Главная страница «Первого сентября»Главная страница журнала «Английский язык»Содержание №43/2002
METHODS OF TEACHING

continued from No. 42

Raising the Motivation

A transparent and specific explanation of what we want of them at any step of the learning process is related to the problem of task-assignment and deals with the so-called SMART tasks, which help both sides to perceive, measure and enjoy the progress made. It may also encourage students to speak more at the lesson, as some stay inactive because of the fear of spontaneous speech and a flood of mistakes connected with it. When students know that it is their homework that is being checked and assessed, fully explained from the point of view of the task, they might feel more at ease speaking during the lesson and discussing other things, completely or partially new to them.

SMART stands for specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-bounded (B. Nelson & P. Economy). For instance, giving a good summary of a newspaper article is essential for a good information perception and is not usually connected with detailed retelling of the text. From the point of view of quick news grasping this task can be considered relevant and important. So, with the proper choice of an article (answering “why-question” of the diagram, i.e. what points make the story of any use for us), for students who are not accustomed to such kind of work we begin with filling up the following chart (or any other, but it is preferable to use a scheme of any kind as a visual aid):

For beginners it is quite enough to start with just words and phrases; then the students should be encouraged to use sentences and paragraphs and be able to expand any information given into an utterance. The why-question stands here for preteaching the issue and it’s important to zero in. On the practical use of anything we can get out of the discussed text/conversation/etc. Pragmatics implies something that students can think over; it can be a question or a problem presented by the teacher based on complicated and controversial, or vital; grounds; that could be done within 3–5 minutes of the lesson as a writing task to be checked later.

To evaluate the skills and knowledge gained at the end of the term we put forward our demands: we want each student of the group to write within several minutes a short summary of an article. We can give a number of sentences, for example, of a composition. We’ll put a mark according to special rules: full coverage of the chart and no grammar, pronunciation or spelling mistakes, all for “excellent”, any lack of the above mentioned things – for a good mark, and so on.

The second argument – “we’ll forget everything by the time there is some need” – is a stumbling stone of the process of learning. On the one hand, information becomes obsolete and superfluous much more quickly than it is usually thought. On the other, for many it’s almost impossible to retrieve it from the dusty cellars of their memory. So, the more paths lead to the cell, the better we remember them, but it is also important what to remember. Do you know an old saying about a son asking his father what the German for “mechanisation” is? The dad answers that he can’t recall, but if need be, he’ll look up in a dictionary, and the son ruefully says he told their teacher the same thing, but she gave him a ‘two’.”

If the stress is laid on the ways of helping students remember properly, using different activities and always summing up after their work, it can give a great impact on learning. As a Chinese proverb says, “give a man a fish and he’ll be sated till the end of the day, teach him how to fish and he’ll be sated till the end of his days”.

To go back and sum up, or just repeat the main points, is crucial for better remembering, so every task should be observed from the beginning and, the shorter the better. Sometimes we only need a sentence, but the most important one.

The student’s individual work at class, thinking over and discussing problematic issues, attempts to explain various things to their mates “as though they were three years old”, and games of different types may serve the same aim of making “paths” to notions and new words. Books like Five-minute Activities by P. Ur & A. Wright and of that type may serve as an indispensable source for short activities at the lesson that gives children the relaxation they need so much.

For example, while discussing the ways of talking over the phone, the above-mentioned book presents a game called “What are they talking about?” The procedure is to write a sentence (e.g. “You can’t? Well, we’ll just have to manage without.”) which represents a bit of conversation that has been overheard and have the students guess what the person is talking about; what sort of person the speaker is; what the relationship between the speaker and the person addressed is; and so on. Variants also are given, very funny ones. For very shy students a choice of options can be suggested by the teacher just to make them speak up. Then the children might try to make and act out their own dialogues according to the chosen patterns that contain the phrases from the list. The material from children’s textbooks used in a game can’t but be remembered with no evident effort. For example, “noughts and crosses” as a device for learning new words became a very popular game in one group after a while, and definitely helped the pupils distinguish between their different usages. Those who caused their team to lose were ashamed, and each win was met with such a burst of gaiety that you couldn’t help feeling happy, too.

The importance of a game should not be underestimated; it plays a great role in the process of learning. We remember 70% of what we’re doing (it is 50% of what we both see and hear), and the notion of a game is identified as a social practice of actual life phenomena reproduction. Usually it is opposed to practical activity and has a special property of reward; but apart from the pleasure connected with it, may also be a very serious thing, e.g. E. Bern mentions war as a most ominous kind of game. In other words, to learn effectively, we should “try on” every situation we feel vital for us, and try to find a solution to every problem we face during the process of education, because that is our aim, after all, in real life.

Unfortunately, attempts to create game activities, role-playing, and reward-finding, take a lot of inventiveness and experience from a teacher; so if the student’s book doesn’t provide us with the materials it may be too hard to develop them ourselves. And nevertheless it’s the shortest and surest way to “pleasant schools and easy ways of learning”.

And the last idea: what very busy people usually have to make is a list of things to do. Having completed all the tasks for a day (week, month, etc.), a person usually feels satisfaction; that is an important motivating factor itself. Teachers write their plans for an academic year, forgetting to write a similar syllabus for their students. Students in their turn can only see the items of the topics and grammar phenomena of an incomprehensible choice in their books. It might be a useful thing to compose a list of “things to learn” by way of understandable (SMART) tasks for the term, put it on the board for all to look at, and tick each task when completed. Students will learn what they are doing, and what for, too, in simple words.

Thus, the motivation of children doesn’t differ much from that of adults. The latter usually come to work for money, but as they get there, other factors begin influencing their work. It is much the same with children. They have to go to school for all their winnings; but they also want to have interesting lessons, fair and immediate appraisal, and a feeling of taking part in something important. The role of the teacher from this point of view is to set a list of tasks to fulfil, to clearly and explicitly present the demands explaining what is expected at the end, and to bring the standards to the knowledge of students. Then, continual monitoring is essential, with a fixed objective and a formal assessment of the results (not a mark only), explained and discussed beforehand. Students should be involved in collaborative activities at each lesson; games are of real help. Have fun all through the lesson.

By Olga Mishchenko