TS #12
Date/Time: Friday,
January 29 2016, 10:00-11:00
Location: Lyon
Country Library
Topic/Skills: Review
of “TH”; Vowels – short a, short e
Teacher Presentation: We reviewed the pronunciation of the voiced and unvoiced
TH. It was obvious that some students
had practiced! We made up sentences
mixing the two sounds (“This thing that they threw over there was
thick.”). I then introduced two vowel
sounds, the short a (“bat”) and the short e (“bet”). We practiced a list of “a” words, then the
“e” words, then the minimal pairs together.
Students worked on “silly sentences” in pairs (sentences that are
grammatically correct but nonsensical, the purpose of which is to use the
sounds) as I moved from pair to pair correcting pronunciation. Finally, the students wrote their own silly
sentences to read to the class.
Feedback provided to tutee:
The group is small enough so that I can still hear individual voices when we do
“choral” repetition, so I was able to correct pronunciation without singling
any one out at first. Once I heard
largely correct pronunciation, the students took turns one at a time, and I
corrected them as necessary. (They seem
to appreciate this little 1:1 even though it’s in front of everyone else.) I also provided feedback during my moving
from small group to small group. The
ending activity – reading of their silly sentences – was a final opportunity to
correct pronunciation.
Lessons learned: The
volunteer who is a speech therapist and who had visited my class last week (Debbie)
returned this week. She was very helpful
to all students and working with one who has having particular difficulty. She
was also very helpful to me with her feedback.
She emphasized the value of repetition, even though students think they
are ready to move on. It was good to
have spent 15 minutes on reviewing what we had done last week. Several students had made marked improvement, but there were
still errors to correct with others’ pronunciation. I'm enjoying teaching pronunciation. My experience with pronunciation/phonetics courses in my second language has given me ideas of how to go about it, and following the model of those teachers is helpful.
No comments:
Post a Comment