Teaching young learners
Principles, strategies and training
Marianthi Kotadaki
ELT School Advisor, Ilia, Peloponnese
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
How do children learn?
• “Young children are still using their individual, innate
language-learning strategies to acquire their home language
and soon find they can also use these strategies to pick up
English”.
• “Young children, who acquire language rather than
consciously learn it, as older children and adults have to, are
more likely to have better pronunciation and feel for the
language and culture”.
The children as esl/efl learners
• more enthusiastic than
adults.
• they want to please their
teacher rather than their
peers.
• they will have a go at an
activity even when they
don’t understand how or
why.
• they lose interest more
quickly
• they become less
motivated when tasks
are difficult
• they find it difficult to
use language to talk
about language
FUNNY SOUNDS
FUNNY WORDS
PHYSICAL COMEDY
"Do it again.“ : a powerful tool! If the pupils find something amusing
they will want to do it over and over again
So, how can these help?
Characteristics of young learners
• “Children are active learners and thinkers.”
(Piaget, 1970)
• “Children learn through social interaction.”
(Vygotsky, 1962)
• “Children learn effectively through scaffolding
by adults.” (Bruner, 1983)
According to Piaget
• Children learn through
making sense of the
world.
According to Vygotsky
• Adults mediate the world for
children through playing,
stories, questions, ideas,
experiences.
• Children learn from actively interacting
with the physical environment in
developmental stages.
• They learn through their own individual
actions and exploration.
• The children gradually develop their formal,
logical thinking.
• Children are encouraged to solve problems.
• Knowledge derives from action.
Piaget in the English class
Vygotsky in the English class
Teacher models questions for
children
“Do you like swimming?” and
encourages similar questions
Through doing things in a social context,
the children internalise language
Bruner’s scaffolding and routines
• Teachers have to get children interested in the tasks
• Teachers have to simplify difficult tasks breaking them
into smaller steps.
• Teachers have to keep the children on track always
reminding of the goal set.
• Teachers have to assist the children’s effort
demonstrating other ways of doing the task
• Teachers have to show the idealised version of the
task.
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
Key principles revisited
• Children actively try to construct meaning
• Children need space for language growth
• Language in use carries cues to meaning that may
not be noticed
• Development can be seen as internalising from
social interaction.
• Children’s foreign language learning depends on
what they experience.
Key principles explained
1. Teachers need to examine activities from the child’s point of view to
assess whether pupils will understand what to do and why.
2. Routines and scaffolding contribute to effective learning.
3. Children need to be helped –not through formal grammar- to grasp that
meaning.
4. Language can grow as the child takes control of language used initially
with other children and adults.
5. The broader and richer the language experience provided for the children,
the more they are likely to learn. Development in certain skills means
experiences that will build those skills.
Important secrets
• Though they may not understand everything they hear, children grasp the gist: they understand a
few important words and decipher the rest using different clues to interpret the meaning.
• Children should not be told they have made a mistake because any correction immediately
demotivates. ‘I goed’ soon becomes ‘went’ if the child hears the adult repeat back ‘yes, you
went’; they will self-correct in their own time.
• Boys need some different language experiences with girls.
• Young children need to feel secure and know that there is some obvious reason for using English.
• Activities need to be linked to some interesting, e.g. everyday activities about which they already
know.
• Activities are accompanied by adult language giving a running commentary about what is going
on.
• English sessions are fun and interesting, concentrating on concepts children have already
understood in their home language.
• Activities are backed up by specific objects, where possible, as this helps understanding and
increases general interest.
• Before they can decode English, young children need to know the 26 alphabet letter names and
sounds. As English has 26 letters but on average 44 sounds (in standard English), introducing the
remaining sounds is better left until children have more experience in using language and
reading.
A purpose for learning
Key words for YL teaching
• Enjoyable
• Meaningful
• Supported
• Social
• Purposeful
• Full of practice
YL language teaching “tips”
• Imitate the L1 environment in the class
• Teach language in a context.
• Don’t teach grammar explicitly!
• Create an English speaking environment.
• Keep yourself motivated!
• Encourage!
• Make English fun.
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
We usually need
• A starter activity
• An attention getter activity/signal/chant
• Brain breaks
• An end-of-class activity
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
Do you want tomatoes?
Yes, please.
No, thanks
How many …..?
4 slices of cheese, please
Little Red Riding Hood: A board game
• The children roll a die, and
rather than count the spaces,
say the vocabulary on the
space before proceeding.
• If they land on a flower space,
they lose a turn and take one
of the laminated flowers from
the board, but,
• if they land on the wolf and
have at least one flower,
they’re safe.
• If they don’t have any
flowers, they must return all
the way back to the
woodcutter space (about a
third of the way from the
beginning of the path), as he
was the one that saved Little
Red Riding Hood in the story.
• Not too much time on an activity!
• Different kinds of activities:
quiet and ‘noisy’ ones in turns
listening-speaking-reading-writing
individual-pair work-group work-class
teacher-student and student-student
activities foe various styles and intelligences
• Repeat and recycle as much as possible
• Connect language to other content areas.
Lesson plan
Lesson (and song/story/poem) title:
Vocabulary:
Grammar:
Objectives: By the end of the lesson, students should be able to…
Warm-up:
Presentation:
Practice:
Follow-up:
Do we translate? Of course! For …
• hard words and expressions
• (difficult) instructions for activities
• language objectives
Stories
• She tells the story waving pictures at the
pupils.
• She gets groups of pupils to learn parts of the
story by reading it.
• Pupils act out their parts in groups.
• Pupils complete blanks on a simple version of
the story text.
• Children write their own story using new
ideas.
Story lesson activites
• Q & A. comprehension questions for students to answer orally.
• TPR. If the story has movements do a TPR activity with pupils.
• Group retelling. Students retell the story and fill in gaps.
• Create your own ending. Tell the story up to the climax, and have students predict the ending.
• Drama. Do a retelling by having students act out the plot of the story.
• Story mapping. Give students a graphic organizer to map out the plot of the story.
• Story boarding. Have students make simple drawings in boxes that show the plot of the story
sequentially (like a comic book). The drawing can be accompanied by text or dialog bubbles.
• Read & Write Books. Students create their own storybook by drawing and adding text.
• Projects. Have students work together in small groups to create projects on the story.
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
A handful of resources
• http://www.primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/interactive/onlinestory.htm
https://storybird.com
https://storybird.com/books/favorite-animals-7
teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt
Annamaria Pinter Lynne Cameron
http://didactics-a.wikispaces.com/file/view/lynne+cameron.pdf
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/sites/
teacheng/files/B369-Young-Learners-Activity-
Book_v10.pdf
http://rcel.enl.uoa.gr/peap/training/e-training

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teachingyounglearners-141130124938-conversion-gate02.ppt

  • 1. Teaching young learners Principles, strategies and training Marianthi Kotadaki ELT School Advisor, Ilia, Peloponnese
  • 5. How do children learn? • “Young children are still using their individual, innate language-learning strategies to acquire their home language and soon find they can also use these strategies to pick up English”. • “Young children, who acquire language rather than consciously learn it, as older children and adults have to, are more likely to have better pronunciation and feel for the language and culture”.
  • 6. The children as esl/efl learners • more enthusiastic than adults. • they want to please their teacher rather than their peers. • they will have a go at an activity even when they don’t understand how or why. • they lose interest more quickly • they become less motivated when tasks are difficult • they find it difficult to use language to talk about language
  • 7. FUNNY SOUNDS FUNNY WORDS PHYSICAL COMEDY "Do it again.“ : a powerful tool! If the pupils find something amusing they will want to do it over and over again So, how can these help?
  • 8. Characteristics of young learners • “Children are active learners and thinkers.” (Piaget, 1970) • “Children learn through social interaction.” (Vygotsky, 1962) • “Children learn effectively through scaffolding by adults.” (Bruner, 1983)
  • 9. According to Piaget • Children learn through making sense of the world. According to Vygotsky • Adults mediate the world for children through playing, stories, questions, ideas, experiences.
  • 10. • Children learn from actively interacting with the physical environment in developmental stages. • They learn through their own individual actions and exploration. • The children gradually develop their formal, logical thinking. • Children are encouraged to solve problems. • Knowledge derives from action. Piaget in the English class
  • 11. Vygotsky in the English class Teacher models questions for children “Do you like swimming?” and encourages similar questions Through doing things in a social context, the children internalise language
  • 12. Bruner’s scaffolding and routines • Teachers have to get children interested in the tasks • Teachers have to simplify difficult tasks breaking them into smaller steps. • Teachers have to keep the children on track always reminding of the goal set. • Teachers have to assist the children’s effort demonstrating other ways of doing the task • Teachers have to show the idealised version of the task.
  • 14. Key principles revisited • Children actively try to construct meaning • Children need space for language growth • Language in use carries cues to meaning that may not be noticed • Development can be seen as internalising from social interaction. • Children’s foreign language learning depends on what they experience.
  • 15. Key principles explained 1. Teachers need to examine activities from the child’s point of view to assess whether pupils will understand what to do and why. 2. Routines and scaffolding contribute to effective learning. 3. Children need to be helped –not through formal grammar- to grasp that meaning. 4. Language can grow as the child takes control of language used initially with other children and adults. 5. The broader and richer the language experience provided for the children, the more they are likely to learn. Development in certain skills means experiences that will build those skills.
  • 16. Important secrets • Though they may not understand everything they hear, children grasp the gist: they understand a few important words and decipher the rest using different clues to interpret the meaning. • Children should not be told they have made a mistake because any correction immediately demotivates. ‘I goed’ soon becomes ‘went’ if the child hears the adult repeat back ‘yes, you went’; they will self-correct in their own time. • Boys need some different language experiences with girls. • Young children need to feel secure and know that there is some obvious reason for using English. • Activities need to be linked to some interesting, e.g. everyday activities about which they already know. • Activities are accompanied by adult language giving a running commentary about what is going on. • English sessions are fun and interesting, concentrating on concepts children have already understood in their home language. • Activities are backed up by specific objects, where possible, as this helps understanding and increases general interest. • Before they can decode English, young children need to know the 26 alphabet letter names and sounds. As English has 26 letters but on average 44 sounds (in standard English), introducing the remaining sounds is better left until children have more experience in using language and reading.
  • 17. A purpose for learning
  • 18. Key words for YL teaching • Enjoyable • Meaningful • Supported • Social • Purposeful • Full of practice
  • 19. YL language teaching “tips” • Imitate the L1 environment in the class • Teach language in a context. • Don’t teach grammar explicitly! • Create an English speaking environment. • Keep yourself motivated! • Encourage! • Make English fun.
  • 29. We usually need • A starter activity • An attention getter activity/signal/chant • Brain breaks • An end-of-class activity
  • 31. Do you want tomatoes? Yes, please. No, thanks How many …..? 4 slices of cheese, please
  • 32. Little Red Riding Hood: A board game • The children roll a die, and rather than count the spaces, say the vocabulary on the space before proceeding. • If they land on a flower space, they lose a turn and take one of the laminated flowers from the board, but, • if they land on the wolf and have at least one flower, they’re safe. • If they don’t have any flowers, they must return all the way back to the woodcutter space (about a third of the way from the beginning of the path), as he was the one that saved Little Red Riding Hood in the story.
  • 33. • Not too much time on an activity! • Different kinds of activities: quiet and ‘noisy’ ones in turns listening-speaking-reading-writing individual-pair work-group work-class teacher-student and student-student activities foe various styles and intelligences • Repeat and recycle as much as possible • Connect language to other content areas.
  • 34. Lesson plan Lesson (and song/story/poem) title: Vocabulary: Grammar: Objectives: By the end of the lesson, students should be able to… Warm-up: Presentation: Practice: Follow-up:
  • 35. Do we translate? Of course! For … • hard words and expressions • (difficult) instructions for activities • language objectives
  • 36. Stories • She tells the story waving pictures at the pupils. • She gets groups of pupils to learn parts of the story by reading it. • Pupils act out their parts in groups. • Pupils complete blanks on a simple version of the story text. • Children write their own story using new ideas.
  • 37. Story lesson activites • Q & A. comprehension questions for students to answer orally. • TPR. If the story has movements do a TPR activity with pupils. • Group retelling. Students retell the story and fill in gaps. • Create your own ending. Tell the story up to the climax, and have students predict the ending. • Drama. Do a retelling by having students act out the plot of the story. • Story mapping. Give students a graphic organizer to map out the plot of the story. • Story boarding. Have students make simple drawings in boxes that show the plot of the story sequentially (like a comic book). The drawing can be accompanied by text or dialog bubbles. • Read & Write Books. Students create their own storybook by drawing and adding text. • Projects. Have students work together in small groups to create projects on the story.
  • 39. A handful of resources • http://www.primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/interactive/onlinestory.htm
  • 42. Annamaria Pinter Lynne Cameron http://didactics-a.wikispaces.com/file/view/lynne+cameron.pdf