TOT and TETE Workshop scripts
Cascading Workshop Plan & Script
Week 1 TESOL 6 Principles: Principles 1-2 |
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Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Introductions
Trainer(s): |
9.00 – 9.20 |
Briefly introduce each Core Trainer’s name and start “Ball Game”. With the help of a ball, participants get to know each other’s names. Ball game: This is an icebreaker which allows participants to know their names. All participants and trainers make a big circle, they should tell their names and throw the ball to another person. The receiver should thank and do the same. They should remember to whom they threw their ball. And once the person receives a ball, he or she can’t be thrown second time in this round.
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These 6Ps materials were developed to be accessible to teachers with developing English levels. Many activities may be familiar to CTs and RPMs. This is for them to learn then cascade. They will not recreate the TOT, rather train on aspects of 6 Ps. |
Orientation
Trainer(s): |
9.20-9.30
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Introduction/ESN Program Orientation. Trainer will talk about ESN program and its goals using the slides
The objectives for Day 1. By the end of the day 1 workshop participants will be able to Identify The 6 principles for Exemplary Teaching of English Learners Discuss how we teach English in more details Describe the characteristic of specific age groups Explore Principle 1 and 2 |
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The 6 Principles
Trainer(s): |
9.30-9.45 |
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Introduction to the 6 Ps
Trainer(s):
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9.45-10.00 |
* Principle 1: Know your learners.
* The 6 Principles connect TESOL’s . . . values, standards, professional learning, and publications. * The 6 Ps are universal, come from many years of research, and help teachers and students be successful in any program. They are a framework that can be connected to other ELT professional development. Have participants read the quote and then discuss how we make this possible when we use the 6 Ps together. |
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10.00-10.05
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Discuss how teachers teach best when they know their students well.
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Activity: Find Someone Who . . .
Trainer(s): |
10.05-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
Introduce the Find Someone Who . . . activity. Tell participants the purpose of the activity is to gather information about students and help them learn about one another.
2. When I give you a signal, walk around the room for five minutes. Ask other people questions to see if they fit one of the statements below (e.g., “Have you ever traveled by train?”). 3. Write their names in the appropriate box. 4. Sit down when you finish or when I give you a signal.
Have participants share out any interesting information they learned about other people
Break time 10 min |
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Characteristics of Specific Age Groups
Trainer(s):
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10.30-10.40
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Briefly show the five age groups we will discuss. Explain that we can only teach children well if we have a deep understanding of their unique characteristics and stages of development: physical, cognitive, and social-emotional.
Remind participants that this is only a general guide. Many factors affect students’ physical, cognitive, and social-emotional growth. |
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Activity: Jigsaw Reading
Trainer(s): |
10.40-11.10
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4. After 15 minutes, return to your table-group as the “expert” of your assigned age group. As the expert, you will summarize the characteristics of your age group while your table-group mates take notes. Be ready to answer and clarify meaning for them. Model a Numbered Heads Together group to read, discuss, and clarify meaning for the Pre-primary stage. |
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Principle 2: Create Conditions for Language Learning
Trainer(s): Raximov Umidjon |
11.10- 11.20 |
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Activity: Personal Inventory
Trainer(s): |
11.20- 11.30 |
3. Put a star (★) next to the three statements you most want to improve on.
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Activity: Think-Pair-Share
Trainer(s): |
11.30-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
3. Share in a larger group.
Break |
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Principle 2 – Best Practice 1: Teachers create a positive and organized classroom where students feel happy and comfortable.
Trainer(s): |
12.15-12.30 |
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Principle 2 – Best Practice 2: Teachers demonstrate that they have high expectations of all students.
Trainer(s): |
12.30 -12.40 |
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Principle 2 – Best Practice 3: Teachers plan lessons that motivate students.
Trainer(s): |
12.40-12.50 |
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Activity: Turn and Talk / Activity Tracker:
Trainer(s): |
12.50-13.15 |
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Final activity: Exit ticket
Trainer(s): |
13.15-13.30 |
Exit ticket: Ps will be given 15 min to fill in exit ticket -3 things I learned today, 2 things I found interesting, 1 question I still have |
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Week 2 TESOL 6 Principles: Principles 3-4 |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
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Change table groups. (quickly). Use a line up by birthday or other way to mix groups |
Today’s Agenda and Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.05-9.10 |
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Activity: Penny for Your Thoughts
Trainer(s): |
9.10-9.25 |
3. Think of an important event in your life from that year that you feel comfortable sharing with others (if it is a year before you were born, you can exchange your penny with another person).
Ask participants to share out interesting
Ask participants to share out interesting
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Activity: Turn and Talk / Activity Tracker: Penny for Your Thoughts
Trainer(s): |
9.25-9.35 |
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Review of Principles 1 and 2
Trainer(s): _________ |
9.35-9.40 |
Tell participants we will briefly review Principles 1 and 2 from last week. Encourage them to look back through their handouts with you as you review. Today, we will continue with Principles 3,4,5, and 6:
Our last P is what holds all of the 6 Ps together.
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Principle 3: Design High-Quality Language Lessons
Trainer(s): |
9.40-9.45 |
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Principle 3 – Best Practice 1: Teachers prepare lessons with clear language objectives and share the objectives with their students.
Trainer(s): |
9.45-10.05 |
●What do my students specifically need to say when they speak? ●What do my students specifically need to understand when they read? ●What do my students specifically need to write about?
Contrast language functions with forms by saying that language forms are the structures (grammar) and vocabulary that students need to perform the function. Use the “Orally compare the weather in your city to the weather in Paris” example to discuss |
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Principle 3 – Best Practice 2: Teachers use oral and written English that students can understand.
Trainer(s): |
10.05-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
*Use the same classroom management and routines every day. *Give simple directions with patterned language (hand clapping, rhymes, hand and face expressions, signals). *Divide tasks into smaller parts. *Model every part of a task. 7. Ask participants to share other ideas.
Break |
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Principle 3 – Best Practice 3: Teachers have active classrooms where students can actively practice English with interesting topics.
Trainer(s): |
10.30-10.50 |
*Concluding (Rubrics, Collaborative Dialogues, Comprehension Checks, Numbered Heads Together, Stir the Class) 5. Ask participants to share other ideas. |
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Activity: 3-2-1 Uzbekistan!
Trainer(s): |
10.50-11-55
11.55-12.15 |
2. Work with your table-group to add the 3-2-1 information in the boxes. 3. Transfer all of the information to poster. 4. Be ready to answer questions about your region and ask questions about other groups’ regions. You can add drawings if you like. 5. Model the activity by choosing a region and then asking participants to name three things a tourist can do there, two traditions or local foods, and one famous landmark. 6. Give participants 10 minutes to work with their table-group to create their posters. 7. Have 2 or 3 table-groups work together to do a mini–Gallery Walk with table-groups taking turns being the presenters and visitors. Each group should spend about 5 minutes as presenters.
Break |
3-2-1 Uzbekistan! Handout |
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Principle 4: Adapt Lesson Delivery As Needed
Trainer(s): |
12.15-12.20 |
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Principle 4 – Best Practice 1: Teachers check student understanding often
Trainer(s): |
12.20-12.25 |
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Principle 4 – Best Practice 2: Teachers adapt their teaching when it is necessary
Trainer(s): |
12.25-12.35 |
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Activity: Adapting 3-2-1 Uzbekistan!
Trainer(s): |
12.35-1.15 |
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Activity: Mingle & Share
Trainer(s): |
1.15-1.25 |
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Activity: Activity Tracker
Trainer(s): |
1.25-1.30 |
1. Ask participants to fill in their “Activity tracker”.
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Activity tracker handout |
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Week 3 TESOL 6 Principles: Principles 5-6 |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
3. Change table groups. Have participants introduce themselves to the other members of their new table-group. |
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Today’s Agenda and Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.05-9.10 |
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Board, projector |
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Activity: Inner-Outer Circle (fluency circle)
Trainer(s): |
9.10-9.30 |
1. Divide participants into 2 groups by numbering 1,2. 2. Ask all number 1s to stand up and make a circle. Ask them to turn around so they are facing out. 3. Ask all number 2s to stand up and stand in front of a number 1. 4. Ask the following questions. Time each question and give participants 1 minute to discuss each one. After one minute, ask the outer circle to move (1 step to the right, 4 steps to the right, etc.)
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timer |
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Principle 5: Monitor and Assess Language Development
Trainer(s): |
9.30-9.35 |
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Principle 5 – Best Practice 1: Teachers take notes of student errors.
Trainer(s): |
9.35-9.40 |
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Principle 5 – Best Practice 2: Teachers give prompt and specific feedback to students in a positive and effective way.
Trainer(s): |
9.40-9.50 |
* recast – The boy went to school. * elicitation – How do you say go in the past? * clues – Did this happen in the past? * Questions – Can you tell me something the boy did yesterday? 5. Ask participants to talk at their table-groups about which kinds they feel most comfortable with. |
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Principle 5 – Best Practice 3: Teachers use a variety of assessments to inform teaching and improve learning.
Trainer(s): _________ |
9.50-9.55 |
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Activity: Assessing 3-2-1 Uzbekistan!
Trainer(s): |
9.55-11.05 (Participants can take a break from 10.20-10.30)
10.20-10.30 |
2. Decide how you will assess your students’ language skills for this lesson:
3. Design an assessment tool. 4. Monitor and assist.
Break |
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Note: Assessment tools should be tied to the objectives/ what teachers want to know or what evidence they need to prove students have achieved the objective, or to what extent. Examples of an assessment tool might include a checklist or a rubric for an oral presentation, for example. Participants should articulate what they are assessing and how the tool helps document it. |
Activity: Assessment Tool Group Sharing
Trainer(s): |
11.05-11.35 |
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timer |
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Principle 6: Engage and Collaborate Within a Community of Practice.
Trainer(s): |
11.35-11.45 |
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Principle 6 – Best Practice 1: Teachers regularly do self-reflection.
Trainer(s): |
11.45-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
3. Discuss the ways teachers can do self-reflection.
Break |
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Principle 6 – Best Practice 2: Teachers regularly participate in professional development.
Trainer(s): |
12.15-12.25 |
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Principle 6 – Best Practice 3: Teachers develop leadership skills so they can be a resource in their schools.
Trainer(s): |
12.25-12.35 |
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Review TESOL COP and Professional Resources Trainer(s): |
12.35-12.45 |
Review some options for professional learning on the TESOL Website.
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RPMs will not get TESOL memberships. |
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Review of The 6 Principles
Trainer(s): |
12.45-12.55 |
1. Review the 6Ps all together and emphasize that the best teaching happens when all of the 6 Ps are working together. |
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Activity: Around the Clock
Trainer(s): |
12.55-1.15 |
2. Move around the room and ask your colleagues their name and a favorite take-away. 4. Move quickly! You only have five minutes to fill your clock.
6.Have participants share out favorite take-aways as /if time allows.
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Abbreviate this or eliminate it if there isn’t time. Connect it to planning (get some ideas!) |
Activity: Activity Tracker
Trainer(s): |
1.15-1.30 |
1. Ask participants to fill in their “Activity tracker”. 2. Give one article related to next week’s workshop to read at home. |
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Remind them this activity tracker helps them while they will be cascading the materials to teachers |
Week 4 TETE Module 1: Building Routines in English |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Introductions
Trainer(s): |
9.00 – 9.10 |
1. Entrance tickets (Homework check) 2. After greeting, trainer writes on the board a quote by Benjamin Franklin. "Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn." 3. Trainer asks their opinions and elicits their answers about the quote. Then trainer asks to write their favorite film to watch as suggestion to their trainer in front of their names. Teacher collects paper. |
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Activity: Four Corners
Trainer(s) |
9.10-9.20 |
1. Teacher explains “four corners” in order to check their knowledge for previous theme. There are words on four corners: Agree, strongly agree, disagree, strongly disagree. 2. Trainer reads statements, and they say their opinions. They prove their opinions. |
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Trainer(s): |
9.20-9.25
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1. Introduce objectives on the board. By the end of the workshop participants will be able to
(Teacher models making a foldable and gives instructions how to fill it) The day 3 aims to:
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Greeting poem
Trainer(s): |
9:25 9:45
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1. Trainer introduces a poem to greet with each other: Good morning, friends. How are you? I am fine. what about you? Today we are here to pair, Discover the world with sharp brains. 2. Funny Labyrinth Teacher asks some students to sit in a row and some of them in labyrinth room. They go by the words hung on the desk and find their classmate and greet by clapping their hands as hi- five time. And who finds more classmates or meets will be winner or we can modify as a classroom routine to find questions and answer for guardians in the labyrinth. 3. Follow-up questions: Prior knowledge is activated (brainstorming what they already know about building routines) What is your favorite classroom routine that you regularly use when teaching? What part of the class do you use this routine - in the beginning, when transitioning, or at the end of a lesson? Why is it your favorite?
What do you do to involve your students in the daily routines in your classroom?
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Video Presentation
Trainer(s): |
9.45 – 10.20
10.20-10.30 |
1. Video 1. Start up language routines (Monitoring/Scaffolding/Take notes to foldable) 2. Mini lecturing about routines 3. Trainer puts a video by Dr. Shin who explains types of routines. Ask them to write a foldable while watching. Divide them into 4 groups with colorful sticks. 4. Monitor them and ask them to write summary in a sentence with their group.sk to read their summaries.
Break |
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Do Now &Wrap up.
Trainer(s) |
10.30-11.00
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1. Video 2. Do Now & Wrap up. 2. Trainer shows the second video to introduce some best strategies of questioning. 3. Participants identify how to set up some language routines for your daily or weekly lesson activities 4. While watching, they take notes to complete anchor chart. Trainer scaffolds how to complete the chart. |
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Activity: Jigsaw Reading
Trainer(s): |
11.00-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
1. Trainer distributes article related to the theme and asks them to choose colorful paper and to find their group. 2. They will find their groups, then trainer asks participants to count 1-4 numbers and asks to read article in their home groups and discuss with their expert groups parts of article assigned to them. Then they complete the given 5 sentences with each group member’s summary from their expert group conclusion.
Break |
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Activity: Student Routines
Trainer(s): |
12:20 12:40
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1. Participants work in groups to demonstrate how they organize language routines.
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Activity: Speaking fluency
Trainer(s): |
12:40 13:00
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1. Trainer asks participants to say A, B and puts them in a line they will retell the article each other. First A pairs to B pairs, then B pairs to A pairs retell. |
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PQP-Praise, Question, Polish
Trainer(s): |
1.00-1.15
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1. Trainer asks participants their feedback about the training and what would they change.
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Assess performance
Trainer(s): |
1.15-1.20 |
1. Participants do “Daily mingling” on 3 important questions about theme.
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Anchor chart completion
Trainer(s): |
1.20-1.30 |
1. Based on what they learned, they should create a new or adapt an existing classroom routine you would like to use regularly in their current teaching context. Briefly describe who their learners are, when would you use this instructional routine, and why they believe it would be effective |
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Week 5 TETE Module 2: Giving Clear Instructions |
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Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.02 |
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Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.02-9.05 |
By the end of the workshop participants will be able to - describe the features of good teacher talk, use several modeling strategies, - write and practice speaking effective teacher talk for your lessons, - reflect on how to prepare a teacher talk - share a sample teacher talk using an activity. |
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Activity: Stand Up / Sit Down
Trainer(s): |
9.05-9.25 |
1. Listen to and/or read each statement. If it is true for you, stand up. If it is not true for you, sit down. 2. Look around so you can learn new information about your colleagues. 3. EXTENSION: Ask follow-up questions to people near you.
1. I live in the United States. 2. I have taught English for more than 25 years. 3. I have a pet.
Emphasize the importance of giving instructions while doing activities such as these. |
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At first give very long instructions. Then make your instructions shorter. At the end of the activity discuss the importance of instructions in students’ task fulfillment. |
Activity: Review of articles given to read at home
Trainer(s): |
9.25-9.50 |
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Article 10 Tips for Giving and Checking Instructions in an ESL Classroom by Sue Swift https://www.eslbase.com/teaching/giving-checking-instructions |
Starting from week 2 we give them an article to read at home. Participants come and discuss articles they have read. |
Presentation of new topic (Giving clear instructions) Trainer(s): |
9.50-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
Break |
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Activity: Wall reading
Trainer(s): |
10.30-11.20 |
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Print different parts of this article on different separate paper sheets and stuck them on the walls of the classroom. |
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Activity: Find what’s wrong with instructions
Trainer(s): |
11.20-11.40 |
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Print the article in several copies, cut only those part where the examples of instructions |
Activity(energizer): 1-2-3 Reorganize
Trainer(s): |
11.40-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
Break |
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If time allows you may have this energizer with different categories |
Activity: Write an instruction and perform
Trainer(s): |
12.15-1.05 |
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Choose any activity from school textbooks grades 9-11 |
Activity: Feedback session
Trainer(s): |
1.05-1.15 |
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Focus on main (possible) errors made by participants in the previous “Instruction writing” activity |
Activity: Fluency line
Trainer(s): |
1.15-1.25 |
1. Tell participants to stand up & form 2 lines facing each other. If you have an even number of trainers, you can have a trio at one end. 2. Tell them "I am going to give you 1 minute to talk to the person in front of you about what you have learnt today" 3. Set a timer & let participants carry out the activity. Walk around to monitor & assist if necessary. 4. When the timer goes off, tell the person at the end of one line to rejoin her line at the other end while the rest of her line moves over to make space for her. Everybody should have a different partner. If you have an even number of trainers, get 2 trainers to move to the other end. 5. Tell them: «Again, I will give you 1 minute to talk to the person in front of you about what you have learnt today. This is a repetition, so you need to speak better and add more information." 6. Repeat the activity 2-3 times as necessary. Clap your hands & say, "Good job, everybody! Now return to your seats!" |
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This is a good activity for summarizing the materials learnt |
Activity: Completing “Activity tracker”
Trainer(s) |
1.25-1.30 |
1. Ask participants to fill in their Activity Tracker. 2. Give one article related to next week’s workshop to read at home. |
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Remind them this activity tracker helps them while they will be cascading the materials to school teachers |
TETE Module 3: Effective Questioning & Answering Strategies |
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Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
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Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.05-9.10 |
By the end of the module, participants will be able to: -understand how to form and give effective questions to check comprehension and increase students’ learning -use appropriate teacher talk for choosing and using effective questions depending on different learning goals -elicit students’ answers by giving effective questions |
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Warm-up activity: Great wind blows activity
Trainer(s): |
9.10-9.25 |
1. Participants will be given a range of questions about their personal and professional lives so they will wave instead of answer. They feel how it feels joyful when movements and TPR takes place in language learning Questions number can be increased until 15 |
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Activity: 5 Ws
Trainer(s): |
9.25-9.40 |
1. Five w questions. Instructors give questions and elicit answers from each other. |
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Activity Tracker/Foldable
Trainer(s): |
9.40-9.50 |
1. Remind participants to keep track of activities in their foldable or activity tracker. 2. Participants can keep filling tracker all the session instead of foldable. It depends on trainers whatever they choose. Handout with following sections will be provided in printed form: Activity b) what did we do? C) How did we do? E) Why did we do? F) How can I adapt it? |
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Activity: Q & A
Trainer(s): |
9.50-10.05 |
1. Stimulate participants’ beliefs in using effective questions while teaching children with these questions: ● Do you check your students’ understanding? ● How often do you give HOT/ISQ questions? ● What do you think about giving the whole challenging or triggering questions? ● Which types of questions do you know that serve as effective stimulating tool to speak up? ● How would you teach students answer properly?
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Video Presentation & Comprehension Check
Trainer(s): |
10.05-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
1. Watch the video. 2. Ask comprehension questions using thumbs up/down: a) HOT questions are higher order thinking questions which help to think critically b) True false questions are the version of comprehension checking questions c) comprehension checking questions are needed to give extra information about topic d) we use questions to initiate discussions e) questions may help to generate group works f) giving questions and eliciting answers can be done without any strategies Participants will model in some activities the response TPR or others when needed. Tue-false question list can be prolonged according to the plans of presenters
Break |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMGRuuhiCBU https://sites.google.com/view/mason-tete/webinar-recordings |
Activity: Q & A Activities
Trainer(s): |
10.30-11.25 |
1. Introducing activities which help most to pro-pose effective questions and give proper answers very quick: Guiding Artist, Poster making, 3-2-1, true-false, digital storytelling, warm-ups, ice-breakers, collaborative mind mapping, find some-one who, concentric circle, anchor chart application activity, give one get one info gap activities, bingo, mingle, turn and talk, peer tutor, interview, project work, brainstorm and so forth. 2 Give participants an opportunity to participate in one or two of these examples. |
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Activity: Info Gap
Trainer(s): |
11.25-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
1. After filling-during discussion answers, participants will be asked to reflect on questions they are composing. They will be asked some ISQ or HOT questions in order to evolve deeper reflection.
Break |
Info Gap Handout |
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Activity: Silent Video
Trainer(s): |
12.15-12.30
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1. Instructors will watch the silent video from the TETE group website. They will give speech to silent video. They learnt new technique, plus they will give extra questions belonging to them.
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Computer LCD screen Speakers Internet Blackboard |
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Activity: Creating Questions for Textbook Activities
Trainer(s): |
12.30-1.00 |
1. Creating questions for textbook activities.
· Trainers will check comprehension of teachers by giving extra questions and asking repeating instructions. · Trainers will provide feedback either after each activity or at the end of the session overall. · Giving effective questions and answers, playing roles abilities will be graded according to certain clear rubrics. |
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Infographic Feedback
Trainer(s): |
1.00-1.20 |
1. Feedback is given for participants’ content of info graphics. (P-Q-P by other groups) Oral and general feedback They will be praised in each participation. |
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3-2-1 Exit Ticket
Trainer(s): |
1.20-1.30 |
3 Things you learned from the module 2 Strategies for giving Feedback 1 question you still have |
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Week 7 Module 4: Checking Comprehension and Giving Feedback |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
Give a general welcome to the Week 6 workshop. |
PPT |
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Activity: Ask and switch
Trainer(s):
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9.05-9.35 |
Introduce the Ask and switch activity. Tell participants the purpose is to increase interaction among the participants.
1. Each participant takes small sheet of paper and writes a question related to the article which was given as a home reading on one side and the answer to the question on the other. 2. Participants get up out of their seats and walk around the room. 3. They approach a partner and ask their partner to answer the question. 4. The partner asks his or her question and the first participant answers. 5. The two participants then switch cards and go to find a new partner. 6. Model the activity.
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Article: Progress check. https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Famericanenglish.state.gov%2Ffiles%2Fae%2Fresource_files%2Fpromoting_learner_engagement_week_3.pdf&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNF3DixkkHRcvVPQZiMhzbGNq4GMbA |
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Today’s Agenda and Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s):
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9.35-9.40 |
Present the objectives for week 7.
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Activity: KWL Chart
Trainer(s): |
9.40-10.00 |
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Activity: Video True/False
Trainer(s): |
10.00-10.20
10.20-10.30
10.30-10.50
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Break
Statements:
mistakes they have made. (True)
but still be effective. (False)
meaning of students’ communication. (True)
errors. (True)
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Activity: Turn and talk
Trainer(s):
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10.5011.20 |
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Video 3. Anxiety-free corrective feedback. |
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Activity: Act out situation.
Trainer(s): |
11.20-11.55
11.55-12.15
12.15-12.45 |
1. Demonstrate a video about feedback strategies beyond error correction. 2. Divide the participants into groups of four. 3. Ask them to act out the situation: “Teacher corrects a student’s mistake using one of indirect feedback strategies: give a pause, recast, requesting clarification”. 4. Give time to work in groups. 5. Monitor.
Break
6 Tell participants they will now present their situations. 7. Announce timing for each group presentation. 8. Signal to start. 9. After all groups have presented their situations, give formative feedback. 10. Discuss with participants: “What I have done after your group presentation? Did I give individual feedback to each of you? Was my feedback anxiety-free? How did I correct your mistakes?” |
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Activity: Foldable
Trainer(s): |
12.45-12.55 |
1. Give participants time to take notes about the Act Out activity in their foldable. |
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Activity: Classroom Application Turn & Talk
Trainer(s):
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12.55-1:10 |
1. Ask participants to think of one lesson they often teach. 2. Ask them to write down how they checked comprehension and gave feedback in the past. 3. Ask participants to write down how they will give feedback in the future for that lesson. 4. Put participants into pairs. Have them share their ideas in a turn and talk. |
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Activity: KWL Chart
Trainer(s): |
1.10-1.20 |
1. Ask participants to fill in the Learned part of the KWL chart. 2. Share what they learned in their table groups. |
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Exit ticket. Filling GOTs and NEEDs.
Trainer(s): |
1.20-1.30 |
1. Introduce GOTs and NEEDs to participants. 2. Elicit the sample one. 3. Ask participants to fill in the GOTs and NEEDs before they leave the room. 4. Give one article related to next week’s workshop to read at home. |
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Week 8 Modules 5 & 6: Increasing Classroom Interaction & PTRA: Plan, Teach, Reflect, Adjust
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
Give a general welcome to the Week 6 workshop. |
PPT |
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Activity: Concentric circle
Trainer(s): |
9.05-9.15 |
Introduce the Concentric circle activity. Tell participants the purpose is to increase interaction among the participants.
1. Stand in 2 circles: one inside and one outside. Each participant must have one partner facing each other. 2. Talk about what you have learned in previous workshops and what you have already applied in your lessons. 3. When I give you a signal, only inside circle participants speak and participants in outside circle listen and keep in mind what they listened. 4. When I give you a signal, participants in outside circle move one step right. Now Ps in outside circle retell what they have listened from the Ps in inside circle. 5. This is to be continued till I give you a signal to finish talking.
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Today’s Agenda and Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.15-9.20 |
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Stimulate recall of prior learning
Trainer(s): |
9.20-9.40 |
Ask participants some questions from articles they are supposed to read at home.
Elicit ideas about how to have more interactive lessons. Write key ideas on the whiteboard so that Ps could write them down into their notebooks.
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Activity: Find Someone Who . . . + Bingo
Trainer(s): |
9.40-10.00 |
2. When I give you a signal, walk around the room for five minutes. Ask other people questions to see if they fit one of the statements below (e.g., “Have you ever traveled by train?”). 3. Write their name in the appropriate box. 4. Sit down when you finish or when I give you a signal.
Have participants share out any interesting information they learned about other people. |
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Activity: Guiding Artist
Trainer(s): |
10.00-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
1. Each participant chooses a photo with a simple scene. 2. Once they have chosen their photos to describe, pair them up with a partner who is sitting near them. In each pair, designate participants as Student A and Student B. 3. Give each participant 5 minutes to describe their picture to their partner. 4. After participant A finishes his/her job, they switch their roles. 5. After the description of pictures/photos, the participants compare their drawings with the original images.
Discuss the whole process with participants: tell them the importance of monitoring, scaffolding and taking notes of mistakes while observing the learners on task.
Break |
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In Guiding Artist activity, participants should not show their photos to their partner; If possible, have them sit back-to-back.
Monitor, scaffold, take notes
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Mini lecture on Plan, teach, reflect, adjust
Trainer(s): |
10.30-11.00 |
1. Demonstrate two videos about writing good objectives and sequencing activities. 2. Inform participants of CAMEOS principle in setting objectives. 3. Discuss some ideas about what makes a good lesson plan.
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Participants are informed of the importance of lesson planning, putting objectives, sequencing the activities, 6-step lessons |
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Preparation of a 6-step lesson plan
Trainers: |
11.00-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
1. Participants are put into groups. 2. They are given learner autonomy; thus, they can choose whatever the class and the theme can be. 3. They prepare a 6-step lesson plan out of what they have learned.
Break |
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Scaffolding is provided if any help is needed |
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Presentation of a 6-step lesson plan
Trainer(s): |
12.15-1.05 |
Participants demonstrate their lesson plans in groups. Participants are given learner autonomy: they can perform the lesson process, present the lesson orally, in a Power Point presentation, etc. |
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Activity: PQP
Trainer(s):
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12.15-1.05 (same as above) |
1. Introduce PQP feedback. When one group is presenting their lesson plans, the other participants should write feedbacks using PQP. |
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PQP feedback is given at the time of presentation. While one group presents, the other writes feedback. |
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Activity: Scavenger Hunt
Trainer(s): |
1.05-1.20 |
1. Look at the vocabulary word in each box on this paper. 2. Write a note about the meaning of each vocabulary word that you know. 3. When I give you a signal, walk around the room for five minutes. Ask other people the meanings of the vocabulary you do not know. 4. Sit down when you finish or when I give you a signal.
* TESOL – Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages * learners – students * engage – participate in, join in |
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Activity: Completing “Activity tracker”
Trainer(s): |
1.20-1.30 |
1. Ask participants to fill in their “Activity tracker”. 2. Give one article related to next week’s workshop to read at home. |
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Remind them this activity tracker helps them while they will be cascading the materials to teachers |
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Week 9 TETE Modules 7 & 8: Textbook Activities / Visually Stimulating Tasks |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
Welcome and Overview
Trainer(s): |
9.00-9.05 |
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Entrance Ticket |
9.05-9.15 |
1. Participants will write about their expectations of the workshop. |
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Activity: Textbook Picture |
9.15-9.35 |
1. Choose a picture from the textbook and project it on the board. 2. Ask participants what they see in the picture. 3. Ask participants to think of 2 activities they could do with the picture. 4. Put participants into pairs to share their ideas. |
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Today’s Objectives
Trainer(s): |
9.35-9.45 |
By the end of the workshop, participants will be able to: • analyze textbook lessons/activities and adapt content for appropriate and meaningful use to meet the learner needs and enhance classroom interactions • use textbook, ancillary materials, and other relevant sources to develop effective communicative lessons/activities appropriate for your learning environment • understand the importance and positive effects of making learning visually stimulating for language learners ▪ identify visual tools that work best for your instructional context ▪ examine how visually stimulating tasks can lead learners through the critical thinking process ▪ discuss how a creating a visually stimulating task can be used to enhance a language activity (e.g., infographics, images, movie/video clips) ▪ create or reconstruct a language task to become a visually stimulating task |
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Activity: Four Corners
Trainer(s): |
9.45-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
Participants will show their agreement about different statements by standing in four different corners of the classroom Agree/Disagree/ Strongly agree/Strongly disagree Prior knowledge is activated (brainstorming what they already know about extending textbooks and creating visually stimulated tasks)
Break |
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Video Presentation: Visually Stimulating Tasks
Trainer(s): |
10.30-11.00 |
1. Creating and facilitating visually stimulating tasks 2. Monitoring/Scaffolding/Take notes to foldable)
3. Mini lecturing about visually stimulating tasks 4. Participants will watch video concerning the topic and complete graphic organizer 5. Give one/get one |
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Activity: Visually Stimulating Tasks Posters
Trainer(s): |
11.00-11.30 |
1. Participants create posters about visually stimulating tasks. |
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Activity: Gallery Walk
Trainer(s): |
11.30-11.55 11.55-12.15 |
1. Participants will walk around the classroom and get ideas from other group’s posters Break |
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Activity: Presentations
Trainer(s): |
12.15-1.00 |
Participants work in groups to demonstrate how they prepare visually stimulating tasks for their lessons (Recast, clarification, pausing before the mistake |
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Feedback
Trainer(s): |
1.00-1.15 |
1. PQP (based on rubric) 2. Participants will give feedback to different groups using provided rubric |
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Exit Ticket & Foldable
Trainer(s): |
1.15-1.30 |
1. Participants will fill ‘3/2/1” 2. Participants will write about: -3 things they have learnt; -2 things they found interesting; -1 thing they’ll imply in their teaching process 3. Participants will complete their foldable with necessary information |
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Week 10 TETE Module 9: Facilitating Discussions and Debates |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
Gain attention
Activity: Tower Block
Trainer(s):
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9.00 – 9.20 |
1. Experiential activity “Tower block” (Homework check) One member of the group starts the conversation with a statement or question about the topic. Topic can be prepared in advance. The goal is to keep the conversation going until no one has anything else to say. Each member will add a cube to the tower for contributing to the conversation |
Blocks, cubes |
This conversation-based discussion activity gives the opportunity to negotiate meaning and encourage one another to stay on the same topic. This activity can also be used as a formative assessment. At the end of activity, you can see whose tower is the highest. |
Inform learners of objectives.
Trainer(s):
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9.20-9.30
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1. Introduce objectives on the board. By the end of the workshop participants will be able to: -develop HOT questions - design how to integrate and manage learning activities - describe the purpose and benefits of project work |
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Mini lecture on how to group and engage teachers in Collaborative work |
Stimulate recall of prior learning: Bucket of Prompts
Trainer(s):
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9.30-9.45 |
1. Classroom vote “Bucket of prompts” It can conclude from ten to twenty topics to debate, they may be given in textbooks, as well as include by the trainer, related to the problems in your school or hometown. Input: mentees will write the prompt and drop into the bucket and debate according to evidence and reason. After in groups they will have some time to think about possible solutions to the problem and debate them in front of the class after other participants will pose the question and state the opinion of the question towards their interests. |
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Prior knowledge is activated (brainstorming what participants already know about discussions and debates) |
Present the content: Debates
Trainer(s):
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9.45-10.00
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1. Mock debates 2. Typical debates consist of:
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Introduce some ideas for organizing and facilitating debates in the language classroom |
Guide learning
Trainer(s):
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10.00-10.20
10.20-10.30 |
1. 4- Corners Agree/ Disagree (Strongly/ Partly/ Totally)
2. Tell participants the purpose of the activity is to provide a counter argument or a statement of opposition. To conclude, each side presents a closing statement that summarizes their prospective and opinion on the issue.
Break |
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Authentic experiences can be created in the classroom that invite and challenge participants to use their target language skills to effectively communicate in discussions and debates with each other. It will reduce TTT and support a participant-centered approach where the trainer as a guide on the side, rather than the direct and only facilitator of instruction. |
Elicit the performance
Trainer(s):
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10.30-11.05 |
1. Anchor chart (providing questions starters)
Participants work in groups to make their own dialogues and get ready to debate |
Handout PPT (Video 3) Higher Order Thinking Questions |
This activity develop higher order thinking (HOT) questions is also a way to advance participants toward more critical thinking and inquiry, which will produce discussions and debates that lead to opposing ideas and opinions. |
Provide feedback
Trainer(s):
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11.05-11.15 |
1. Discussion and debates 2. A debate is a competition in which two opposing teams make speeches on a particular topic and motion to support their arguments and contradict the members of the other team. A debate in ESL class can be based on a specific topic that has recently been taught, therefore strengthening language skills and vocabulary but also critical thinking on the part of the participants. There should also be a judges’ table made up of 3-4 mentees who will be evaluating the whole process and assessing each team based on certain criteria. The judges—are the ones who will grade both teams and finally decide on the winner. In other words, the trainer should play the role of the coordinator, thus allowing participants to feel independent, comfortable with the process and responsible for following the rules and guidelines. |
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Some of the criteria which are easy and effective to use are the following: Clear voice Clear way to express their arguments Organized thoughts Strong opening and/or closing statements Effective use of argumentative language Effective use of key language structures Equal participation of all team members Strong arguments, well thought-out statements Effective rebuttal Respect shown to the judges and the opponents Teamwork amongst members of the same team |
Assess performance
Trainer(s):
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11.15 11.30 |
1. Creating open-ended questions
- How could the question be improved to be a better discussion question? 2. Assessment can be done due to: Respect time limits and talk only when it is your turn to do so. Plagiarism is not accepted. If you have a source, mention it. You can use your objection cards only once. Speak clearly and loudly Don’t look at your cards while speaking. |
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More fruitful are open-ended questions that elicit factual information as well as opinions and differing perspectives. |
Enhance retention and transfer
Trainer(s):
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11.30-11.55
11.55-12.15 |
1. PQP (based on rubric)
Break |
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Gain attention: Stand Up / Sit Down
Trainer(s):
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12.15. -12.25 |
1. Tell the participants the purpose of use discussions and debate to develop higher order thinking questions that encourage critical thinking in the classroom |
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Explore various cooperative learning and interactive language tasks and strategies that build language proficiency and a classroom discourse community |
Inform learners of objectives
Trainer(s):
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12.25 -12.30 |
1. Introduce objectives on the board. By the end of workshop participants will be able to:
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Present the content: Bloom’s
Trainer(s):
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12.30-12.50 |
1. Bloom’s Taxonomy -create -evaluate -analyze -apply -understand -remember
Hive mind activity |
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Students begin in pairs, responding to a discussion question only with a single partner. After each person has had a chance to share their ideas, the pair joins another pair, creating a group of four. Pairs share their ideas with the pair they just joined. Next, groups of four join together to form groups of eight, and so on, until the whole class is joined up in one large discussion. |
Guide learning
Trainer(s): |
12.50-13.15 |
1. Micro teaching |
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Assess performance
Trainer(s): |
13.15-13.25 |
1. Participants will fill “Exit ticket” |
Exit ticket handout |
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Enhance retention and transfer
Trainer(s): |
13.25-13.30 |
Activity tracker completion |
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Week 11 Microteaching |
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Section and Trainer(s) |
Time |
Instructions |
Materials |
Notes |
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Welcome and Introductions
Trainer(s): |
9.00 – 9.15 |
Introducing rubric of the micro-teaching Participants are told to perform micro teaching for 7 minutes in 4 groups. They practice all what they have learnt from workshops. Rubric is given to each group: Creativity-5p Clear instructions, students’ engagement-5p A good lesson planning-5 p Using all six principles-5p |
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Objectives & Agenda
Trainer(s):
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9.15-9.25
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Introduce objectives on the board. By the end of the workshop participants will be able to:
give feedback to other RPMs |
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Activity Auction
Trainer(s) |
9:25 9:45
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1. Activity auction.
2. Participants are asked to choose certain score from poster and answer questions from easy to difficult ones. They should answer questions to review all materials. |
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Micro teaching
Trainer(s): |
9.45-10.20
10.20-10.30
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There will not be presenting any new module by trainers as participants will conduct micro- teaching based on what they learned. Trainers monitor groups when they are preparing.
Break |
handouts to complete for their teaching reflection |
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Presentation of lessons
Trainer(s):
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10.30-11.55
11.55-12.15
12.15-1.00 |
1. There will not be guide learning as participants will conduct microteaching based on what they learned.
2. Micro-teaching (group work) 4 groups present their demo lessons one by one.
3. PQP (based on rubric will be provide by CTs) PQP (RPMs will give Praise, Question and Polish to one another)
Break
4. Continue Microteaching |
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Assess performance
Trainer(s): |
1.00-1.10 |
1. All participants will reflect on own teaching by reading PQPs given from CTs and peer feedback.
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Post-survey
Trainer(s): |
1.10-1.20 |
Trainer distributes survey sheets and asks to complete. |
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Portfolio Submission
Trainer(s): |
1.20-1.30 |
1. Trainer asks teachers to say the poem together You are wonderful, You are great Next time Do not be late
2. They share their impressions about sessions, and they submit their portfolios. |
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Gulnora Abdullayeva