Friday 11 April 2014

Sporcle and Reported Speech

Happy Friday one and all. Just a few more hours 'til the weekend and for many of us the promise of a nice week off. Thanks easter.

As far as I can see, when we get to this stage of the year most text books throw up the idea of reported speech with varying degrees of difficulty.

There are a myriad of games to allow your students to practice their newq found skill. One I was introduced to a couple of days ago tests your students movie knowledge, their ability to transalte from the language they first saw the movie and then how to convert some of the most famous quotes in movie history into reported speech.

Your students level will, obviously, dictate the difficulty of the task, the reporting verbs they use and whether they chuck a few adverbs in there as well.

The first step is to get onto the fantastic  http://www.sporcle.com/games/happy101/best-movie-quotes-images then run through each of the images to identify which movies the quotes come from.

Step two, hit the timer and get the students to take turns in giving you a quote to one of the movies on the screen. 

Seven minutes later the time will have run out and all the missing quotes will be revealed and the students will have a chance to take the famous quotes and report them to their classmates.  

This works as a wonderful cooler after going through the "rules" of reported speech or as a warmer in the next class to make sure they still have it down.. My students really enjoyed it.

 A big thanks to my colleague Neil for pointing me towards the quiz and sharing his idea with me. 

I hope your students find it as useful as mine did. 

Right that's all for today.  Have a great holiday whereever you may be. If you don't have a holiday just go ahead and have a great weekend.

For regular updates why not follow me on twitter @sirhofthebomb



Thursday 10 April 2014

Using Sporcle to Build Vocabulary

My colleagues and I at The English House are all frequent  users of http://www.sporcle.com/. It's a quiz website with quizzes for just about everything you can imagine. I'm just going to wizz through a couple of them today and ideas on how to use them in your class. I normally use them as a warmer or cooler. Not to mention as a filler.
As I said before there are a plethora of quizzes on just about every subject under the sun. What's great is there are a whole bunch of vocabulary quizzes which can be really great in the classroom. I've used lots of general knowledge quizzes as a reward for good work on a number of occasions too.

The first pair of games I'm going to cover both involve the use of common suffixes. The Spanish favourite      -ation and the forever common -ish. The links are below.
http://www.sporcle.com/games/naqwerty3/sporclation-nation

http://www.sporcle.com/games/TheLoir/word-ends-in-ish

What I like to do with the words first is put them on the board and give the students 5 minutes to look up the meaning of any they don't understand on their phones.


Next I set the clock running and see how many they get right. I only take their first answer though to stop the multiple guessers I almost always have. The results were really surprising the last time I did these games and four of the words actually came up in the very same class.

That's about it for now. I'll be back tomorrow with more sporcleicious ideas. Tomorrow's is a fantastic way to practice reported speech. A great idea my colleague Neil gave me just yesterday.

I'll catch you on the morrow.

H

Friday 4 April 2014

Imagine if......

In the entire time I've been teaching Cambridge Exams; the main fear my students have had has always been around the Use of English exam. More specifically phrasal verbs and dependent prepositions.

In my never ending quest to eradicate this this fear and, more importantly, keep students talking and improving on their speaking. After all what is a language if all you can do it put the right word in a space and correctly guess a question with a 25% chance of getting it right with your eyes closed. I digress. What I came up with in the end was a simple idea which involves a lot of cutting up pieces of paper and the need for at least a sprinkle of imagination, on the student's part. 

First I put the class in pair then I get each pair to select for the four following catagories.  


  1. A Name/Profession (x2 per pair)                                           
  2. A Situation (x1)
  3. Some recently studied phrasal verbs (x4)
  4. Dependent prepositions (x4)
The next step is pretty simple. You hand it over to the students and get them to write a dialogue between these two people in their given situation, using all the phrasal verbs and dependent prepositions they have chosen. 

I've found this brings about a much greater understanding of the selected vocab and a good deal of laughter. 
I've added the printable version to the section at the top (just a few materials).

That's all for now peeps.

At school
On the tube, stuck in a tunnel
At church
In a bar
In an airport departure lounge
At a vegan food festival
In a bar
At a concert
At a police station
 On a sinking ship
In a park
 On a desert island
In the changing rooms at the gym
 Stuck in a lift
In a bar
 In a traffic jam
In the bus queue
 In a sauna
At the supermarket
 After an exam

Barak Obama
Adolf Hitler
Josef Stalin
Vincent Van Gogh
A Hairdresser
Pablo Picasso
Marilyn Monroe
Count Dracula
A computer technician
Albert Einstein
 Dalai Lama
Russell Brand
Cristiano Ronaldo
Nelson Mandela
Lance Armstrong
Darth Vader
A doctor
Walter White
A teacher
Batman
Grow up
Hand out
Pick up
Think up
Stand out
Turn up
Stand up
Turn down
Look up
Get off
Think over
Get on
Come up with
Make up
Bring up
Break out
Look forward to
Work out
Drop in
Hang out
Depend on
Break from
Addicted to
Bored with
Admit to
Capable of
Think of
Successful in
Come from
Agree with
Argue about
Arrest for
Accuse of
Discuss with
Stop from…-ing
Explain to
Fear of
Congratulate on
Hope to
Rely on

Wednesday 2 April 2014

20 Question.......Tags

Well, it's been a while hasn't it. Too long some might say. How on earth have we gone on with our lives without your frequent updates Harry? I don't know, but it seems you have and so have I.

I recently took my ESL presenter train, well bus,  off to Madrid for TESOL Spain 2014. Despite speaking at 09:30 on a balmy Sunday morning I got a pretty decent turn out, so thanks to everyone for showing your faces. Upon my return I've jumped right back into work and a mere three weeks later here I am, posting again.

There'll be a few more posts over the next few days because my brain has been simply overflowing with ideas.

This first one came about due to my students, who are all Spanish, constant use of the word No as a question tag. Try as I might I couldn't get through to them that, while English speakers do use no as a question tag, they really aren't "supposed" to. I also explained that in an exam situation they'd be looked upon in a much better light if they used the correct question tag. Or at the very least. Right?

The question tag unit in the book came at just the right time. I started by playing question tag dominoes. Which you can see below. I just cut them up and handed them around. It's a great introduction. (I'll add the downloadable doc to my the useful links above)
aren’t we?
You’re name’s Harry
isn’t it?
You’ve been here before
haven’t you?
Let’s make a move
shall we?
You didn’t see the film
did you?
She’ll be at the party
won’t she?
You couldn’t lend me five euros
could you?
You can speak Spanish
can’t you?
You haven’t seen Gavin anywhere
have you?
He’s bringing Barbara
isn’t he?
She won’t tell anyone
will she?
Give us a hand with this
will you?
We are all agreed

Next I did simple matching exercise. I used this one here:
http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises/questions/question_tags.htm

Finally I got students to select the most obscure thing they could find in the room and played 20 questions with them. However, this time with tag questions. I started by giving them examples so they didn't get stuck on isn't it?

When the students felt they were getting closer I told them to change their intonation to a falling intonation to show they pretty much knew what it was but just wanted confirmation.

Here were a few of my examples.

We use it every day, don't we?

Marco has one in his bag, doesn't he?

It starts with a letter from the first half of the alphabet, doesn't it?


So that's all for now folks.

I'll be back in a couple of days with my newest activity Imagine if.... a great way to practice phrasal verbs and dependent propositions. Not to mention an imagination booster.

'til then.

H
Follow me on twitter for regular updates: @sirhofthebomb