This is a walk-through demonstration of an TESOL lesson sequence I designed using corpora linguistic insights and content- and text-based approaches. The lesson material is fun, useful and applicable across many teaching situations and English instructors of every level, elementary through university.
The YouTube video songs are Israel Kamakawiwo'ole's Over the Rainbow/What a Wonderful World and Judy Garland’s original Wizard of Oz version of Over the Rainbow. The presentation cites background theory, including text-based and content-based teaching, Extensive Reading principles as applied to other text types, language as a social activity, and corpora linguistics for teachers; there is a brief introduction of how to use a corpora website for teachers.
Two New School courses influenced the development of this material: Language Analysis with Scott Thornbury and Materials Development with Steve Cornwell & Deryn Verity. The aim of the classroom materials is to help learners notice the fundamental patterns of English and encourage using the English they already know, in combination with listening, enjoyment and an exploratory, not-speed-driven, not-transmission-driven approach. Corpora data shows that song lyrics often share commonalities with spoken English, making them ideal texts for many language classrooms, while YouTube videos offer a platform for encouraging student-based inquiry and text-based exploration and dialog.
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
Rainbow_ppt presentation_gwen atkinson_for STEM conference_23 april 2011
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5. Thanks to my professors for teaching me kindly & my colleagues for their willingness to look-see. Scott Thornbury Deryn Verity Steve Cornwell Joseph Venables Bianca Turalija Joshua Davies
13. I’ve Been Everywhere, Johnny Cash Leaving on a Jet Plane, John Denver/Cass Elliot Leaving on a Jet Plane, Chantel Kreviazuk If I Had a Boat, Lyle Lovett New York, New York, Frank Sinatra Road to Nowhere, Talking Heads Thriller, Michael Jackson Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, from Mary Poppins Yesterday, Beatles
14. “ A genuine text… is much more likely to elicit a genuine response.” Scott Thornbury, Beyond the Sentence
26. “… re-visiting should be common, and what-you-meet-you-master avoided at all costs. ~ Michael Lewis, The Lexical Approach
27. “… it is far more positive to build on what your learners already know, than to start with what they don’t know.” ~ Willis & Willis, Task-based Learning
29. Steps of the ‘IZ’ Lesson 1. Preview the IZ video ~ build schema 2. Watch the IZ video ~ for pleasure & interest 3. Preview lyrics handout method ~ language focus 4. IZ lyrics handout ~ ss do it together; teacher circulates 5. Listening to IZ song again ~ no video; listen only
53. Use the patterns of English you know to help you: [S V O] [S’V O] [ a / an / the Noun] Sit side-by-side with a partner. Work together to guess the lyrics.
54. Do the lyrics handout… … Then listen to the song again… … Then discuss the lyrics again with your partner to double-check them… Lastly, listen to the song a 3 rd time, if you want, or just sing along…
59. Steps of the ‘OZ’ Lesson 1. Recall IZ video & song ~ group “culture” brainstorm 2. Preview the OZ video ~ build schema 3. Watch the OZ video ~ for pleasure & interest 4. Guess the OZ date ~ group/partner guessing game 5. Review OZ video & song ~ group “culture” brainstorm 6. Review lyrics handout method ~ language focus 7. OZ lyrics handout ~ partners do it; teacher circulates 8. Listening to OZ song again ~ no video; music only
61. What is “culture”?... Hawai’i Country/ Location beach, ocean, sea, volcano, island Geography sunny, blue sky, hot Weather no shirt, grass skirt Clothing boat, surf board… Things melodies, rhythms, instruments; ukulele, drums Music funeral, government honor ceremony, urn, ashes Celebrations & Ceremonies happy, peaceful, colorful, vivid Mood father, husband, wife, daughter Family dancers, fans, government officials, mourners People surfing, swimming, going to concerts, relaxing, dancing, mourning, singing, celebrating Activities
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66. Notice any “culture” you see or hear. Guess the year the original movie was made.
70. With a person sitting near you, guess the year the original movie was made.
71. What year? Scan your lyrics paper to find the answer. What ‘culture’ did you notice?
72. Steps of the ‘OZ’ Lesson 1. Recall IZ video & song ~ group “culture” brainstorm 2. Preview the OZ video ~ build schema 3. Watch the OZ video ~ for pleasure & interest 4. Guess the OZ date ~ group guessing game 5. Review OZ video & song ~ group “culture” brainstorm 6. Review lyrics handout method ~ language focus 7. OZ lyrics handout ~ ss do it; teacher circulates 8. Listening to OZ song again ~ no video; listen only
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74. Lexical Density Written texts = 40~65% Spoken texts = <40% Over the Rainbow = 43%
86. FAMILIZER a word family list for all of the words in the text.
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88. Gwen Atkinson MA-TESOL, curriculum development [email_address] http://www.slideshare.net/GwenAtkinsonTESOL
89. Gwen Atkinson MA-TESOL, curriculum development [email_address] Here is the APA reference citation for this ppt & presentation: Atkinson, Gwen. (2011, April 23). Using Song, Media, and Corpora Linguistics to Create Content-based Gap-fill Materials . PowerPoint presentation at the 15 th Society for Teaching English through Media (STEM) Conference, Busan National University of Education, Busan, Korea. Presentation information retrieved April 18, 2011 from [http://www.stemedia.co.kr/index.htm]. PowerPoint presentation and lyrics handouts retrieved April 18, 2011 from [ http://www.slideshare.net/GwenAtkinsonTESOL ] and [http://www.slideshare.net/GwenAtkinsonTESOL/documents].
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Editor's Notes
Day & Bamford, #4 The purposes…are usually related to pleasure, information and general understanding
Student awareness of methodology is closely related to student motivation and beliefs about learning. When students believe that the some authority has the answers, or some testing system dictates their relationship to english, or one idiom or expression or vocabulary item is unrelated to another, and so has to be learned in discrete, painstaking increments and lists (of course de-contextualized), this picture becomes the students’ relationship to language learning….But students can be made aware of methodology; they can be given basic, easy tools with which to begin to do their own deciphering. Yes, English can be complicated and not necessarily easy to learn. But even the most complicated english can be broken down to very basic patterns. Being aware of these patterns, being able to start with what’s easy and build on it with those tools, effects motivation and beliefs about english and about one’s self as a learner; learning the methodology, the tools, helps students look not so much like this and more like this…
Complexity & richness of language…deepening it…opposite of “what you meet you master”
Day & Bamford, #1 Students [read] as much as possible
Day & Bramford, #6 materials are well within the linguistic competence of the students in terms of vocabulary and grammar…
With slide-3
With slide-3
hand out the lyrics sheet after watching
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Talk about how to do the gap-fill. The word choices can be used more than once. Important: SS work together in pairs. (negotiation of meaning & social benefits of working together; Vygotsky; Sociocultural learning theory; learning as a social process). Relationship to Extensive Reading principles: Tips for developing fluency (ss love the idea of developing ‘fluency’). Focus on what you know rather than on what you don’t know. Use what you know as clues . Ss may or may not know Over the Rainbow by heart…but the point for developing fluency is that they do not need to have memorized it…they can use the knowledge of English that they already have and work together to guess the lyrics. They already know a lot about how English works. Elicit what they already know & reinforce awareness of it & encourage ss to use this knowledge to figure it out. Tell ss to try to get as many as they possibly can using what they already know about English…and in 10-15 minutes we’ll listen again. Walk around the room checking & encouraging & noting their use of what they know in the context of these lyrics. Ss sit in pairs, ideally side by side. Give ss the gap-fill hand out. Allow plenty of time for ss to work together. After most students have done as much as they can on the first try, listen again (cover the video). Ss work on the gap fill again, about 5-8 minutes. If the ss want to, watch the video and/or listen to the song a third time and/or sing.
Let time pass…two or three days or even a month or two… 1. Tell ss they’re going to watch another version of “Over the Rainbow”.
2. Explain that Somewhere Over the Rainbow is a popular song with a long history, so there are many versions. The idea of “culture” is often included when studying another language. But what is culture? Music, lyrics, and video often show aspects of culture.
9. Put the YouTube of Oz on the screen, paused at the first frame. 10. Come back to the idea of “Over the Rainbow” being well-known, through generations; a song with a lot of history and many versions. The original version was written for the movie The Wizard of Oz . (Many Korean students are familiar with some version of the book or movie. They might not recognize your pronunciation of “Oz”, so also write it when you’re asking if they’ve heard of it). 11. Today we’re going to watch a film clip from YouTube of the actress Judy Garland singing the original version of “Over the Rainbow” in the original Wizard of Oz movie. 12. Activate schema before watching: Do you know the name of the main character? (you can point to her). [Dorothy Gale] Do you know the name of her dog? [Toto] The movie takes place in Kansas, usa (show a map/next ppt slide) …
Kansas.
Elicit “tornado”.
13. Describe the scene: Lives out in the countryside, in a time without TV, cell phones, etc., an only child, so she often plays with her dog….and imagines they are somewhere more exciting. In this scene, it’s a beautiful day, Dorothy’s talking & singing to Toto, dreaming of going someplace (over the rainbow) where there’s more adventure…But…point to the gathering tornado behind her, in the distance… 14. Tell ss to notice any “culture” you might see or hear; try to guess the year the movie was made in. 15.Watch the YouTube clip. Remember, the lyrics will be handed out after watching, so don’t look at your lyrics…^^ 16. With your partner (person sitting next to you), decide together what year the movie was made (& write it down). 17. Collect all guess & reveal their guesses…. 18. …then hand out the lyrics for Judy Garland’s version. (Now the audience can look at their lyrics). 19. Find the answer by scanning the lyrics handout for it.…Congratulate the pair that came the closest to the correct guess! (Also, ask “Who wrote the song?” (they can scan lyric sheet for that info).) 20. Ss work in pairs to complete the lyrics. 21. Remind them to use clues (focus on what you know, guess based on what you already know, guess based on the knowledge of English you already have…etc.) 22. Give time (5 to 10 minutes). 23. When most ss are finished, either play the video again or shut off the screen & they can just listen to the song part. 24. Ss work on completing the lyrics again (3 to 10 minutes). 25. Play the song/video again if ss want. Lesson-#3 Ask ss to recall the Oz video clip & song…Although it’s a fictional movie, there are elements of “culture” in the media…ask ss to make a “culture” chart like they did for Iz. (Use any of the styles of chart process & result/information sharing, as previously). ~
13. Describe the scene: Lives out in the countryside, in a time without TV, cell phones, etc., an only child, so she often plays with her dog….and imagines they are somewhere more exciting. In this scene, it’s a beautiful day, Dorothy’s talking & singing to Toto, dreaming of going someplace (over the rainbow) where there’s more adventure…But…point to the gathering tornado behind her, in the distance… 14. Tell ss to notice any “culture” you might see or hear; try to guess the year the movie was made in. 15.Watch the YouTube clip. Remember, the lyrics will be handed out after watching, so don’t look at your lyrics…^^ 16. With your partner (person sitting next to you), decide together what year the movie was made (& write it down). 17. Collect all guess & reveal their guesses…. 18. …then hand out the lyrics for Judy Garland’s version. (Now the audience can look at their lyrics). 19. Find the answer by scanning the lyrics handout for it.…Congratulate the pair that came the closest to the correct guess! (Also, ask “Who wrote the song?” (they can scan lyric sheet for that info).) 20. Ss work in pairs to complete the lyrics. 21. Remind them to use clues (focus on what you know, guess based on what you already know, guess based on the knowledge of English you already have…etc.) 22. Give time (5 to 10 minutes). 23. When most ss are finished, either play the video again or shut off the screen & they can just listen to the song part. 24. Ss work on completing the lyrics again (3 to 10 minutes). 25. Play the song/video again if ss want. Lesson-#3 Ask ss to recall the Oz video clip & song…Although it’s a fictional movie, there are elements of “culture” in the media…ask ss to make a “culture” chart like they did for Iz. (Use any of the styles of chart process & result/information sharing, as previously). ~
Lexical density: Written = 40~65%; Spoken = <40%