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Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State [email protected] 1
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Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State [email protected] 1.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Teaching English to Young Learners

Evelyn TurnerEnglish Language FellowUnited States Department of State

[email protected]

Page 2: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Good Things I Saw in Schools:Knowledgeable teachers working hard

Teachers making English fun

Warm relationships with students

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Page 3: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Teachers usually kept a good pace to maintain interest

Physical activities alternated with table work

Familiar directions given in English 3

Page 4: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Songs used for teachingNew material was in “small bites”

New material built on old material

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Page 5: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Authentic language – greetings

Off-task students gently redirected

Scaffolding techniques to help a student who only knew part of the answer 5

Page 6: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Teacher adjusted her directions when she was misunderstood.

Spanish used only as a help, the rest of the lesson was in English.

Lots of repeatingChildren having fun

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Page 7: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

However, there was often a problem with children waiting while the teacher organized materials.

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Page 8: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Let me share an experience.Instructional time in reading groups:

Group 1 above level – 20 minutes

Group 2 on level – 20 minutes

Group 3 below level – 40 minutes

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Page 9: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

After six months:

Group 1 still above levelGroup 2 still on levelGroup 3 doing better than group 2

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Page 10: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

What I learned:

Every teaching minute is precious and important.

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Page 11: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

If I were teaching, I would try to minimize wait time:Tear out the workbook pages before class.

Have only one kind of page in the student’s journals.

Have items organized and ready to hand out.

Constantly look for other ways to minimize wait time.

Remember!11

Page 12: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Every teaching minute is precious and important.

Besides!

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Page 13: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

If you don’t have something for them to do every minute,

they will find something to do

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Page 14: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

And you probably won’t like it!

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Page 15: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

When teaching Young Learners we need:

1. To know what they are like and how they learn.

2. Appropriate classroom approaches.

3. Best practices for teaching young learners.

4. To develop a strategy for using Spanish.

Then we will review and do an exit ticket.

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Page 16: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Who are Young Learners?Very Young Learners are under 7 years old.

Young Learners are 7 – 12 years old.

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Page 17: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Why are we teaching them English at such a young age?English is important for their future.

We want them ready for success in our globalized society.

Children learn languages more easily than adults.

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Page 18: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Is starting early a good idea?Program and curriculum in tune with their needs

Appropriate techniques and activities

Enough class time spent on English

Teachers prepared to teach Young Learners

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Page 19: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Think Pair ShareWhat were you like as a Young Learner?

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Page 20: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

1. What are Young Learners Like?ImpulsiveInquisitiveLearn from other peopleEnergeticWant to be entertainedThey want your attention.They want you to love them.

(Joan Kang Shin, 2010)

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Page 21: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

What are we trying to create by starting so young?

Learners who have a positive attitude toward English (Learning English is fun!)

Life long learners of English 21

Page 22: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Teacher: Are you ready to work hard and learn English?

Students: Yes. We are ready to play and have fun in English.

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Page 23: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

How do they learn?They are active learners. (Piaget, 1970)

They learn through social interaction. (Vygotsky, 1962)

They learn through scaffolding by adults. (Bruner, 1983) 23

Page 24: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

2. Our classroom approaches need to reflect what they are like and how they learn.

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Page 25: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

They are active learners and need an experiential approach.

People remember:20% of what they read20% of what they hear30% of what they see50% of what they see and hear70% of what they see, hear, and

discuss90% of what they see, hear,

discuss, and practice. (Rutgers Cooperative Research & Extension,

2004)25

Page 26: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Activities should be:

ScaffoldedEnjoyableSocialMeaningfulFull of practice

Shin (2006)

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Page 27: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Scaffolding is giving part of the answer so the student can get all of the answer.

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Page 28: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Successful scaffolding:

Creates interest in the task.Breaks the task into small steps.Reminds the child about the purpose or goal.

Points out important parts of the task.

Controls the child’s frustration.Models the task.

Bruner (1983)

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Page 29: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Activities should be enjoyable.

TPR◦Head, Shoulders, Knees, and Toes

◦Use the body to make ABCs

◦Peanut, Peanut Butter and Jelly

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Page 30: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Peanut, peanut butter – and jelly!

Peanut, peanut butter – and jelly!

First you take the peanuts and you crunch ‘em, you crunch ‘em.

Then you take the grapes and you squish ‘em, you squish ‘em!

Then you take the bread and you spread it, you spread it.

Then you take the sandwich and you eat it, you eat it!

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Page 31: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Activities should be social.Make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in English.

Older students write the steps they used.

Younger children tell the teacher what they did step by step. The teacher writes it on a chart.

Everyone reads what they wrote to a partner or as a whole group.

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Page 32: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Activities should be full of practice.

Days of the Week songJazz chants◦Hi, how are you?Fine, and you?

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Page 33: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

3. Best PracticesUse visuals, realia, and

movement.Let students make the visuals.Alternate the level of activity.Allow students to relate personal

experience.Develop classroom routines in

English.Have a plan for when to use

Spanish in the English class. 33

Page 34: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Use bright visuals, realia, and movement.

Weather song: What’s the weather, what’s the

weather, what’s the weather like today?

Tell us (student’s name), what’s the weather.

What’s the weather like today?Is it sunny, is it cloudy, is it rainy

out today?Is it snowy, is it windy.What’s the weather like today.

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Page 35: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Alternate the level of activity.

Quiet and noisyDifferent skills

◦listening, speaking, reading, writing

Alone, pairs, small groups, whole class

With the teacher, with other students

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Page 36: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Use finger plays for quiet.Here is a turtle.He lives in a shell.He likes his homeVery well.When he gets hungry,He comes out to eat.Then he goes back in his shell to sleep.

Feldman, Jean (2000)

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Page 37: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Develop classroom routines in English.

“Good morning class. How are you?”

“We are ready to learn.”Day and date routineMoving from activity to activity routine

Attention getting routineEnd of class routine

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Page 38: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Moving from activity to activity routine:

I love EnglishI love EnglishYes I do.Yes I do.Come and be my partner.We will learn together.Yes we will.Yes we will.

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Page 39: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Attention getting routine:

Sh, sh, stop that noise.Sh, sh, stop that noise.Tell all the boys to stop that noise.

(Repeat with girls and everyone.)

(Carolyn Graham)

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Page 40: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Another attention getting routine:

When I say peanut, you say butter.◦Peanut butter◦Peanut butter

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Page 41: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

End of class routine:

Turn to your partner and say:

You were wonderful.You were great.See you next time,And don’t be late!

Joan Shin41

Page 42: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

4. Develop a strategy for using Spanish.

Think, pair, share:

When should you use Spanish in your English class?

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Page 43: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Use Spanish to:Explain difficult concepts.Give complicated directions.

Keep your language objectives in mind.

Allow students to help each other in Spanish. You will know if they are on-task!

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Page 44: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Review

Discuss with your partners what young learners are like and what they need to be able to learn.

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Page 45: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Exit ticket

Make a note about one thing you will remember when thinking about teaching English to Young Learners.

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Page 46: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Turn to a partner and say:

You were wonderful.You were great.See you next time,And don’t be late!

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Page 47: Teaching English to Young Learners Evelyn Turner English Language Fellow United States Department of State evelyn.turner.elf@gmail.com 1.

Thank you very much!

My email address:[email protected]

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