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]]>One of the speakers, David Spencer, talked about “Motiv8: Eight Key Factors in Motivating Teenage Students ”.
During his talk, Spencer referred to the article below. We’d like to provide it for you today, so that you can review your notes and introduce these ideas to your classrom or school.
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MOTIV8: Eight Key Factors in Motivating Teenage Students
David Spencer
Tbilisi, Georgia
8th November 2014
1.) Personalisation
For students to communicate comfortably in another language, it’s important to create an atmosphere of personal trust in the classroom, where students feel at ease talking about their lives.
Activities:
2.) Challenge
If you treat teenagers as if they know nothing, they’ll act as if know nothing. Try to challenge students in terms of grammar, vocabulary, texts, and interesting content. Think also about having open-ended activities for fast finishers to avoid bored, potentially disruptive students.
Activities for fast finishers:
3.) ‘Do-ability’
Give teenage students structured activities that help to make difficult things easy, or do-able.
Activity:
Ask students to write down:
1. a country 2. a boy’s name – famous, fictional, unusual… 3. a girl’s name– famous, fictional, unusual… 4. a city 5. a verb in the past simple (+ object if necessary) 6. an animal 7. a superhero 8. a place 9. a type of food 10. a number
Then give them a skeleton text below to put their words into. Let them compare texts. Then analyse the linkers and use those linkers as a structure for the students’ own text.
[box type=”shadow” align=”aligncenter” ]This story took place in (1) _______. It all began when (2) _______ met (3) _______. They decided to go to (4) _______. Lots of things happened there. First they (5) _______. Then they saw a big (6) _______. The (6) _______ attacked them but just at that moment (7) _______ came and rescued them. (7) _______ took them to (8) _______ and they ate (9) _______. In the end, (2) _______ married (3) _______ and they had (10) _______ children.[/box]
4.) Engagement
The main thing we need in any class is that the students are engaged and active in our activities. Enjoyment is an important factor.
5.) Progress / 6.) Success
Help students to see the progress they’re making. Do regular progress checks, guiding them to extra practice if they need it. Include cumulative practice and revision throughout the year.
Activity:
7.) Variety
Make sure there is variety of skills and language work, interaction, task types, and media. Activities that are out of the ordinary will help to keep the students’ interest.
Activities:
(a) Spell words. Students who have a letter that appears in the word come to the front of the class and position themselves to spell the word correctly.
(b) Call out a category. Students have to think of a word beginning with their letter for the category. They hold up their card and say the word. If they can’t, they lose a point.
8.) Teacher Motivation
Activity:
One of the speakers, Philip Kerr, will be talking about “Learning Vocabulary: It Takes Two to Tango”.
During his talk, Kerr will be referencing several websites. We’d like to provide those for you today, in preperation for his talk.
We look forward to seeing you there!!
[button color=”blue” size=”medium” link=”http://adaptivelearninginelt.wordpress.com/2014/10/13/spaced-repetition-and-the-classroom-part-1/” target=”blank” ]Spaced Repitition in the Classroom, Part 1[/button][button color=”blue” size=”medium” link=”http://adaptivelearninginelt.wordpress.com/2014/10/29/spaced-repetition-and-the-classroom-part-2/” target=”blank” ]Spaced Repitition in the Classroom, Part 2[/button]
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