Speaking activities for adult beginners

Teaching ESL to adults

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benjuli
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Joined: 31 Jan 2005, 14:19

Speaking activities for adult beginners

Unread post by benjuli »

Hello,
I was wondering if anyone could help me with some ideas for adult beginners. It is difficult at times to get them to speak. Any ideas? Thank you. benjuli
Nigel
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Joined: 25 Apr 2004, 15:00

Speaking activities for beginners

Unread post by Nigel »

It's difficult to get beginners talking. They need a well-structured conversation and lots of support and practice to get them going.

You can start them off reading a dialogue and then get them to substitute different parts of it.

eg :

A: can I see Jane and Helen?
B : no, they're busy
A : when will they be free?
B : at 7 o' clock this evening

You can have them substitute Jane and Helen, the time.


Or you can ask them to read the dialogue and slowly cover parts of it when they feel more confident.
TeacherJoe
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Joined: 13 Sep 2005, 13:29
Status: Teacher

Re: Speaking activities for adult beginners

Unread post by TeacherJoe »

Hello Benjuli,

When I teach adults beginners, I always start slow and build my way up through several stages. First, I just get them to mark a piece of paper in response to my questions, just to see how much they really understand. Second, I get them to repeat answers out loud as a whole class. This gets them used to speaking out, even the very shy ones. Then I ask individual students to repeat out loud, starting with the better students, but giving all students the chance to speak. Then I get them to answer simple questions with only "yes" or "no". Once they get used to responding with one word, I ask them to respond with two words, then three or more. This progression has always worked well for me.

As for specific activities, with beginners I use dictations and basic Q and A techniques mostly. As they progress, they can work on debate or giving short presentations, but that takes time.

Teacher Joe
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schetin
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Joined: 13 Sep 2005, 17:50

Unread post by schetin »

Hi,

Adults are slow-thinking and you can't help it. They rely too much on their consciousness. They don't even doubt that establishing assotiations is the slowest way of retrieving information, the very way we never use in speech. You can't persuade them they are wrong - too much psychology is involved. But you can make them start repeating before they understand a message. The most important thing to remember is that form always prevails. If they don't start thinking they will reproduce the form offered without critical mistakes. What is wrong will come up when they start thinking.

Regards,
Slava
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