This document provides guidance on organizing and managing an effective classroom. It discusses setting up displays, seating arrangements, and personalizing the space. Clear communication is also emphasized, including using body language, gestures, eye contact and walking around. Instructions should be concise and demonstrations provided when possible. The blackboard is identified as a useful teaching tool for writing, drawing, and games. Planning the board layout, spelling, illustrations, and mind maps are recommended.
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Module 3 of Teaching English
This document provides guidance on organizing and managing an effective classroom. It discusses setting up displays, seating arrangements, and personalizing the space. Clear communication is also emphasized, including using body language, gestures, eye contact and walking around. Instructions should be concise and demonstrations provided when possible. The blackboard is identified as a useful teaching tool for writing, drawing, and games. Planning the board layout, spelling, illustrations, and mind maps are recommended.
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Module 3: Managing the Classroom
Unit 1: Organising your Classroom
Having a well-organised classroom will set the tone of your lesson and create a relaxed physical environment for your learners. This will involve using displays, your board and the seating arrangements for the classroom. Having an excellent environment will make your classroom a better learning environment. Before you start teaching, walk into your classroom, or sometimes a number of different classrooms, and try to find out what sort of equipment you have. Try to personalise your classroom by displaying your students' work, using posters and other colourful information. It's always a good idea to spend the first week getting to know names, creating wall displays, setting the rules and, of course, having fun and playing games. Having a comfortable and colourful classroom will make a big difference to your lessons. Good wall displays can also be used for teaching. I have often had groups walk around the classroom and observe the displays during a lesson. I have also found that having a classroom with easy accessibility for your students and teacher to walk around in makes life easier. In summary, being well organised will give you one less thing to think about and allow you to concentrate on the teaching and helping students who need some extra guidance with problems. Don't be static at the front of the class, using the board. I have always found that walking around the room lends itself to a more dynamic, open, friendly and fun environment.
Unit 2: Communication and Giving Instructions
Great communication is important when you are a teacher and using the right body language, smiling, gestures, eye contact, walking around the room and giving clear instructions are essential. When I teach, I like to walk around the room so that I can make eye contact with all the students. I like to have the tables and chairs set up in groups, which means that often not everybody is facing the front. Smiling and using open body language will also help and I often use a thumb up or clap to reinforce praise and positive language. I'm also quite energetic in the classroom and often go from the back of the class to the board to write something. I feel positive that using praise and positive language has the most impact on my students. Giving clear instructions for your activities is paramount. Once you have engaged the students using a starter activity, it's critical that you use clear, concise and plain English and avoid any lengthy and colloquial sentences. Let's consider some examples: Use concise imperatives CORRECT: Work with the person to your right. INCORRECT: Would you mind if you work with a partner? Okay, what I'd like you to do if you don't mind is... We, as teachers, can be too polite or we are afraid of being impolite; but it's right to give clear and concise instructions. You will not offend anyone because you will have built up plenty of trust with your starter and you will be calm and smiling. Avoid using colloquialisms: INCORRECT: If you need any help, don't be afraid to give me a shout. INCORRECT: If you find yourself really out of your depth, then ask your partner. CORRECT: Ask me if you don't understand. CORRECT: Ask the person you are working with if you don't understand. Over time, you will naturally find yourself giving clear instructions. Use other techniques as well if you are having problems making yourself understood. Use the board or ask a more capable student to explain to the individual. Most important: stay calm. Demonstrate: If you can demonstrate an activity either by completing the first part of the activity or by role playing with some stronger students, you will find that this will work better than lengthy instructions. Check that your students have understood you. A good way to do this is to watch their faces and by asking some concept checking questions (CCQs). We will discuss CCQs in more detail later in this Module. Voice Your voice is very important in the classroom and you can use intonation to express to students a whole variety of feelings and prompts. It's critical to speak loudly so that everyone can hear you. If you want them to start an activity, often a louder voice will signal to the students that it's time to start. It will also signal the end of an activity. Whispering is also a good way of getting attention, as students will automatically stop talking to make sure they can hear. It's also a sound idea to use your voice (at different levels) and your body language to tell stories. In many classrooms you will teach in, resources will be limited so you will have only your voice with which to model with. Speak clearly and try to avoid protracted and stilted ways of talking. Eye contact Eye contact is also very important and can convey success and interest in the student. I normally try to make eye contact with all the students throughout the lesson and will often speak to a student at the end of a lesson and ask if there is anything bothering him, if I haven't made successful eye contact with him. You will find a great deal of success in the classroom if you can use eye contact, reinforced with positive language. I use it a great deal. Try it. Gestures Gestures are good to use because they reinforce positive language. Try using thumbs up or two thumbs up or try clapping.
Unit 3: Board Work
The blackboard or whiteboard is one of the most useful tools in a teacher's classroom. In some developing countries, you might find it is the only resource in the room. I have taught in classrooms where I have had only chalk and a blackboard. Some of the advantages of using a board are as follows: Gives students a visual stimulus, especially the visual learners Allows students to focus It's good fun to get students to the front to draw on the board Great for games Environmentally friendly Great for showing vocabulary and introducing new concepts Mind maps There are also a few disadvantages when using a board but, as your career develops, you will become more and more comfortable with the board. We will examine some of the 'don'ts' in a moment. Planning the layout of your board: We recommend that you divide the board into 4 using an H. You can use certain boxes for activities or keywords you want to use. You might want to keep one box for vocabulary you are using. Blackboard drawing: There is no end of different drawing you can use to illustrate and convey a feeling or new vocabulary word. And it doesn't matter if you can't draw; it's part of the learning experience and you will get better, as I did. You can also ask students to come to the front and help you if you are having problems. One of the best icebreaker activities is a game of Pictionary. We will discuss this later in the Module. Start drawing with stick men, if you don't feel confident to start with. Let's examine some of the 'don'ts' of using a board: It's crucial that you try to avoid capital letters and avoid cursive script (joined up words): Avoid capitals especially with those students who do not use the Roman alphabet as we do. Avoid cursive script because it's more difficult for students to grasp the individual letters of a word when they are learning. Let's consider some of the 'dos' of using the board: Spelling: the board is an excellent way to write a new word and make sure the students are able to copy the word down. Avoid spelling mistakes! Illustrate jobs using drawing. This can be lots fun trying to draw certain types of job and getting the students to guess, e.g. policeman, fireman, nurse, doctor Illustrate transport-using drawings, e.g. cars, trains, boats, planes Illustrating facial expressions to show feelings. Exercise: Read the paragraph below and draw pictures to illustrate the story. Jack was 24 when he first went travelling. He took a round the world airline ticket and travelled from the USA to Fiji to New Zealand and then to Australia. After spending time in Australia and visiting many beautiful places, he went to South East Asia. He travelled from Singapore to Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. As Jack travelled around, he experienced many different foods and cultures. He also visited many exotic sights, like Angkor Wat and the Royal palace in Bangkok. In conclusion, he liked travelling so much that he decided to stay and got married and had a family. You could also draw pictures on the board and have the students write a short paragraph about what they can see. You can draw a picture illustrating how a word can be pronounced. Add a picture. You can use the board to illustrate intonation. Write words like 'wonderful' and 'exciting' and show where the emphasis should be. You can use the board to show grammatical forms by drawing tables. Mind maps: Mind maps are an excellent way of eliciting new vocabulary and ideas. You can use a mind map for just about anything. We will explore mind maps in a later Module. Show timelines for present, past and future tenses. Again, we will explore these later. Use the board for playing games and writing the team names down. Get your students to come to the front to write their team names down and add the score. Introduce new vocabulary. So, when you use the board, try to remember 4 things. Write clearly in letters which are not cursive. Write in a straight line. Try not to turn your back on the class too much. Try to do a small amount of writing at a time, eliciting information from the class and maintaining eye contact as much as possible. Be reflective of your lesson. Ask yourself at the end of each lesson whether you could do anything differently and improve your style. We will also come onto this in a later Module but I would also like you to ask students: 'What went well?' Have fun!
Unit 4: Creating Excellent Displays
Displays will make your classroom look inviting and warm for your students. You can use anything that has been used in your previous lessons and also include some other displays like maps and pictures. You can also use your displays as a teaching aid. Let your students walk around the room and answer questions about what they can see. A great lesson is to display posters about different countries around the world and let your students walk around the classroom and answer questions. This idea can be used for just about any subject or any type of lesson. Let's have a look at some of the things you can display in your classroom. Make a clothesline: This is easy to do. You get some string and attach it from one corner of the classroom to the other. Go and buy some clothes pegs and attach some useful pictures, definitions and perhaps some phonemes. Anything will work. Maps: Maps are good, especially the ones which show where you are from. You can also get your students to make some displays in the first week about a country they would like to visit. Phonemic Chart: This will help you when you come to teach pronunciation. We will explore this in Module 9. External Courses Please display any courses overseas that are available to students. Classroom Rules: It's critical to discuss classroom rules with your students and then agree and display them on the wall.
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