. Without hesitation or communication of any kind, they immediately arrest the fireman. How did they know they'd arrested the right person?


I reminded the students we were working on stereotypes and that the carpenter, lorry driver and mechanic all had something in common. Then after stressing that HIS name was John a bright spark finally clicked and pointed out that the three former occupations were not gender specific and that they could as easily be women as men. Whereas the fireman by definition had to be a man. 

The class are now eagerly anticipating next week's riddle. I think I'll go with this little classic. 
How could a baby fall out of a twenty-story building onto the ground and live?

'til next time




Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Another Fun Filler - Would you Rather....

There is almost always a time when you've got 5 minutes left at the end, in the middle, at the start of your class where you just want the students to let their hair down and have fun. Rather than just turning on yourtube and watching a students favourite video, which can have little or no language pay off, why not have try this little activity.
I love playing Would you rather..... I like to start by giving a few examples. I sometimes use http://yourather.com/ to get students going. Giving students really imaginative silly options always brings out the best answers and the best questions from your students.
Would you rather have glitterball hair or a glow in the dark tongue?
I like to get my students to give a reason for their decision and make sure they choose one.
Next I get the students to write two or three of their own and go around asking their classmates.

Now don't get me wrong I'm not video bashing. I love using videos in class, rather than a filler though I prefer to use them as a planned activity and that usually takes a great deal more work than just throwing in a game.

I love this game, it never fails to make people laugh and almost always brings about lively debates on more serious subjects.