Tuesday, 14 October 2014
Guten Morgen Frau Wylie!
Along with all my routines in my lessons, their own use of spontaneous language is rewarded by the giving of small sticky dots, which they collect on a grid in the back of their books. Once they have 5, they can claim a merit. There is usually a race at the start of the lesson for someone to ask 'Darf ich meinen Blazer ausziehen?' before anyone else, because they know that copying someone else saying it won't cut the mustard; it has to be spontaneous. I know it isn't completely spontaneous, but it has that feel of real communication for the sake of actually needing to communicate, rather than learning the words needed for the lesson objectives, then switching to English for the general running of the lesson, which is, in my opinion more false! It's all about creating the right atmosphere, or as my wonderful and inspiring ex PGCE tutor, James Burch used to say, it's about 'suspending reality'.
Come to think of it, I should be rewarding them for shouting at me in German in the corridor; this is the ultimate example of spontaneous TL. Pass me the sticky dots...
Friday, 3 October 2014
I love teaching mfl!
Thursday, 2 October 2014
Perfect tense through classroom language
I have blogged before about setting up language for future use and at the moment we are using the perfect tense as part of our ever growing register routine. Its logical really and a natural progression. Here's what we do at the start of every lesson: first the pupils ask if they can do the register, points, stopwatch. Darf ich die Namensliste machen? Darf ich die Zeit stoppen? Darf ich die Punkte zählen? The register is then taken, using @ClassDojo on my tablet, while I take it on SIMS; the time is taken and points are given for pupils saying 'Nicht hier'. Afterwards, we keep a record of who has done what. I have a chart on a smartboard notebook, which is where we record this. I ask 'wer hat ... gemacht?' and at the moment I am getting them to say 'ich habe die Namensliste gemacht' etc.
You might think this takes up precious time at the start of the lesson and it does, but I would argue that this is time well spent. They are using some wonderful language which will stand them in good stead in the future.
Monday, 15 September 2014
Third week in and all is well!
Right then, what to tell you...
Routines
I have introduced a team point system (as I have already mentioned), so from this, they can now ask for points:
Darf ich ... Punkte haben?they can ask to do the points too:
Darf ich die Punkte zählen?and they can state whether the allocation of points is fair:
Das ist (nicht) fair!
We have started the register routine too, so added to:
Ich bin hier
Nicht hierthey can also say:
Darf ich die Namensliste machen?
Darf ich die Zeit stoppen?They ask to time the register which then leads to the next piece of language which my Year 7 class are starting to say:
Das war langsam
Das war schnellIn our school, pupils can wear jumpers or blazers and they can only remove them if they have permission, so here is another brilliant way of introducing some lovely language:
Darf ich meinen Blazer/Pulli ausziehen?A lot of phrases start with 'Darf ich'. Similarly in my French classes: 'Est-ce que je peux ...'. This is a great one to build on and is extremely useful to know.
Soon, I will be asking them to give their opinions on what they thought of the register. For example:
Ich denke das war gut...and building up to:
Ich denke das war gut, weil das schnell warThis will set them up for when we introduce 'weil' and it should make it easier for them to pick it up, having heard and used it before.
The mats are helping a little. However, we are not yet at the stage where pupils are using them to talk to me spontaneously in German. Little steps.
Thursday, 4 September 2014
Lesson 2
Today we did greetings - Guten Morgen, guten Tag, guten Abend, gute Nacht and Auf Wiedersehen/tschüs. We also recapped Wie heißt du and ich heiße and the register routine vocab; ich bin hier/nicht hier
They arrived in good spirits and were ready to learn. I introduced team competition, which I think is a wonderful tool in any MFL teacher's toolbox. I introduced a sheet handing out race, for teampoints, I introduced pupils telling me how many teampoints they should have (I gave them the choice; "drei Punkte oder vier?", whilst holding up the appropriate amount of fingers!); this led to "Das ist nicht fair!", as I 'forgot' how many points were awarded and wrote too many on one team's chart on the whiteboard. We played 'Beat the teacher/Repeat if true', where the vocab was on the WB and I pointed at each in turn and said them out loud; pupils have to repeat it if I say the right one and if I say the wrong one, they remain silent and win the point, or I win the point if they make a sound. First to 5 wins. There were lots of opportunities for "Das ist nicht fair", "nein", "ja", which they delighted in!
When I needed someone to explain, they wore the hat, but this happened only once today and the pupils who were struggling last lesson, really pulled it out of the bag today and got stuck in. Maybe yesterday they were a little shellshocked!
I gave myself 5 minutes at the end to talk about my website (www.wylieweb.weebly.com) in English as I needed to explain about scanning QR codes and other technical stuff!
Here is the slideshow I used (Looks a bit weird below, but if you download it, should be OK! Also photo credits in 'notes' section of PowerPoint):
Wednesday, 3 September 2014
Lesson 1
Learning how to say what you are called and asking someone else was the first objective and for this I had a speech bubble with 'Wie heißt du' and 'Ich heiße Frau Wylie' in it. Again, some drilling and a few appropriate mimes did the trick. To practise this, I asked them to ask 5 people in the class. I simply said "fünf Personen" and then did some examples myself. To finish off, I used my lovely new inflatable microphone to ask random pupils their names, which seemed to go down well!
Objective 2 was to learn a little about Germany. Originally this quiz existed in English, but I was determined to do it in German, so I doctored it! (See below) They wrote the answers (A,B,C,D) on their mini whiteboards. As you will see below, some of the questions are obvious, but some required a little explanation. Where possible I gestured (Frage 4), but occasionally, we needed a proper explanation, so that's when the Union Flag hat came out (see post on 26th August - Chapeau). I simply said, "Was ist das auf Englisch?" and showed the hat and I had a volunteer raise her hand. I placed the hat on her head, which caused a little giggle and then she explained what it meant. Sometimes having a pupil interpreter is extremely useful. It means that they don't hear you speaking English, thus keeping to your TL.
Finally, the third objective was to learn about Schultüten and for this I had made a short explanatory video with PowToon (See last slide below for link). I showed it and then asked for someone to explain (With the hat) and before they left to go to their next session, they were given a hand made Schultüte (Made by last year's Year 10 classes!) as a nice memento of their first German lesson.
To get them quiet, what I normally do is count down: "drei, zwei, eins, null, STOP!". To accompany this I raise 3 fingers, then 2, then 1, then make a zero with my fist and on STOP I raise my hand to show my palm. It never fails. I have done it in English with my form, but I have found that it always works best in German or French!! Weird!
There were a couple of pupils, who were clearly struggling with the quiz, but I dealt with this by kneeling down next to them and helping them out individually. There were also 2 TAs in the room as there are a couple of pupils with SEN, but generally the class coped well. No-one complained or mentioned that there was no English spoken; it seemed to be expected. I have them again tomorrow for a full lesson, so we will see how that goes, but so far, so good!
I can't remember where this slideshow originally came from as we have had it for a few years now. We really like it!. It was in English and as I mentioned above I translated it into German. I also added the link on the last page and put some more pictures on to make the answers easier to understand.
First Lesson Quiz About Germany
Saturday, 30 August 2014
Skolinks
Friday, 29 August 2014
Intro video
Here it is:
Tuesday, 26 August 2014
Chapeau!
They become readily available when we have things like World Cups and Euros etc! This is how I use it:
Child desperately needs to speak to you in English. You will only allow them to if they ask in the TL if they can (and sometimes, I make them state a reason why, like 'because it is too difficult' etc). When they have asked in beautiful French or German (language given to them on the language mats on a previous post), they then wear the above hat. Whilst the hat is on and ONLY whilst the hat is on you are both allowed to speak to each other in English. The SECOND it comes off, you are back in the TL. This can work for you too. YOU must ask for permission to speak in English (Sometimes they refuse you permission!) and on their approval, you wear the hat and the same situation applies. Simple, but effective.
I love my hat!
Tuesday, 19 August 2014
Some excellent resources
Here are the presentations. The message is clear - be a role model and be consistent:
Sunday, 10 August 2014
Classroom Language mats
Thursday, 7 August 2014
Planning
So, thoughts on the first lesson. Well I will have 3 Year 7 classes; 1 German and 2 French. As German is my specialism, I will probably concentrate on that class mainly for the benefit of this blog, although I am sure that the 2 French classes will pop up. I will assume that most of the pupils in the class have done French before, which is the norm here. Therefore, it will be appropriate to start from zero knowledge. As I mentioned in my previous post, I do not want to start with the usual boring rules and expectations lesson, which is all done in English as this will be defeating the object somewhat. What to start with and how to go about it is the issue.
I usually start with a registration routine pretty sharpish. For those of you who have never done this I thoroughly recommend it to get the party started(!). In German, I usually introduce 'Ich bin hier' as their answer to the register and 'nicht hier' for those who are absent. I do this because it is all about thinking ahead and using structures that are going to be future friendly. 'Ich bin' is a phrase which will be used over again, so that's why I use this for the register. 'Nicht hier' is just a simple foot in the door. In the future, they will be taught: 'Er/Sie ist nicht hier/krank/im Urlaub' etc.
However, before they even enter the classroom, they will have to be put in their seating plan; so, I think a visual representation of the plan on the SMARTboard would be a good idea, accompanied by 'Fred, du sitzt neben Bob und Joe' with lots of gestures and pointing. After this, a greeting and a simple intro accompanied by a visual presentation (PPT, Emaze, Haiku Deck) with images and cognates where possible:
Hallo!
Guten Tag/Morgen!
Ich heiße Frau Wylie. Wie heißt du?
Eliciting some meaning from them would be the next step, then drilling with mimes. It's essentially a dialogue, so it would make sense to get them out of their seats and using it with their classmates as soon as possible to get to know each other - it is after all a communication tool - that it why we are learning it and teaching it in the TL! After that I will need to use it to get to know their names, so a ripple effect conversation would be good: I start it off and address one of them - maybe I will throw a ball (Or my knitted snowman, Peter) and the conversation will move from child to child. An element of competition may need to be introduced - maybe a timer...teampoints for each conversation delivered. Maybe a timer with a random explosion - if it explodes on you while you are talking, you lose points. Maybe a musical chairs type activity - play some music quietly in the background (German of course!) and when it stops, points are lost??? Lots of things could be done. I want them to leave their first German lesson, having had fun and excited to come to the next one.
Something that we do in our department is hand out Schultüten to all our new Germanists on their first lesson (like they do in Germany). These have been made by our Year 9 and 10 and filled by Year 12. We put sweets from our Austria trip in with stationery items, like rulers and pens. They love them and it rounds off their first lesson really nicely. The whole experience needs to be as real as possible, so that they expect the same kind of thing in the next lesson (not the treats, the learning experience!) - we use German to communicate and it is normal practice in our lessons.
Phew - lots of thoughts and possibly rambling here! I'll have to come back and sift through to plan the lesson. I also started to make some phrase signs for the door for colleagues in other subject areas to use with us if they knock at the door for something - got to lead by example!
Bis bald!
Thursday, 24 July 2014
Creating the right atmosphere from the start
As far as rules and behaviour expectations go, I read an interesting article in the TES about a year ago about a teacher who launched straight into teaching and allowed the pupils to 'work out' where the boundaries were. I must admit, it's a little daunting, but then I don't work in a school where behaviour is an issue. I always put my classes in seating plans, which helps with remembering names and I have various ways of rewarding and applying sanctions. I am going to re-launch Class Dojo with my lower school classes for an individual team point thingy and I will be implementing my yellow and red card sanction system. I have also considered starting a football card collecting system off the back of the world cup - not sure yet; maybe too much.
Hopefully with all this in place, I should be able to jump right in at the deep end with the TL, using lots of simple language and cognates and of course mimes galore!
Any thoughts? I would really love to hear them. Post comments here, send an email (see right hand side) or send a tweet (@reebekwylie)
Thursday, 26 June 2014
Year 9 pupils teach Year 6 pupils in the TL!
Yesterday was great. A day to feel really proud. This year we have run our own voluntary 'Language Leaders' course for Year 9 pupils, based on Rachel Hawkes' language leaders course, which you can find here. Pupils have come once a week, at lunch time, with their lunch and have learnt how to set context, present language, drill language, set up pairwork - all in TL. Our aim was to get them to help out in our annual Year 6 taster day. 26 Year 9 pupils successfully managed to teach 24 Year 6 pupils in French and German, all about clothes, colours and opinions and it all culminated in a French and German fashion show. Throughout the day, our Year 9s taught language in chunks, in small groups. They taught from their own plans that they had written and used activities that they had devised, based on ones they had learnt from us. The pace was a little slow, but there was a languages teacher in the room to move them on, if needed.
The result - the Year 9s loved it, the Year 6s loved it and the languages teachers were nowhere near as worn out as they normally are after one of these extremely intense days. The most impressive thing is, that they managed to deliver the lessons IN THE TARGET LANGUAGE!
If they can do it, all of us can!
Please get in touch if you want more info about how we went about it. Thanks to Rachel Hawkes for inspiring us to do this in the first place. Roll on next year!
Wednesday, 18 June 2014
Observations
The trick is to find some really simple phrases and to use them consistently. I find that less is more and often, rather than barking long winded commands at my classes, I prefer to use short phrases and sometimes single words and gestures;
Examples:
'On pose les stylos' or simply 'stylos' and gesture for it to be put down
'C'est quoi, la date?' or simply 'la date?' and gesture writing it on the board
'Ouvrez les cahiers' or simply 'les cahiers' and gesture opening a book
If you have good routines and if you are consistent, your learners will quickly catch on.
More on routines later!
Signing off!
Displays
I also don't have the seats set out like this. I have changed the layout to rows again, so that everyone is facing the front (avoiding too much chatter).
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Before I start!!
There are of course things you can do to help this communication happen. Your walls and noticeboards are a brilliant place to display useful language, or if you are short of space, why not provide 'language mats' to give your learners the vocab they might need to say various important things, such as 'Can I go to the toilet?'
They will not need all of the language on there to begin with, but they can start to make connections and maybe surprise you by coming out with something else from the mat that they have worked out themselves! Do not underestimate the power of teampoints and prizes, or indeed, praise. Learners like to win, so use that to your advantage.
The main thing is that you start off small and build up, so routines such as taking the register, handing books out and keeping score become a language opportunity. Then you can build it up to asking for points and giving reasons why they should have those points etc. Before you know it you have got complex 3 or 4 clause sentences, just as a result of the 'incidental' language.
You have to put to one side your thoughts about not having time to fit in the content language and understand that THIS IS the content language that they need. The structures and phrases you teach them to communicate with in lessons are the structures and phrases that they can use for a variety of 'topics' if you are clever about it and choose wisely.
Finally, what if they don't understand you and switch off? This won't happen if you use cognates and simple language to begin with. There is always a way to make yourself understood, including gestures and mimes; anyway, isn't this what we do when we travel to other places - we make ourselves understood! Your learners will feel great when they make themselves understood in your lesson too!