I once again had most of this week’s classes canceled due to
school events or the public holiday. This has given me time to deal with STG
assignments, but as I work multiple part-time contracts, if I don’t work I don’t
get paid.
Nonetheless, I did have some classes and managed to record
the one 6th grade class for my lesson plan assignment. With all the
cancelled classes this week I only had one shot at the recording. Furthermore,
I had to interrupt the class scheduled textbook activity, to insert a more
dialogic discourse activity.
Having limited time and opportunity to get this homework
assignment done, I found myself rushing a little bit. When showing the PowerPoint
and asking a question to activate the students schema, I would then rapidly
fire off the answer or echo the students answer, in order to move the lesson on
more rapidly.
We then moved on to the main activity of having three
opposing teams of students describe an image to their team artist. No Korean
was allowed to communicate, but the students were allowed to point out the
location of nouns on the paper. With the co-teacher and I moderating the game,
it went fairly well. I was a little frustrated to see that under pressure, some
of my star students reverted back to very basic sentences, or just answering
with single words. They are usually able to better express themselves, in a
more relaxed setting. I should keep this in mind for future discussion
activities.
In retrospect I should have had the students engage in more pair work in order to enable more authentic interaction. By simply asking the students to come up with five nouns and five adjectives, after explaining those concepts, they would better remember the target language I was trying to teach. I justified the long PPT vocabulary refresher with the fact that the main activity was strong in dialogic discourse, but this doesn't excuse the opportunity cost of my monologic introduction.
In retrospect I should have had the students engage in more pair work in order to enable more authentic interaction. By simply asking the students to come up with five nouns and five adjectives, after explaining those concepts, they would better remember the target language I was trying to teach. I justified the long PPT vocabulary refresher with the fact that the main activity was strong in dialogic discourse, but this doesn't excuse the opportunity cost of my monologic introduction.
Having trouble counting this as 'reflection', Justin. Your middle, four line paragraph is what this blog post should emphasize... Consider expanding it tomorrow if you'd like it to count?
ReplyDeleteAffirmative.
ReplyDelete