The Teacher's Magazine
The Teacher's Magazine
The Teacher's Magazine
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MAGAZINES
MULTIMEDIA RESOURCES
Activities and Projects
Workrho aotivitier
Photoopibe activities
Gorrrer
Pooterr,
Videos
soppienrentr
Printable activities
ear colleagues,
This month The Teacher's Magazine brings along lots of
0' ideas on literature. For very young learners, there is a lesson
plan on the traditional story The Gingerbread Man; for young
learners, you will find lesson plans on The Ugly Duckling and The Very
Hungry Caterpillar.
For teenagers, you will find a lesson plan on the ballad The llva Sisters
of Binnorie and on the story Alice in Wonderland. In the Global Culture
Corner there are ideas 10 work with Shakespeare's Hamlet and King
Lear.
Last but not least, there is a new section called Tips for Teachers, which
will deal with the teaching of pronunciation providing tips for different
ages and lbvels.
We hope you enjoy this April's issue and make the most of it.
The Teacher's Magazine team
GRUPO
EDIBA
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Spain
All information in our website: www.ediba.csm
By e-mail: [email protected]
By Phone: 91 352 D9 18
By Fax: 91 715 58 75
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Contact:
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'his is a question that
many writers, critics and
theorists have asked
'I, themselves throughout the
centuries. It is likely that, while
reading some peculiar texts, we asked
ourselves the same question. Language
teachers may have sometimes explained it
to us. They may have even shown us or
made us read what they thought was
"good" literature, Literature, with capital
L. We can probably identify and
distinguish novels, short stories, poems
and theatre plays. We very well know
that Jorge Luis Borges's texts are thought
to be great ones around the world. We
also understand that certain authors,
whose books are bestsellers, are not as
highly esteemed as Shakespeare, Salinger
or Twain.
Terry Eagleton, in his book Literary
Theory: An Introduction, attempts to
explain what literature is and what is not. In this article, the
main concepts developed in "introduction: What is Literature?"
will be summarised.
At the beginning of the chapter, Eagleton refutes several
arguments that are, for one reason or another, false, incorrect
or insufficient to explain what literature is.
First, literature could be defined as "imaginative writing in the
sense of fiction", but this concept presents some problems.
The distinction between fact and fiction is a questionable one,
and it may differ from culture to culture. What is literally true
or not may vary since some texts that used to belong to the
category of "philosophy" or "history" may now be considered
literary. For instance, certain speeches, essays or letters may
now be read as Literature.
Secondly, we may consider that literature "uses language in
peculiar ways". According to the Formalists, literature
"transforms and intensifies ordinary language and deviates
systematically from everyday speech." They focus on
structures and devices ("form"), leaving aside the content of
the texts. The devices they study are imagery, rhythm, syntax,
among others that transform the language we use every day.
literary language is "a set of deviations from a norm", opposed
to the language we generally use. The problem with this
definition is that it is extremely difficult to identify only one
norm, from which literary language supposedly deviates. This
"ordinary language" that "people" use varies according to the
socio-historical context and educational level of those who use
it. Language is not only one, but a "highly complex range of
discourses". There is no single "linguistic community".
Teachers at school do not use the same "language" they use at
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,his lesson plan is aimed as pre-teens and
teenagers at elementary level. It deals with the
ballad The 71va Sisters of Binnorie. Many
recordings have been made of this ballad;
t, all of them revolve around the idea of an
however,
elder sister killing a younger one out of jealousy.
In the past, in Scotland (like in other parts of the world and
other cultures), when there were two or more sisters in a
family, the youngest had to wait for the eldest to gel married
before they could even be wooed by a gentleman. In this
tragic ballad, she elder sister pushes she younger down a dam
because the latter is in love with the knight, her fianc.
Actually, the knight loves the younger sister but tradition
dictates he has to marry the eldest daughter. When the young
sister dies, her dead body is found by a miller's son, and he
strings a harp with her hair. The story is resolved by a dens ox
machina device since the harp becomes alive and blames the
elder sister for her sibling's death.
When they start reading, encourage your students to use their
creativity and IT skills as much as possible Is grasp meaning.
In some versions, past tenses -ed are shortened. Discuss this
with the students and ask them how they shorten words in
text messages.
Lexics-grammatical features:
Simple past regular verbs.
Vocabulary related to the story.
Warm-up
Ask students to write a definition of jealousy. As an
alternative, students may complete the following statement:
I am jealous when..
Introduce vocabulary like wooer, since it might be an
unfamiliar word for students even in Lt. Ask them which
terms they use for someone who likes another person; let
students express themselves in Li if necessary.
You may wish to discuss older concepts of beauty through
the ages as portrayed in the poem by phrases that allude Is
hair and skin colour.
61
Task i
Ask students to categorize words in the vocabulary flashcards.
Then, distribute the words in pairs and tell students they will
choose a word and teach its pronunciation and meaning to the
rest of the group.
This task takes time and it may harm students' and your own
motivation. Remind students they will be listening and then
recording a version of a tragic song, that is, remind them of
the final outcome. Keep yourself and them motivated!
Task 2
Read the ballad to the students. Before you start to read aloud,
make sure you have students' attention. Some ideas: play
background music; walk around the room while you read and
make eye contact with your students; make strategic pauses
for suspense and include Li translations in between the
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Task 3
Ask students to identify the past tense verbs in the ballad and
circle them. Now, ask them to close their folders and dictate
this phrase twice: Oh, you jumped. Ididn't posh.
2) Tell them they may change some parts, add new lines or
skip some parts. Remind them that some comic strips do
not have excellent drawings, but they are effective all the
same. Students may want to draw people with simple
shapes.
Task 4
Students do activity C on page S. Ask students to support their
answers,
Task -a
Next, students do activity D. For this task, first read the
conversation to the students so that they understand the idea.
Then, give them time to complete the activity.
Task 5. Role-play
The key here is that students understand their roles, the
scenario and their objectives. Give them five minutes to
Level: Elementary/Pre-intermediate
Age: Pre-teens/leenagers
1) Categorize the words in the bank into objects, actions, people, places.
2) Adopt a word! In pairs, use a dictionary and ask for your teacher's help to become a specialist in the set of words your
teacher has assigned to you.
3) Now, in groups of four, present your words to the rest of the class.
M
in N
NE ,
Harper
Hair locks
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it
__
Mt
Mill
Stan
B) Listen to your teacher and follow the lyrics. Pay attention! Later, you will have to choose an alternative title.
The Cruel
Sister
C) The eldest sister arrives home one day, before the fatal moment. What does she say?
AIM
ll!
D) Imagine a phone conversation was possible between the younger sister (YS) and the eldest (ES). Put the
verbs into the simple past tense.
3)
YS: Hey! 11 ___________(be) thinking maybe we 2_(can) go to the river tomorrow...
(rain) yesterday. Maybe tomorrow it'll be horrible too... Did you check the weather
(past auxiliary). It'll be a clear day. Do you wanna go? Earlier today, 15_(make)
Kein SI The Cruel Sister; Cl option 1; D) 1) was, 2) could, 3) rernud. 41 did, SI wade, 61 did. 7) happened. 5) asked. SI gene.
The story
Once upon a lime, there were an
old woman and an old man who
lived in an old house. The old
woman made a gingerbread man
and put it into the oven to cook it.
When the gingerbread man was
done, the old woman opened the
oven door, but the gingerbread
!h? ccbka!nihj
www.enchantedlearning.com/stories/folktale/
gingerbreadman/story
Extra ideas:
Level: Kinder
El
EEII tEE I
B) Listen to the story, cut and paste.
El
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Ilei'
Objectives
Enjoy a classic story, The Very Hungry Caterpillar
by Eric Cane, and learn more about caterpillars.
Understand the importance of good nutrition to
grow healthy.
Contents
Linguistic exponents
Days of the week.
Fruit and food: junk food, healthy food.
Adjectives: little, tiny, big, hungry, warm, sick, fat.
Cocoon, caterpillar.
On (Monday) he ate through...
But,
Language practice
Discuss about healthy or junk food.
Discuss about nutrition,
Tell the story with the help of a puppet.
'liming: 10 to 12 lessons.
Tasks
Ask students:
What do you eat at weekends?
Stage i
lhacher interacts with students using the following questions
to introduce the topic:
What insects do you know?
What do insects eat?
What insect do you know that undergoes a metamorphosis?
(to introduce caterpillar)
THE VERY
HUNGRY
TERPILLAR
--
by
Why is it so popular?
Who usually does the cooking
in your family? Do you help
with the cooking? Do you know
any famous cook?
Do you enjoy cooking?
What's your favourite dish?
Make them aware of the
importance of good nutrition to
grow up healthy.
Stage 4
A volunteer comes to the front of the class and his
classmates wrap him up from toes upwards with toilet paper.
Then, ask:
Lorena Sabathni
all
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PART I
It is summer time. It is a beautiful sunny day. The sun is shining in the sky. There is a small house in the
country near a river. Behind she house, there is a barn, and in the barn, a mother duck is sitting on four eggs.
Suddenly, there is a CRICK CRACK CRICK CRACK Sound and one by one, all the eggs open up. All of them...
except for one. It is very hot in the farm. Mother Duck is delighted. One, two, three beautiful ducks: weak,
yellow and very small. But the last egg is big and different. It doesn't move. Mother Duck broods one hour, two
hours, three hours... At last, it breaks CRICK CRACK CRICK CRACK and what a surprise! Baby duck jumps Out
ofthe egg. It looks big and strong and grey and... ugly. It is different. Mother Duck goes to sleep, protecting her
little ducks. She is very proud. She has four baby ducks.
The following morning, Mother Duck goes for a walk with her four ducklings in a line. All the animals point and
laugh out loud, while saying "How ugly is the grey duckl" Mother Duck tries to accept him but all the animals
laugh and laugh. The ugly duck wants to be loved and makes silly things to be noticed. Summer passes by and
ugly duck realizes that he simply doesn't belong in that place. "Isn't he horrible?" a hen says and picks him.
isn't he ugly?" a rooster says and flies at him. Even his two brothers and sister mock him and cult him "THE
UGLY CLUMSY DUCKLING". He feels so sad and unhappy that he runs as fast as a thunder. He breaks a
beehive, destroys a pigsty, and passes through an anthill and even a shed. He rushes as fast as he can and turns
a spider web upside down.
"Ugly: unskillful, unpleasant to look at. Ugly duckling: someone who is less attractive, skillful etc than other people when they are
young, but who becomes beautiful and successful later. (Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. New edition)
..Clumsy; wooing is as awkward way and tending to break things, (Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. New edition)
C) Read the beginning of the story and complete the animals' homes (Use a dictionary, if it is necessary)
ANIMAL
Hen, rooster
Bee
Pig
Spider
Cow
Ant
Chicken
HOME
PIG
DUCK
COW
HEN
HORSE
CAT
DOG
GOAT
PART II
SHEEP
. a mother duck broods four eggs; three eggs are (b)_______________ and one is
In a small (a)
(c)
lel
I
a
- Oh, nollhree yellow ducks and a (d)_______________ duck hatch. How awful! Mother duck is
but the animals in the farm (f)________________ at the big duck.The poor duck is
in
the forest. One day, he meets Lady Swan. She is in a (m)_. He sees his reflection on the water and finds
He goes back home with his new family and all the animals are
again.
0) SEASONS, FEELINGS AND EMOTIONS. How does the Ugly Clumsy Duckling feel? Match the seasons and
the sentences.
1) SUMMER
I ) He is happy.
2) AUTUMN
3) WINTER
I He is treated as a toy.
( I He realizes he is different.
4) SPRING
He feels alone.
I ) Animals in the farm say sorry to him.
I He nearly freezes.
(I
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16
11 was
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5 Summer again.
I return home with Lady Swan.
And lam pleased again.
And in the form, they are all surprised
Tb find a handsome and cheerful swan.
They say sorry to me and now we live
As a big family, all happy and free.
B) While-reading activities,
SUMMER (FIRST STANZA)
1) How do you think the duckfeels when the animals laugh at him? How do you think the animals feel when they are
mocking the duck? Underline in red the words referring to the duckling and in blue the words referring to the animals.
Use a dictionary, if necessary.
--
Level: Bieser+;Efrmwt
BEAUTIFUL
LAUGH
ROOSTER
AUTUMN
ALONE
UGLY
FREE
GUESS
MELT
HEN
MOCK
DUCK
RETURN
WINTER
UNHAPPY
HOPE
RUSH
CHEERFUL
HAPPY
SWAN
DIFFERENT
NICE
PICK
SPRING
HIDE
SUMMER
BAD
FREEZE
FEAR
IJii1G
ROOSTER
IMOCKPZU
VSUMMERCORYF I W T
WI
N T E R D EW B U E C N U
SPHENOINYANAKVM
ICHEERIULDHRCUN
IS
Q 0 E E P 0 P S P U C
:SQEEFURAXGPWULU
X A T E P 0 E UM U V A S K
ZI
0]
POREEYT I
LS I Q F N U
QNNPBKTFTSHOPEC
ZEFVEBZUHAPPYA1H
YBLAIJGHLTQFXH
2) Now, classify the words from the word search in the correct column.
SEASONS
ANIMALS
ACTIONS
I
r.B)DsckDng, wrok, insecure, unloved,
porotoeste
wont
voInesabfeWendoeed,onhappo lonely, deserted, Aninnalo happy, secure, powerful, funny, strong, cheerful; 31 ol No, he doesn't, bI He's sod, ul He finds out that he's ugly, dl No, he doesn't el
Because children ploy with flier, f) Yes, he does, g) Possible answers: He goes to the pond, he meats a swan, he realizes he's swan, hI yes, II He's happy now. $1
white, Is) No, he isn't, II Yes, ml He goes bark to the fares, n) They are surprised, ol Yes, they are C) th spring, rooster, wouls, summer, winter, hen, cheerful, hide,
hope, happy, laugh; 4, nice, aotorrn, pick, fear, different, bad, unhappy, freeze, beautiful, return, swan, rush, fern, ugly. guess, alone, welt, duck.
V
18
Level: Elementary
9e: Teenagers
MICRO STORIES
FLASH LITERATURE
0, sh
rt sh_rtst_r__s,
or
n.
31 Short short stories are s_mpl_. c_nd_ns_d and they have rn_ _u_ng.
D) Put the scrambled words in order to find out more about micro narrative.
11 make / These micro stories / think a lot. / readers
21 the outcome, / think about / the characters, / Readers / the plot, / and the conflict.
31 the meaning of the story. Ito understand and / actively / explain / participate / Readers
E) Now, it's your turn!
11 Read these guidelines written by the famous British micro fiction author David Gaffney and discuss them with your
classmates and teacher.
(Taken from:
21 Write your own micro stories. You can work alone or in pairs.Think about your characters and, if possible, leave the
ending to the reader's imagination!
3) Publish your productions in the school noticeboard or stick them on the walls, so that everyone can read them.
Kept Al Personal answers; Note: Both tents are micro stories, whose author Is Ursula Antoine; SI Personal answers; C) 11 flash fiction, micro fiction, sadden
fiction, short short stories; 2! characters, conflict, outcome, resolution; 3) simple, condensed, meaning; Dl U These micro stories make readers think a lot.
21 Readers think about the plot, the outcome, the characters and the conflict, 31 Readers actively participate to understand and euplain the meaning of
the story; El Students' productions
$ 19
Activity i
Activity 3
Activity
Activity 4
Ask students to imagine a Wonderland world of their own.
What would it look like? They could create a poster s/it and
write down a description of the place. They may consider:
Would it be dark? Full of light?
Where would it be? How would you get there?
What special creatures or characters would you find?
What would you do in there?
Another option could be writing a shape poem describing
their own Wonderland world.
20
Age: Teenagers
Level: Intermediate
Mad Hatter
March Hare
3) He is always smiling. Alice finds him on a tree and tries to have a serious
vanishes and reappears. Sometimes only his head or his enigmatic smile, are visible.
White rabbit
4) The first creature thatAlice sees in Wonderland. He leads Alice through the hole
into Wonderland.
C) Read the following summary of chapter one and put the verbs in the correct form of the past tense
mil
)simple or continuous).
by the river. Alice's sister (read) 3
14
. She (look) ia
him. He Inonl ie
the rabbit across the grass and into a big hole. She (fell) 10
sleepy.
enough to fit the door. But the door was closed and the key was on the table. She Ibel 32
she lran'tl 33
a small glass box under the table. Inside the boo, there Ike! 37
She (eat) 38
smaller
too small now and
big.
90 in.
KayrA) 1) A white rabbit, 2) 11 had a welch, he wore clothes and bespoke, 31 Hems loin. 4) Hems wearing a brown coot,a pocket-handkerchief,o yellow
necktie and a yellow waistcoat 5! the roll into the rabbit's hole and she went down, 61 She appeared lie dneatn where all her adventures begin; B! Mad horn,
tied hotter, cheshire cat white rabbit clii woo, 21 were sitting, 31 was reading, 4! didn't like, 5) woo, 6(50w, 71 looked, 8) said, 9) followed, 10) fell, ii! stopped,
12) stood op. 13) lookod, i4lsow. 15) followed, 161 was running, 17) saw, 18) took, 191 tried, 20) couldn't, 211 now, 22) owned, 231 wet, 241 wonted, 251 noon,
26) put, 27) saw. 20) told, 29) took. 30) drank, 31) got 32) wet, 331 couldn't 341 was, 35) started, 36) saw, 37) won, 381 ore, 39) happened, 40) knoewe. 411 took,
42) went 43! was 44! couldn't.
$ 21
Level: Intermediate
rl
-'- :
Vegetation
Animals
Human settlements
Level: Intermediate
.-
----,-y.
flock
starve
butt
piteous
bleating
nourishment
frisky
lea
mound
roam
KeynAl 11 Nouns related to vegetation: Grass, verdure. wheotfield. orchir rs, pasture, daisies, oaks, elm, leaver, vioiets, primroses, hedgerows, ash, boughs,
mayflower, woods, gardens, orchards. Nouns related to unimuis:Thrushe cows, birds, butterflies, cattle. Nouns related to human settlements: roads,
farm, granges, cottage, chimneys, gardens. Nouns related to landscape a rd inanimate natural obineis', Hulls, sky, valleys, streams, dew, shade, clouds,
wind, veins, mist: B) 1) butt, 21 bleating, 31 lee, 41 hock, 51 mound, 61 flour ahnievt 71 roam 81 piteous, 9) frisky, 10) crag, ill starve.
8s
ometimes students ask for a translation of
every lexical item they do not know.
S 'Overusing translation may lead to
misinterpretation, since students may wrongly
assume that the translated term has a single meaning. As a
result, it may reinforce students' hypothesis of one-meaningone-form.
A great way to introduce students to double meanings is by
means of puns. Puns are jokes which use words with different
possible meanings, or words that sound the same but have a
different meaning.
Two good jokes I came across the other day went on like this:
Why couldn't Cinderella be a good soccer player?
She fast her shoe, she ran away from the ball, and her roach
was a pumpkin.
I was arrested at the airport. Just became I was greeting
my cousin Jack!
All that! said was "Hi, Jack, but very loud.
If students are not acquainted with the double meanings for
ball and coach, they will not be able to understand the first
joke. Students can work with dictionaries to look up the
meanings for ball and coach so as to see which applies best. In
order to understand the second joke, students need to be aware
of the meaning of hijack.
To gel more puns for pre-intermediate or intermediate level
students, you can visit reallifeglobal.com/fun-esglish-vocabularypans or http://iteslj.org/c/iokes-puns.html.
Another interesting idea to work with double meanings is to
use Amelia Bedelia's books. Amelia Bedelia is a famous book
character. She is a cleaning woman who misinterprets the tasks
she is asked to do because she reads them literally. You can tell
Amelia Bedelia's stories to children or teenagers to help them
realize the importance of not taking every single word in a
literal sense. Exploring the linguistic misinterpretations Amelia
makes can pave the way for teaching your students about
multiple meanings.
To bear in mind
When students ask for the translation of a term, always ask
them for the context in which it appears.
Emphasise that words may have multiple meanings. Be
aware that students tend to attach strongly to the first meaning
learnt.
Work with puns for students to see double meanings at
work.
S1:
Background
Age: Any
Level: Any
SRAICESPEARFS
ILs.&
Objectives
To introduce students to
Shakespeare's life and legacy.
- To expand students'
knowledge on the historical
background in which
Shakespeare wrote.
- To analyse the most famous
plays written by Shakespeare
from a discursive and historical
perspective.
j
Pre-task
Materials:
Pictures of a quill, a miniature of Shakespeare, the cover page
of any of Shakespeare's play and the printed phraseTo be or
not to be'
Instructions:
1. Stick on the board pictures of a quill, a miniature of
Shakespeare, the cover page of any of Shakespeare's play, and
the printed phrase"To be or not to be'
Age: Teenagers/Adults
Level: Elementary+/Pre-intermediate
SHAKESPEARE
L?
King Lear
A. Before reading.
Answer about you.
I
:
B. While reading:
Read each line from Hamlet's most famous
soliloquy and match it to its corresponding
meaning.
'
1> Have you ever felt at a loss when deciding how to face
a problem?
2) What do you generally do when you have a problem?
Have you ever heard of Hamlet? Have you read one of
his most famous speechesTo be, or not to be'?
4) What does Hamlet refer to when he says"To be, or not
to be'?
a) Is it nobler to endure
difficult things
i
I
i
i
I
i
i
41 Or to take arms
against sea of troubles,
dl Is it better to be alive
or dead?
-----------------------------------------------------Koyr King LeanAl Studerpts'answert; Bill He's King of England, 21 Goneril, Regan and Cordelia, 3) Nn,4l Cordelia, 5) she
0
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lltL !L CL IJ
4. Sharing and publishing: Students share their stories with the
class and post or publish them on the Net in a class blog or
wild, on Twitter or any other social network.
Since digital storytelling requires a big amount of time from
the moment students start creating their stories to the minute
they publish it, it suits project-based learning. In this way,
learners will also develop cooperative, problem-solving and
critical thinking skills.
The infinite number of resources we find on the web can be
overwhelming. Here are ten sites to try digital storytelling in
the EFL classroom, which can be used with children and
adolescents and sometimes even with adult learners. Some of
these sites require registration but they are all free.
#1 Storybird
www.stsrybird.com
I t is a free web 2.0 tool
to create stories or
poems. Students can
choose art from the sitc
and add text to create
their work. Once
students publish their
digistory, they can
embed it in a blog or
wild. Registration is
needed. This tool is
suitable for all levels.
#2 Pixton Comics
www.piston.com
It is an online tool to
create comics.
Students can use the
pictures which are
already available on
the site and write
inside speech bubbles.
Students can also
explore their artistic
skills by drawing new
pictures for their comic
strips. Registration is
needed. It is
appropriate for
adolescent students.
This site is also
available in Spanish.
W!, M
-- 1
#3 Dvolver
www.dvolver.com
It is a simple website
which allows students
make customised
animated videos.
Background, characterr
plot and even music ca
be selected for each
scene. Students can als
add a dialogue which
appear in a bubble abs
the characters head in
the finished movie. On
published, the video ca
be embedded in a blog
a wild. No registration
needed. This tool is
suitable for all levels.
50005
#4 Glogster
www.glogster.com
It is a tool to create an
interactive poster, where
students can include
videos, photos, voice
recording, text, drawings
and links to external
websites. It is suitable for
personal introductions or
holiday stories. It is ideal
for adolescent or adult
students.
#5 Vocaroo
www.vocarss.com
It allows students to
record their voice and get
a link for it. There is no
need to download any
software or get an
account for this tool.
Students can tell a story,
record their voices and
share it on the net.
II
s PicLits
www.piclits.com
It is a web tool to create
digital stories, poems or
paragraphs using
pictures. It provides
images and word banks
where word lists are
categorized by nouns,
adjectives, adverbs,
verbs. There is also a
universal list available.
There is no need to
create an account to use
the site. It is suitable for
all levels.
www.pimpampuni.net/bubblr
It is a tool to create comic
strips using photos from
Flickr.com. Students select
their photos and add
speech bubbles to the
pictures. Registration is not
needed.
#7 Little Bird Tales
www.littlebirdtales.com
It is a website that allows
students to create an online
book using the available
artwork at the website,
scanned pictures, words,
and even their own
recorded voices. They can
share it via email or gel a
code to embed it in a blog
or website. This is a great
tool to create digital Stories
with children.
These are only a few of the numerous resources that the Net
offers to make storytelling more appealing to our students and
foster their creativity. Even though digital storytelling might be
challenging and time-consuming, it will motivate our digital
native students, challenge them to work collaboratively as well
as autonomously and enhance their learning.
Prof. M. Fernandn Fivia
#8 Folding Story
www.foldingstory.com
It is a web 2.0 tool to
create digital collaborative
stories. It replicates the
game "Write, Fold and
Pass'. Registration is
needed and people from all
over the world can read the
digital stories once they are
published on the site. It is
appropriate for adult
learners.
#9 Creaza
It is an application to
create comic strips or
videos. Like at Dvoler,
students can select the
background and characts
and add speech bubbles.
Registration is needed.
[+J
W 29
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justification
There is a tendency to place very little importance on proper
pronunciation. The main focus seems to be on production but
accurate articulation lends to be disregarded. Teachers should
not forget to emphasize the broader meaningful aspects of
phonology which are essential in the delivery of intelligible
speech. Pronunciation leaching must be based on meaningful
real-life communication. Normally, pronunciation activities rely
heavily on mechanical drills and it is the role of teachers to
change this paradigm (Jones, 1997). Exercises should gather
several features. They must be simple, accessible and
entertaining. They should promote clear practice in reception
and production. They should also allow the teacher to give
feedback to every learner as to where their problems lie and
how to deal with them. Sometimes the solution is simple. For
example, with a subtle change such as rounding the lips, the
pronunciation of a certain sound can be improved. Teachers
have to bear in mind the four target learner groups (very
young learners, young learners, teenagers and adults) and
grade the activities according to their level of domain (Dalton,
2002).
httpatearnenglishkids.britishcsssciiorg/en/tsngue-twisters/two-witches
Curtain, H., & Dahlberg,C. )2010).Lagoages and children:Mahiog the march, new
languages foryoung learners, grades K-8, 41F. Pearson.
Dalton, D. (2002). Some Techniques for Teaching Pronunciation. The Internet TESL
1. Running dictation,
a. Divide the class into smaller groups.
b. Place different tongue twisters on the classroom walls.
C. Tell students that one person at a time can run at tongue
31
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