Posts Tagged ‘free writing’

Bullying

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

As I mentioned in the last post, we did a free writing activity on what my students remembered from their school days as children.

Almost all the students remembered some positive experiences learning about friendship or loyalty or how to get along with others. But students from all nine countries, from Western Europe to Eastern Europe to Asia and Latin America, remembered incidents of bullying as they grew up.

They said it was rampant and were very shocked to hear that it had not been a major problem in past generations. Now it seems ubiquitous. Each student (sadly) gave examples of bullying and the worst seemed to be among girls. We practiced indirect speech and paraphrasing by having another student summarize what had just been said and we compared experiences.

This gave an interesting background for what most of my students did not at first understand: home schooling. Put in this context – as a possible reaction to bullying and other negative influences — the home schooling movement from Reading One became less completely strange to them.

How have you all handled discussions of bullying with your students?

  • Share/Bookmark

Reading about Education–and doing free writing

Monday, May 10th, 2010

We’re wrapping up the term’s work and we ended with the NorthStar unit on education.

We started with Reading Two, the great story from Isaac Asimov called “The Fun They Had.” In the story, children from the future looked back on “the good old days” and how great it was to go to school (instead of relying on computer-learning at home). The children of the future were starved for the companionship and relationships that school can bring.

Then we asked the students to write for 5 minutes in free writing (not paying attention to errors but just brainstorming) on what they learned from other children in school: good and bad. Then they read their paragraphs to other students and commented on the results.

I’ll post the results of this activity next. How do you work with this particular unit?

  • Share/Bookmark

Using info-gap and summarizing activities to introduce homelessness

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

I began the class by talking about my students’ reactions to New York City. Most of them have just arrived in the U.S. What surprised them most about the city? Many of them said, “Homeless people in the streets of one of the richest countries in the world.”

To introduce unit 6 on “Philantropy” and “Why We Give” I had the students read an excerpt from an article by Peter Marin called “Helping and Hating the Homeless.” I found a copy of the article on the web and made the excerpts a little easier for my students by shortening the reading and replacing some of the vocabulary.

We did it as an info-gap exercise. Half the class read his portrait of Alice, a homeless middle-aged woman in Santa Barbara, who became homeless as a result of a criminal attack, and the other half read about Marin’s description of three homeless shelters in the same city, two run by religious organizations and one by a private charity.

This worked really well, in part because I made up questions and vocabulary exercises for each excerpt and that built confidence so that they were able to make an oral summary (no pencils / all in their own words) of the excerpt they read to another student and vice versa.

Reading is something my students are usually fairly good at (compared to speaking and writing) and they need academic preparation. I also asked selected students to tell part of their summaries to the class so I could work on error correction. I had them write their summary at the end of the class. 

 The homework was to do Internet research on the causes of homelessness and the charities who help the homeless. It may seem like too much preparation (before diving into the books) but we have 15 hours of teaching with our class (and three teachers) and I like to have the unit emerge from some real life questions.

  • Share/Bookmark
Legal Notice | Privacy Statement | Home

Website content 2008-2009 by Pearson Education, Inc.