Using
students’ backgrounds and identities to acknowledge and promote their agency
helps teachers create a community of learners in their classes where the
process of teaching and learning is personalized. It also creates strong bonds
among students as they feel accountable, which boosts student motivation,
participation in the activities, and retention.
The
following lesson plan is a narrative journal assignment for students with
advanced English proficiency, but it can be adapted for different teaching
contexts, skill area classes, and proficiency levels. I use this in my academic
English oral communication courses to train international teaching assistants
in becoming effective public speakers. It starts with writing narrative
journals and moves to creating and presenting effective presentations.
The main
focus of the lesson plan is telling factual stories by using students’ personal
pictures to promote their agency. This lesson plan involves students’ backgrounds
and identities to create a professional learning community of multilingual,
multicultural, and multidisciplinary international teaching assistants and
acknowledge the agency of the learners/scholars.
Journal Writing:
Describe Your Picture(s) Creatively
Duration: 3 sessions, each 80 Minutes
Language
Skills: Reading, Writing, Listening, Speaking
Materials and
Technology: Laptop (or cellphone), internet, learning management
system (LMS), students’ selected pictures, projector
Objectives
Writing a personal story
creatively based on a picture
Describing a familiar event
in writing using descriptive language
Reading creative nonfiction
stories
Analyzing stories and
pictures while thinking critically
Working collaboratively
with a partner/class
Describing and presenting a
story in front of an audience
Listening to stories and
getting to know peers
Outcomes
Students
will be able to
write personal stories
using descriptive language.
read and listen effectively
for key elements and supporting details.
organize ideas to create
and present effective presentations.
present and describe a
factual story.
use communicative resources
and strategies.
use intelligible academic
English.
listen to stories to learn
about their classmates’ personal and cultural backgrounds.
Procedure
Session
One
Warm-Up
Bring some pictures (from
any resource; see Figure 1 for examples) and ask students to create stories for
those pictures.
Ask students to share their
stories orally in groups.
Figure 1. Example photos for students to create
stories.
Ask students to select a
picture from their social media account or from a childhood album.
Assignment
Assign students to write a
journal entry and tell the story reflected/implied in the pictures by
reimagining the time they took that picture. (Because this is a journal-writing
assignment, the length of the journals depends on the students’ stories.)
Ask students to use
descriptive language describing the unique features of the picture that reveal
an aspect of their identity.
Assign students to post their pictures
and stories to the discussion board on your LMS.
Ask each student to select
a story from their peers’ responses. Each student should post a message on the
LMS mentioning their selected story so other students do not select that
particular story.
Ask students to review the
Reading the Story handout (Appendix A, .pdf) before they read their selected stories,
and then complete the handout as they read.
Ask students to post the
handout to the LMS.
Advertisement
Session
Two
Warm-Up
Brainstorm some verbal and
nonverbal public-speaking strategies, resources, and techniques, such as facial
expression, body language, pauses, pitch, volume, and intonation.
Instruction
Discuss techniques and
resources that students can use to speak effectively in front of an audience.
Share a video of an
effective speaker and ask students to take notes about the strength of the
speaker’s speaking skills. TED Talks offer great
videos for examples, and you can easily find something suitable on YouTube; this
video of then President Obama giving a commencement address is
excellent, as it models the use of gestures, facial expressions, pauses, and
humor to retain audience attention. Show students several minutes of a video
and have them watch the rest at home.
Ask students to use their
notes and discuss the strength of the talk and the speaker in groups.
Ask groups to share their
ideas with the class.
Assignment
Ask students to use their
completed Reading the Story handout and prepare a 2-minute presentation sharing
the story of their classmate with the class.
For homework, have students
create a Presentation Notecard (Appendix B, .pdf) to practice for their presentation.
For homework, have students
create an electronic poster using the Poster Presentation Template (Appendix C)
and post it to the LMS to use on the day of presentation.
Share and go over the
rubric you will use to grade students’ presentation (Appendix D).
Session
Three
Warm-Up
Remind students that they
will be graded based on the rubric (Appendix D).
Ask a volunteer to keep the
time for presenters.
Instruction
Remind students that they
have 2 minutes to present their poster and introduce their classmates.
Assignment/Assessment
Ask students to present
their posters (based on the Poster Presentation Template, Appendix C) in front
of the class.
Project each presenter’s
poster as they present.
Grade students’
presentation.
Student
Examples
Following
are a few examples of student work from my class.
Click each image to enlarge.
Conclusion
This lesson plan gave my students an
opportunity to feel comfortable in class and about their personal and cultural
backgrounds and express their ideas and feelings. After the presentations, I
realized that my students found it less challenging to take a stand and express
their ideas. My class turned into collaborative communities that facilitated
participation, group work, and growth.
Neda
Sahranavard, PhD, is a lecturer
and academic coordinator at the University of California, Irvine, Program in
Academic English, and an adjunct faculty at South Orange County Community College
District. She has a PhD in English language and literature and has
worked with multilingual students for more than 17 years. Dr. Sahranavard is
the 2020 TESOL Teacher of the Year.
Collaboration is vital to teaching and learning. Before COVID-19, collaboration might have happened at the copy machine, in the hallway, or in department meetings. Things changed last spring with the onset and spread of COVID-19. During this time, we had to respond and act quickly.
Now, we all face uncertainty with our back-to-school plans for the fall. It is more important than ever that we find new (and sustainable) ways to help facilitate our collaboration with each other regardless of whether we are online, remote, in-person, or using a unique hybrid. This is our time to move from the defensive of managing a crisis to the offensive!
This blog provides five apps that can help you collaborate with other teachers, colleagues, community members, and even parents during the fall semester and beyond. Whether you are working remotely or teaching in-person, these are helpful tools that can keep your lessons, projects, and priorities moving in a positive and sustainable direction. Read more.
Many of us are now teaching online, and it can be challenging to find ways to engage students who are sitting in front of a computer all day. How can we get students talking with the enthusiasm they have in the physical classroom?
One solution is to take advantage of virtual whiteboards for fun, descriptive activities that help students improve their speaking skills. This post explains technical requirements and provides instructions for three whiteboard games: 1) Moving Pictures (beginner), 2) What’s the Difference? (intermediate) and 3) Picture This! (advanced). Read more.
The goal of the 2020 Census is to count everyone who lives in the United States. The information gathered by the Census provide statistics that affect funding for K–12 education and other community initiatives for the next 10 years. The statistics from the 2020 Census help determine how hundreds of billions of dollars in federal funding is given to communities. Because 60% of English learners (ELs) in the United States live in poverty, this affects them both in their schools and in their communities. Here are some educational and community resources that are funded: Read more.
In this much-needed book, the authors marshal research and several decades of their own experience to provide instructional practices and activities that will help teachers develop newcomers as readers and writers of English and engage them in content learning across the curriculum. Equally important, they show how teachers can advocate for these vulnerable students, many of whom have experienced multiple challenges in their home countries or in the United States, including poverty, violence, and political persecution. (Copublished with Norton)
The Teacher Leader Guide for School-Wide English Learning provides a roadmap for capitalizing on the often untapped language expertise of ESL teachers.
Active TESOL members may read current and recent issues of TESOL Connections online at http://www.tesol.org/tc. Inclusion in TESOL Connections does not constitute an endorsement by TESOL.
TESOL International Association
1925 Ballenger Avenue, Suite 550 Alexandria, VA 22314-6820 USA
Tel. +1 703.836.0774
Fax: +1 703.836.7864
E-mail: members@tesol.org (general information) www.tesol.org