My son is asleep and I am finishing my prep for tomorrow. Got as far as laying out what needs to happen tomorrow.
There is no way that I can move forward with anything until I satisfy that first criterion. First thing’s first … and that’s not just me being a granny. As a teacher “moving on,” is pretty-much always a bad idea. This is a mistake I see countless teachers make. Fully exploit whatever you are doing with the kids; OR, if it’s not working, abort. Never just move on. In the case of Lesson 1, the boys, on the second read-through actually did understand he Dish Soap story, and it had been a heavy lift for them, but we were running out of time, and I didn’t have the chance to get them all to really go “ah …" There is another more pedagogically fundamental reason why first thing needs to be first. When I assess a group of learners, I always ask myself “where are they relative to the four doors.” I am sure that this is something that I have stolen from someone, but my four-doors paradigm goes like this.
- Tangible experience of success with the first listening activity (“Dish Soap for Dinner.”)
- Some kind of engagement with with topic for the day.
- Ideally SOMETHING that feels like a step in the direction of this bing a debate class. Probably some sort of opinion-formulation/opinion-evaluation activity. (There is a debate textbook that I have used in the past with some success that I think will help me to gain clarity on that point.)
- DOOR 1 — LISTENING CONFIDENCE.
- DOOR 2 — SPEAKING CONFIDENCE.
- DOOR 3 — FUNDAMENTALS.
- DOOR 4 — PRAGMATICS.
- #Action Review "Dish Soap for Dinner” #Completewhen Everyone in the class is able to communicate back to me some kind of explicit understanding of key elements of the story.
- #Action Gauge the student’s level of engagement with “Theft in Italy.” #Completewhen I have enough information to make a good decision concerning how to treat the topic for next week. Also, make sure that I am reciprocating effort that students have put in to understanding the article. #Consider a heavily structured comprehension activity that gets everyone of the same page — perhaps a jigsaw or sentence scramble activity — but before launching into that, give students some kind of opportunity to show you that they have done their homework.
- #Action work in teams of 3 to compose 4-sentence opinion statements relating to the article. PROPOSITION: “People that steal food should not be punished as criminals.” #Consider assigning teams the affirmative and negative positions and then reversing. Time might be a serious consideration. #Consider modeling an affirmative and a negative opinion statement for a different proposition. Again, time will be a serious consideration.