The following lesson is an example of a pre-orientation
warm-up exercise designed to improve familiarity between students, while
simultaneously allowing the teacher to assess their particular English levels.
For the purpose of brevity, occasionally students (plural) shall be referred to
as Ss, students (singular) shall be referred to simply as S and the teacher
referred to as T.
Involves: Critical
thinking, improvisation, anticipating questions, dialogue trees, some chunking
and repetition and being able to detect lies by listening to tone and observing
body-language.
Students: Usually
this game is suitable for 6-12 students. For huge classes (say 20+), split
students into groups and have them do the game just within their groups.
Description of
exercise: The game is called ‘Detective’ or ‘Two Truths and One Lie’. Its
main purpose is to get students critically thinking and to help them express
themselves. Response time and the ability to improvise an answer to an
unexpected question will also be gauged.
Ss should be informed that the lies should be neither too obvious (“I’m
an alien!” I’m a North Korean spy!”,etc), nor too boring or subtle (“my age is
18” when student is 17, or “my name is Yong-Ho” when it’s really something
else.) Ideally, the answers should lead to dialogue trees instead of being
monologic answers that don’t lead to further conversation. For this reason,
simple statements about age and names are also discouraged. First, T should
give an example of how to play. For myself I usually tell them “I am from New
York City, my hobby is painting and drawing comics and I have a younger
sister.” The follow-up questions should follow the “who, what, why, where,
what, how” (or Five W’s plus One H) pattern. One student may ask “what’s your
favorite place in New York?” to which I’ll answer naturally and quickly
“Central Park.” Another will ask me the plot of a comic or a description of a
painting I’ve done, to which I’ll tell him the answer to that too. When a
student asks about my “sister”, maybe what her name is, I’ll feign an awkward
response and maybe snap my fingers in the air as I try to recollect the name of
a person who doesn’t exist. Ideally, the students should pick up on this.
Perhaps for more advanced students, I hesitate only for a moment and then tell
them an unusual name like “Ruby.” This should lead to more critical and probing
questions, like “where does she go to school?”, “what are her hobbies”, etc. At this point I get caught out (T please don’t
try to be too smart or you will completely miss the point of the set-up).
Students will go around in a circle
and attempt the game. It has always been successful and it sometimes produces a
lot of laughs when students have to answer a follow-up question with a
ridiculous answer (eg: “my dog’s name is Kimbap!”). Pay attention to their
reaction time and their ability to detect lies and build dialogue trees from
information provided.
Conclusion:
Students become better acquainted with one another, teacher has quick
indication of students’ levels.
Hey Andrew,
ReplyDeleteYou're describing a famous activity here, with sme nice details about your particular approach to it. Do you see that this post is notreally, however, a teacher's reflection on teaching practice? et me know if you want to talk to me about what you should be doing here, or just work on becoming more reflective next week. There are a couple of quotes and references about teacher reflection in the packet I gave you last Saturday.