Sunday, October 31, 2010

Another way to do a song...

What can you do with a song in an ESL class?
Error correction
Gap fill
Re-order the lines
Re-order the words (!)
Running dictation (with the text...correct while listening)
And one I learned from Margaret Horrigan of IH Manzoni

Take the first verse of the song you want to do with your students. For this example, let's use "These Boots Are Made For Walking" by Nancy Sinatra (because this is what MH used at the conference, to lead into her lesson about shoes). 
Count how many words there are in the first verse, and maintaining the punctuation, replace each word with a letter (in order---1,2,3,4,5,....). You can do this on the board, leaving space to replace the numbers with the words. Or you can use the technology available, and do it as a document, which you then project onto the board (or else, surely, you can do it somehow on an interactive white board, but as I have no experience with one, I'll leave that to the really techy people!) 
If you do it as a doc and project it, you have the words under the numbers, but in white on a white background, so they are invisible at first. As the students guess them, you can then change the colour of each correct word to the colour of the team which guessed the word....

Proceedure : Divide the class into two or three teams, and assign each team a colour (according to your whiteboard pens, of course!). If you are still working on a blackboard, you may have coloured chalk. If you have no coloured chalk, assign each team a shape - the Circle Team, the Oval Team and the Rectangle Team, for example. 
Explain that they must listen to the song, and then they can hazard a guess - one word, or two or three or four (etc) words TOGETHER (this is to show them the lexical chunks). If the words are correct, write them up on the team's colour (or put the team's shape around the word). They can listen again and again, while they build the verse up on the board. 
Once that is done (and you can help them with questions such as "What can come before a noun?"), you then go straight into the lesson. 

This technique can also be used with short reading passages (which you, the teacher, read to the class), which also lead into the theme of the lesson. 

I hope I've explained this clearly enough. If not (or even if), please leave a comment, and I will attempt to clarify!

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