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Archive for the ‘Classroom management’ Category

New classroom language worksheets and phrase lists

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

For teacher training, self study and/ or classroom use, to get the teacher and/ or the students using more and better English in class.

All mine and all on Usingenglish.com:

Pronunciation what sound is it?

Phraselist for praising, encouraging and consoling

Classroom management language

Classroom language gestures game

Classroom language functions review

Classroom language for Elementary students

Classroom language determiners review

Classroom language collocations SNAP

Classroom language links Part One was a while ago and is here. Suggestions for other links always gratefully received.

New classroom handouts, flashcards and games Jan 2010 Part Three

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Here’s the usual weekly supply in no particular order, then back to the things I really should be doing this morning…

writing in English discussion questions (differences between genres, between cultures etc)

Formal and informal emailing card game

Good behaviour TPR

Good behaviour bad behaviour robot pictionary

Korean cultural code words relative clauses (explaining things foreigners might want to know about- easily adaptable for other nationalities)

Weekends in this city discussion questions

politeness guess the country and discussion (mainly cultural training, can lead onto polite language, polite intonation, discussing hospitality/ international business etc)

social customs in your country (some language to stop overgeneralisations like “People in America/ in my country…”)

technology vocabulary guessing and discussion

the great international night out guess the country

ie and y picture phonics flashcards

ch phonics picture flashcards

j phonics picture flashcards

classroom objects picture flashcards

On the CELTA, Japan, and very small learners

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

An interview with Charlie Richards of Learning Tree English, a private language school for 16 and unders (sometimes far unders!) in Osaka.

“I first came across your school through your excellent examples of young learner lessons on YouTube. Typical lessons or selected highlights?

Thanks for the complement but I shudder when I watch certain clips – I like to think my lessons have improved since! Selected highlights of typical lessons would sum it up nicely.

 Why did you decide to set up a YouTube channel? Has it had the effect you expected?

I opened a You Tube channel with a view to showcasing the school to potential customers. Until that time I offered a hand out video tape cassette of classes to take home – too much time and effort involved there so we upgraded to a digital camera and prepared to take a year’s worth of footage.

Desired effect? Yes, for sure. Over the years we have had many sign-ups from the combination of photos and videos on both embedded on the home page and on Flickr and YouTube.

Did it take a long time to do?

Yes, the short clips you see on the Tube is a very small selection of the footage we took over that particular year and handed out on DVD to existing customers. All the downloading and editing takes a lot of time but the results are always worth it! You might or not notice that a lot of footage is taken by either the teacher holding the camera or individual students taking turns – editing shaky camera work was often the biggest headache!

Any problems getting permission from parents etc?

We have a sign off clause on our entry form. Something like, “If you don’t wish your son or daughter to be portrayed on our school website or connected sites please check this box” . In ten years we only had one parent check the box – and that was way back in ‘99 when we started the home page and understanding of such media was weak.

 In the chain of schools I worked for in Japan most teachers wanted fewer kids’ classes and more adults. How do you manage to get teachers who are happy to work with (very small) kids full time? Or does the limited times when kids can come mean you can only employ part time?

Personally, I don’t like to work mornings! Our working day generally starts from 2:30 and ends before 9 p.m. Only twice a week do we have morning classes – the really young ones. And then it is a long day, for sure. The more compact the working day the happier the teacher, in my experience. Until the recession hit I employed full time and paid by the month. Now I pay according to contracted days a teacher works. Baby classes pay time and a half.

What’s your staff turnover like? Is it a problem keeping teachers motivated to teach very small kids year after year?

I only ever had one staff member leave half way through a contract – and that person had been with us five years until that point. I look for career teachers – the ones who are happy and comfortable with the job description and work load although I am happy to employ unqualified, enthusiastic people who show themselves to have the right attributes but can’t convince themselves that this is their life’s work.

Do your teachers have any special qualification or training in young learners? What training, reading etc would you recommend for teachers who want to/ have to teach very little ones?

In my case taking the CELTA before anything set me up for my career. The course I went through at International House in central London covered all aspects of teaching practice and theory. I have never seen the need to waver from the very effective core teaching methods they inculcated in us over a four week period. Without the knowledge and confidence gained from such a course I am sure I would be like many others I meet who are still searching for the best teaching approach – five years or more into their careers. Save yourself time and money in the long run and get qualified, is my advice. A CELTA is surely the best choice, even now.

How well does the CELTA or equivalent set you up for teaching young learners and very young learners?

The methods and approach of the CELTA is, still I believe, primarily aimed toward adult classes but the whole course is about effective classroom methods and teaching – I found it logical and easy to transfer and extend the methods for young learners.

Who usually adapts better to your kind of teaching, a CELTA or equivalent teacher with no experience or training in kids, or a primary school teacher with no experience or training in ESOL/ EFL?

No question, a qualified CELTA teacher with no experience is better able to adapt and develop. In my experience a primary teacher is, in general, less thorough when it comes to the ruthless unwavering determination necessary to present and practice language in a limited time span. That is not to say the teacher teaches a poor lesson, just that compact, effective language teaching ends up taking a back seat to overall class happiness and camaraderie. ” We couldn’t cover it today because….. but we’ll get to it next week” comments abounding. An EFL qualified teacher is less inclined to let go of his or her lesson plan and target language goals for each lesson due to other considerations. Short time spans demand quality, compact presentation of language and high frequency practice of such. An EFL qualified teacher is, in my experience, better equipped to handle this style of teaching.

Why did you decide to start classes from two years old?

Until recently we only taught from 2½ – give or take a few days. In 2008 we started babies classes. We had a number of existing customers who wanted to start their younger siblings a year early. So we put together a curriculum based around songs with actions and started out. Six months later the kids who were eligible entered the next grade without the mums in presence in class.

If I could I would drop this class from the weekly curriculum – I want more mornings free! – but it does ensure kids feed through into the system – which could potentially keep them at the school for a further five years, or so.

How different are classes with two year olds from classes with three year olds?

We separate the age groups from the outset: two and a half year olds upwards we teach in our Tiny Tots class without a parent or guardian in the classroom. Children younger than that put in our Mother and Me classes with a parent in attendance, of course.

With a full Tiny Tots class (8 kids) at the start of the school year in April achieving anything can be quite a challenge (to put it mildly) so we allow the parent or guardian to be in the class but before the end of May we aim to have the children settled in and parents out of the class although available in a separate room for emergencies.

There are set curriculum goals for the year of course but the order everything is taught is flexible. No text used at this level.

Not tempted by mother and baby classes for even younger kids?

Yes, at this very young age we require a parent to be present in the class. The curriculum is steered less directly at the children but more toward teaching the adult to interact and enjoy using English with their child.

Do you do any unstructured play with the teacher just interacting with the kids spontaneously in English? Any comments on how this could work as a method of teaching the language to the very young?

Yes, allowing the opportunity for spontaneous interaction is extremely important to language and character development regardless of age. In my mind an effective teacher allows students the opportunity to interrupt proceedings at any time so long as the goal of language development is not veered away from. I myself always aim to ‘rap with the kids’ at any chance but I see this only as a complement to an established curriculum, not as a substitute – the teaching aims of a lesson should always be pursued each and every class although not too blinkered so as to prevent natural language use or expression.

Any problems with unrealistic expectations from parents?

(no answer given!) 

I was really impressed with the YouTube video of kids fetching things from the open shelves to practice “long” etc, but I fear in my own classes they’d be pulling it all off at other random times in the class as well. Not a problem?

Funny that, not the first time I have been asked the same question. Other friends’ schools I visit I notice they put up curtains or similar in front of the shelves. To be honest, I have never had any worries regarding this.

I also noticed more chances for bumps and bruises than my present school would let me get away with. I found that Japanese parents are surprisingly tolerant of this considering the way the country seems safety obsessed in other ways. Would you say that is true?

I like and encourage activity in the classroom at all times. Perhaps this reflects my adversity to sitting down for any length of time, I don’t know. What I do know is that it is effective to intersperse physical activity with sedentary tasks to enable concentration levels to remain high. I figure, why not combine the two, whenever possible! My focus is on safety at all times but accidents do happen and yes, I do find parents here to be tolerant if safety concerns are always observed. In (and out of) school insurance is a necessity though, of course.

What are the best and worst things about teaching little kids in Japan?

In many instances I teach a child from age two until they leave at junior high school age. Although I don’t think about it too deeply, what other teacher has that opportunity? It is truly heart warming to see the children develop both socially and academically over such a period of time.

The worst? Zero. I love this work.

Why did you decide to use textbooks in your classes, and which ones did you choose and why?

You have to have a base curriculum. Good material enables you to create good lessons. How can you create lessons on a regular basis without a reference point for both yourselves and the students?

Choosing an appropriate text for each level can be really tricky not to mention the financial burden and time costs involved. Caveat emptor! A wrong decision here can ruin an academic year!

Since I have the opportunity to use computers in class I am also very pleased to use texts that provide multimedia CD’s. I currently use a text series that provides ample material to use in class – a workbook, student book, teacher’s book, flash cards large and small, the aforementioned CD ROMs and extra songs to accompany the whole series. The comprehensive Let’s Go Third Series is the text I use with my elementary school kids. Smart Choice with the JHS students and Tiny Talk 1A through 3B with the youngest ones.

I think I noticed a Super Simple Song on one of your YouTube videos. How much are these and other songs important for your classes? Any other recommendations for places to get good songs?

Yes, the Simple Songs people provide many great songs to complement any curriculum. Other kids songs I bought on tapes and CD’s on holidays around the world. I just throw onto an old iPod and leave it playing before class and the in-between bits sometimes. Otherwise I utilize songs from the Let’s Go series (past and present) and Carolyn Graham’s tunes from the Tiny Talk series for kindergarten levels.

Ditto for computer games, stories and crafts.

Computer games? I haven’t bought any in five years. The ones we use on the Macs were mostly bought ten years ago on a trip to Hawaii – Reader Rabbit, Stickybear, Disney stuff and Jumpstart too. Don’t use much of that as teaching material in class but the kids are welcome to play the games before lessons begin. The majority of games and story books are all saved onto the 3GB!! iMac hard discs ready for instant use.

Stories? Just visit the bookstores on each visit home or wherever. Tiring & time consuming but always worthwhile.

Crafts ideas generally start from a book or online site somewhere and then progress from there.

In an email you told me that you start phonics from very young. The Japanese government has decided to ban all reading and writing from state school primary classes. Any views?

Yep, phonics from age 2 upwards here. Almost without exception kids here are reading short vowels and easy sentences by age 5. I find teaching phonics and reading one of the most fun aspects of lessons for the really young – the methods I use have been tried and trusted in the USA for over twenty years now and are extremely effective. The government lacks expert advice!

I was very impressed by the number, range and usefulness of props (hoops, soft blocks etc). Must’ve cost you a fortune!

Yes, it cost a lot to tool up from the outset. Most of the classroom stuff I got from kindergarten suppliers – not much discount on offer there without the government grants etc. The curriculum based materials came from Hawaii (mostly) and the UK.

What would be the most useful and cost effective things to invest in for schools and teachers setting up very young learner classes for the first time (as I am at the moment, actually)?

Put on the spot I’d come up with: blocks to sit on, throw tables to place on blocks, a white board of some description, crayons and pencils and a few hoops, balls, jump ropes and a set of shopping baskets and plastic fruit & veg from Toys R Us perhaps! After that the hard work will be making the flash cards and assembling ample realia to accompany each lesson plan as you go progress week by week. A lot of dedicated work ahead!

Do specialist teachers, props etc mean that you need to charge more than your competitors?

No. What others around me charge is of a concern for me as a business owner of course. But for me to assume that my school might be worthy of higher rates when all around are just as competitive would be a fatal mistake. The current market is, sadly but inevitably in the current economic climate, very sensitive to price differences. And this being Osaka, especially so! I just plough ahead planting the best seeds in order to reap the benefits in the long term. Quality at a reasonable price would sum up what my school offers, I believe.

Does it take a long time to prepare those classes?

Depends on each teacher doesn’t it? For me a kindergarten class can potentially take longer than an elementary school class to prepare for simply because you have to assemble more materials for the really young ones. And, you cannot afford to have any glitches in your lesson plan at that age – things can get out of control really quickly! On average I’d say a K class would take between 5 and 15 minutes to prepare for. An elementary class ten minutes or a little more.

Do you need to be energetic, outgoing, musical or artistic to teach those kinds of classes?

Energetic – yes. But not necessarily physically energetic, just enthused towards successful teaching and putting your efforts into providing quality lessons.

Outgoing? – affable, jovial – for sure it all helps, yes. These attributes in a teacher are surely attractive to the majority of young learners.

Musical or artistic – I am barely musical but I use songs and taught myself to play many kids songs on a small keyboard. Artistic? My talent is virtually zero in this area – but the kids like to help out there, more often than not. And, I should mention, our office manager has contributed much to the school with her artistic abilities.

Are there any particular influences on the teaching style in your school, e.g. a theory, writer, book or defining personal experience?

Nope. Just did the four week CELTA course and pretty much got the whole understanding and concept from there. Tuning the teaching methods to kids took a few years to fine tune. In the early days of my career (the late eighties) waiting for the publishers to come up with good texts was a most frustrating time.

Personal experiences? I guess cub scouts and a few good youth leaders helped form my ideas of what a successful learning experience should entail. And the odd bad teacher along the way taught me what not to do too. In my mind you have got to be able to analyze what works and what doesn’t – and quickly! If you are able to see your mistakes and learn from them you’ll be successful in the long run I believe. At least that’s the way I approach things both in the classroom and in life.

What is your one all time favourite game for very young learners?

Always changing. Each new week brings a new idea to the class is the way it usually works out. I am always inventing new activities, more often than not using an idea a child introduced in class.

What I do treasure is my repertoire of ‘final five’ games – a way to send everyone home happy, if you like. Examples?

Group table tennis with a sponge frisbee around a large round table; group jump rope; dice spinning, balloon volleyball, blow soccer (on a large scale) – all very much not related to the lesson taught BUT a fun way to finish up a class when five minutes is in hand. Any game that can be instantly set up and played with the minimum of fuss is a favorite.

Any other hints for teachers and schools considering very young learners?

You should pretty quickly know if it is for you or not. I continued teaching adults whilst evaluating my potential career move towards kids – giving me time to assess my choice.

A good director of studies or a school offering training would be desirable, of course. In my case I got thrown in the deep end and luckily kept my head above water the whole time. Sink or swim? That’s both the dangerous and the exciting part, isn’t it?

Any plans to share your ideas other ways, e.g. blog or articles?

Have done the lecture circuit in the past and do enjoy the challenges of standing up in front of adults (sic) for a change! Written communication has never been a strong point but I do maintain a school blog, although recently all is posted in Japanese to ensure better hits. Twitter? Never want to go there!”

Thanks Charlie

Anyone one else want to keep me up nights thinking of good interview questions for them? Or anyone want to disagree with Charlie on sinking despite a CELTA, textbooks for little ones etc? To start it off, here’s my own.

Negatives about teaching kids in Japan- kanchou (trying to stick both index fingers up your arse), surely!??

Teaching preschool English links

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

I’ve done a fair bit of kindy (as we call kindergartens in the trade) English teaching  over the years, and I’m doing it full time at the moment for the first time in quite a while, so will be writing about that and giving lots of links for at least the next month or two. I’m going to start with a list of my stuff on the topic, if only to remind myself of what I’ve forgotten, and will move onto other great resources I am finding in future posts- assuming anyone at all is interested!

In no particular order:

In Modern English Teacher magazine (and mentioned in the TEFL Bible!)

Should my English teaching school be a preschool school (or should my preschool be an English school)?

On ESL Teachers’ Board

Setting up activities in preschool English classes

On Teach ESL to Kids.com

Making personal questions for young learners fun

On ESL Galaxy.com

An all singing all dancing preschool English lesson (included in a recent book by OUP Canada for a TEFL course provider)

On UsingEnglish.com

Why and how to use songs with young children

Christmas vocabulary you can mime

Combining Xmas with a young learner syllabus

On TEFL.net

15 criteria of a good preschool English class

The 15 stages of teaching numbers

15 variations on TPR for little kids

15 problems and solutions for large preschool classes

15 uses for guessing games in any preschool English class

15 flashcard activities for any preschool English class

15 fun sit down activities for preschool English classes

15 variations for large preschool English classes

15 techniques for calming down a preschool English class

15 criteria for a good kindergarten English song

The first 15 stages of using worksheets in kindergarten English classes

The 15 stages of using preschool English songs

15 criteria for choosing or making preschool English worksheets

15 punishments for preschool English classes (and the interesting debate it started)

15 fun ways of using preschool storybooks

15 ways of starting a preschool English lesson

15 ways to finish a preschool English lesson

15 reasons for misbehaviour in preschool English classes (and what to do about them)

Using the picture book From Head to Toe in EFL classes

Can-do statements in preschool English classes (an original idea, I think, and some very interesting comments by real published authors!)

Questions to ask before a new preschool English class

The CLT robot

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

“I suppose that in the not too distant future this sort of hopping from group to group and ‘listening in’ can be taken over by some language-surveillance computer or robot. This device would hover above the participants, the symbolic meaning of hovering being the authority or superior knowledge so badly craved for, ignore the quality of English spoken, emit some encouraging sounds at irregular intervals, tilt its metal head as a sign of attention, extend a pair of metal ears, duly pricked-up – and it could even be programmed to make some nodding movement, indicating approval – and it would not have to be in the right places because nobody would notice or care.”

From Bane or Boon: Social Work in Teaching Foreign Languages

Losing my best students

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Getting back to my paranoid fears of the last post (because a blog might be time consuming and pay nothing, but unlike seeing a therapist it’s free), there definitely does seem to be one kind of student I have lost more than others since I’ve been in this school. While I know the reason why, that hasn’t helped me come up with a way of dealing with it.

Due to the famous reluctance of East Asian students to speak out in class, my teaching over the last six years (and earlier with lots of Chinese students in London) has developed so that brainstorming, discussion, lead ins to readings and listenings, discovery approach grammar tasks, drilling etc can be- and usually is- done 90% in pairs or groups. That doesn’t mean that I don’t try to elicit from the class, I just quickly switch tactics when it is obvious that most students won’t contribute or at least will feel uncomfortable doing so (or make the rest of us feel uncomfortable as we wait and wait and wait…)

I don’t think my lessons lose anything due to this way of teaching, and many students seem to find it a relief and a great way of improving the fluency that they are focused on. Some students, however, don’t agree. There are the usual few who see no merit in talking to someone of the same level who is probably making the same mistakes as them as you get everywhere (and much more in Spain than in Asia), but the bigger problem here is the students who have used the fact that they are one of the few who are happy to speak out to dominate their classes with other teachers. In my class they suddenly have less chance to speak and- even more of an issue for them- less chance to speak to the (native speaker) teacher. This is more of a problem here than in Japan as:

• For some reason, there are more students (usually at least one in every class) who are happy to turn the whole lesson into a one to one chat between them and the teacher while the rest of the class twiddle their thumbs

• The (even) greater privilege given to age and status means that some people are used to being able to dominate and pay no attention to anyone else

• There are usually more students who are willing to speak out, sometimes even a majority of the class. Unfortunately, that means even less speaking time for the ones who are not

• Younger students in Japan are often used to a native speaker prompting conversation with pairwork etc from ALTs (Assistant Language Teachers) in public schools through JET etc.

• There are far fewer opportunities to get a one to one conversation teacher here if that is what they really want, and it is more expensive (in real terms) for students in Korea

Having more “fair” whole class speaking doesn’t seem to be an option, as neither they nor their classmates are going to be happy to sit there waiting five minutes for someone to say “Nothing special” every Monday morning. To put it another way, some students are just not happy with me being fair. That being the case, I can think of a possibly justifiable reaction is just to say screw them, but as it says in the title of this post, these students are in some way the best in the class- hard working, happy to speak out, doing lots of reading etc outside class, interested in the language and the world, thinking about studying abroad, etc etc (even if their social skills sometimes leave something to be desired). Anyway, if the other students are happy, the most obvious way for me to develop my teaching seems to be to focus on these demanding students for a while.

What do you think? (Only trained therapists are allowed to answer that with “What do YOU think?”)

Classroom language links

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

I gave a Classroom Language course a few months ago, which is meant to give non-native speaking teachers more confidence in using English in the classroom. The same information could also be useful for native speakers who need to simplify their language or make sure that the incidental language is controlled enough to be learnt by the students. I also just had my review of the book for such courses Practical Classroom English published in ELT Journal, so that officially makes me an ELTJ-accredited expert (they give you a medal and teach you a secret handshake). Luckily for you, I have also published lots on the subject on sites that don’t cost you about a hundred quid a year.

The links below are a mix of ones on Usingenglish.com (including the brand new Teacher Training Handouts page- a first on the Net, I believe) and ones here on TEFL.net, plus I’ve stuck in any other good links I’ve found. Once I’ve used this post to remember what I’ve already written, there’ll also be plenty more in the next couple of months.

Photocopiable teacher training worksheets

Pronunciation peer correction

Classroom language random pelmanism

Classroom language reversi

Classroom language problems and solutions

Classroom language pictionary/ miming game

Classroom language add errors pairwork game

Identify starting and finishing language game

Ranking classroom language

Simplifying classroom language

Lists of useful language (usually with discussion questions and full examples of explanations of relevant classroom activities)

Useful language for moving the class around

Useful classroom language for finishing classes

Useful classroom language for doing listenings

Useful classroom language when you are using the board

Useful classroom language for starting lessons

Classroom language for students (a good way of teachers making sure the students understand and so bringing more English into the classroom)

Classroom language present continuous sounds

Articles on teacher talk/ classroom language

Classifying classroom questions

15 more ways of classifying classroom questions

15 ways of simplifying your classroom language

15 more ways of simplifying your classroom language

15 more ways to make sure that your students understand you

Even more ways of avoiding classroom misunderstandings

15 classroom language games

A well balanced use of L1 in class

Why your students speak L1 in class

A workshop plan of classroom language, including two of the tasks in the top section and

- yet more links including lists of classroom language with translation

———————————————————————

As well as the links on the last page above, I also used three great books on this that I can only hope to get near the standard of (but at least my stuff in free and Googlable…)

Practical Classroom English (OUP)

with its very useful and free supplementary exercises available online here

English for Primary Teachers

Teaching English through English

If anyone else has any links, lists that they would like me to publish or requests for my next article on the subject, comments please below:

Last week’s new worksheets September 09 Part One

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Past continuous memory game

Remembering and forgetting Childhood memories (narrative tenses and functional language- good for IELTS speaking and cutting down on students’ pausing time)

Functional language elicitation text (in which my students found out I’d had a baby and so forgave me some really heavy functional language work- though the other games here too might have helped too!)

Ghosts vocabulary storytelling game

Social English and Phrasal Verbs conversations

Social expressions Answer Me speaking game (making functional language fun!)

Phrasal verbs and second conditional discussion

2nd conditional and phrasals Version 2 (the longer and, frankly, better version)

Good behaviour TPR (setting up class rules for kids- or very manic and naughty adults!- in a fun way that should hopefully mean they recognise the language when you tell them off)

EAP/ Study abroad vocab Past Continuous accusations game (a classic!- or at least a virtual copy of a classic…)

Active Passive True/ False trivia quiz (updated rather than brand new- and of course the idea is as old as the hills!)

Most of these used with New Headway Pre-Intermediate and New Cutting Edge Intermediate, but useable with most other classes with a little adapting

New YL, business and uncountable noun worksheets

Friday, June 19th, 2009

The Post Originally Known As New Worksheets June 09 Part 4 (but for some reason ended up with a name that is even less catchy)

Business complaints case study (only my second attempt at a case study, so let me know what you think)

Mini meetings about cultural differences in the workplace

Going to countable uncountable travel mimes

Food countable and uncountable grammar presentation and speaking (with discussion of recipes and international foods)

Guess who wrote it (revision game, suitable for young learners or high Elem adults)

Change chairs if game prompt cards

Crazy appearances pictionary

Crazy food and drink pictionary

And if you liked those last three or are teaching the same book as me, have a look at Challenges 1 Worksheets

Psychology for English teachers May 09 Part Two

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

From the article “All together now” in Scientific American Mind April/ May 2009Chip Heath and Scott S. Wiltermuth got groups of students to march around the Stanford university campus and tested them against other groups who just strolled together along the same route, and found that the marchers “acted more cooperatively than the strollers did. They also said that they felt more ‘connected’ than the strollers did” in subsequent tests. Similar tests with moving cups and singing along to “O Canada” had the same effect when people were made to move or sing together.

Possible conclusions- some of the more “humanistic” ideas of students doing their own thing and choosing their own ways to learn inside and outside of the classroom could well have the less than humanistic result of damaging class cohesion. The cure? Choral drilling, variations on that like Shadow Reading, starting and stopping activities at the same time together (e.g. timed speaking activities like IELTS and FCE speaking tasks, or rotating roleplays), mingles where they switch partners when they are told to rather than when they feel they are ready, and lots of other seemingly old fashioned stuff. Might I also suggest that this was the real reason for the death of the language lab, rather than any holes in the theory behind the Audio Lingual method that originally lead to its popularity? I’ve always been searching for a reason why my students in London hated it no matter how I used the language lab. I think we can dismiss the idea that it was my fault in any way out of hand…