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Chapter 7
Lesson planning and implementation
Lesson planning and implementation goes through a number of phases: 1- Setting objective. 2- Warming up. 3- Presentations. 4- Practice. 5- Evaluation and lesson closure. Setting objective: General objective: describe what can be achieved by the end of a whole unit. Behavioral objective: describe what the student will be able to do by the end of the lesson. -it describes the student behavior not the teacher behavior. -it describes the learning outcomes not activities. Characteristics of behavioral objectives: (SMART) - Specific: referring to the smallest action students can do. - Measurable: referring to the objective should state observable actions that can be measured. - Achievable: referring to the means through which the objective is to be achieved. - Realistic: referring to taking into consideration the facilities available and the abilities of the students. - Timed: referring to setting a time limit to achieve the objectives. Bloom’s taxonomy of educational objectives in the cognitive domain: 1- Knowledge: recognition and recall of information E.g: describes, identifies. 2- Comprehension: the understanding of the meaning of information given. e.g: explains , clarifies. 3- Application: putting the information available into practice. e.g: applies, uses. 4- Analysis: division knowledge into parts and realizing relationships. e.g: compares, matches. 5- Synthesis: putting the parts together to form new ideas. e.g: rearranges, summarizes. 6- Evaluation: judging the worth of an idea, theory, information. e.g: judges, evaluates. Warming up: Warming up is a process of gaining the attention of the students . - It is one of factors for lesson success . - It influences in students’ achievement. E.g: 1- prepare some pieces of paper (equal size). 2- write some questions or comments on them. 3- fold these pieces of paper and put them in a jar. 4- ask some students to come and pick them up. 5-ask students to respond to what is written on them. 6-Use verbal prompting such as :look here, listen ,let’s start. Presentation: Presentation is the teacher’s mediation between the learners and the new material to appear in form can easily access to the learners. What happens in an effective presentation? -Attention - perception -Understanding -short-term memory Guidelines on giving effective presentation: 1-Prepare. 2-Make sure you have the class’s full attention. 3- Give instructions for a group work task before you divide the class into groups or give out materials. 4- present the information more than once. 5-be brief 6-Illustrate with examples 7-Get feedback: lecturing- discussion-explanation- brainstorming- bridging activities- directed dialogue- concept mapping- outlining- idea frame- object centered lesson- verb centered lesson. The presentation of new vocabulary: Vocabulary is the smallest meaningful units that construct speech. -Vocabulary items can be nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, numerals...etc. -each element of vocabulary presentation technique requires a certain presentation technique: • Real objects: for concrete nouns of items that can be brought to the classroom (chair, light, table....etc.). Realia (picture, slides....etc.): for concrete nouns of items that can't be brought into the classroom (elephant, train, car....etc.) acting out: for verbs. miming: for verbs. giving a definition: for abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, etc. providing a description: for abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, etc. giving an antonym: for abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, etc. giving a synonym: for abstract nouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, etc. • giving examples or providing a context for a word through which students can guess the meaning: for abstract nouns, some verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, ... etc. using the mother tongue: for all as a last resort. How to present vocabulary: 1- Presenting the meaning of the new lexical item first. 2- Asking students to listen to the new lexical item while being pronounced. 3- Asking them to repeat after the teacher as a whole class, then as sections and finally individually. 4- Checking their pronunciation of the new lexical item. 5- Showing them the written word and asking some of them to say it and check its spelling. 6- Going back to the new lexical items every now and then checking the students' learning of them. The presentation of new grammatical structures: A structure is one way of putting words together to form meaning. Types of structure: • Declarative clause (declarative): subject + verb+ complement. • Interrogative clause (interrogative): -yes/no questions: auxiliary verb+ subject + main verb + complement? e.g. Did you go to school? Or questions (alternative questions): auxiliary verb + subject + main verb + or+ verb? e.g. would you like to go or to stay? Wh-questions: questions word + auxiliary verb + subject + main verb+ complement? e.g. Why did you drive fast yesterday? Tag questions: declarative + auxiliary verb (not) +subject e.g. You will watch the match, won't you? -echo questions: Repetition of the auxiliary verb or even part of the sentence e.g. Speaker 1: Ali is tired? Speaker 2: is he? • Imperatives: Verb + complement e.g. Stand up, come here, sit down, do your homework • Exclamatory clauses: How + adjective/adverb+subject+ verb + complement! e.g. How strong he is! What + noun + subject+ verb + complement! e.g. what a good driver you are! • Simple sentence e.g. I live in Riyadh • Compound sentence e.g. I see him every day and some time we go together. • Complex sentence e.g. I don't know where he lives. Could u tell me how you got there main clause (independent): it is the clause that can stand alone. subordinate clause (dependent): it is the clause that can me stand alone. How to present structures: 1- Presenting the structure in writing underlining its main components. 2- Reading it aloud in a normal conversational speed. 3- Asking student to repeat after the teacher as a whole class, then as sections and finally individually. 4- Using the structure build up technique with the students by saying parts of the structure and they complete it . 5- Checking their internalization of the structure asking them to say it. Practice: Practice is defined as rehearsal of certain behaviors with the objective of promoting learning and improving performance. There are three sub-stages included here: Modeling -Effective teachers clarify the skill first before eliciting it from their responses. -when modeling, the clarifying should be very clear to help students to understand. -when teaching a complex skill, it is important to ask students questions to know if them understand well or not. - the model may need to be repeated many times. Eg. Teacher: where did Ali go? Student: where did Ali go? Controlled and guided practice -Controlled and guided practice activities are given to foster accuracy. -correction of all mistakes is a must for both practices. - these practices are coming before the free practice to prepare the students' fluency for the free practice. E. G Controlled practice: teacher: Where did Ali go? Cinema Student: He went to the cinema. Guided practice: Teacher: travel-Landon. Student 1: where did they travel? Student2: they traveled to London. Free practice When students are fluent and have good performance of behavior, they perform the behavior under supervision with no prompting. -feedback must be provided after every item. -teacher should correct global errors only. The three stages comprising the process of learning a skill: 1- verbalization لفظية 2- automatization ذاتية 3- autonomy Verbalization the bit of the skill to be learnt may be focused on and defined in words and demonstrated. قد يتم التركيز علي جزء من المهارة التي سيتم تعلمها و تعريفها لفظيًا و توضيحها. automatized -The teacher gets the students demonstrate the target behavior while he monitors their performance. -In this stage, the practice is started. And students can perform the skill behavior correctly and without Thinking. autonomous - in this stage, students take the set of behaviors they have mastered and start to improve by themselves through more of practice activities. Evaluation and closure: Evaluation is a process through which the teacher can identify/know if the objectives have been achieved or not. Assessment and Evaluation: Assessment: is identifying the students’ errors and weaknesses. Evaluation: includes both the identifying of students’ errors and providing correcting for it. Kinds of evaluation: 1- Formative evaluation: is done after each step of the lesson. 2- Summative evaluation: is done at the end of the lesson. Evaluation techniques: 1- Multiple choice questions: students are given a variety of responses and asked to choose the right one . 2- True or false statements: students should state if the statements are true or false. 3- Gap-filling and completion exercises: students are asked to complete different items by filling a gap or adding something. 4- Filling in exercises: students are asked to supply the missing words . 5- Matching exercises: students should choose from one column the items that link to other items in a second column. 6- Questions and answers: simple questions following reading or a part of an interview ,may require short answers. 7- Cloze technique: words are deleted from a paragraph and students should supply it . usually the first two or three lines are given with no gaps. 8- Problem solving technique: students are given a certain problem and are asked to handle it and find a solution for it depending on their own thinking. 9- Dictation: the teacher dictates a passage or set of words and the students write them down. 10-Transformation: a sentence is given and the students have to change it according to some given instruction.