May 2013
Audience: Low-intermediate to advanced students
In our image-saturated culture, photos are a surefire way to maximize student talk and stimulate creative writing. This activity allows students to practice the narrative and interrogative forms of present, past, and future tenses, and gets them up and out of their seats. You’ll need at least 20 portrait photographs, with a mix of individual portraits and photos featuring two or more people.
Preparation
Before class begins, prepare a photography gallery by taping 20 or more portrait photographs to the walls, whiteboard, and/or doors of the classroom. I use photos that I cut out from Edward Steichen’s The Family of Man and the New York Times, but there are a number of places online you can access great portraits that are free for classroom use. The Smithsonian Libraries’ Galaxy of Images is a great resource. You can browse by category (they have a “portraits” category), and it will return hundreds of high-res images for download and reproduction. Another good option is the National Portrait Gallery's Permanent Collection Flickr Stream, which includes hundreds of portraits, also acceptable for educational use.
Warm-Up
Ask students whether they like to take photos and whether they have ever seen a memorable photo in the newspaper or on the Internet. Invite them to discuss their experience in small groups.
Activity
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Expansion activity
Ask six students to sit in chairs in a row at the front of the classroom, facing their classmates, and tell them that they collectively represent one of the characters in a chosen photo*. Ask students in the audience to pose a question to that character. The students on the panel at the front have to answer the question, but each student can supply only one word of the answer. The student on the left end of the row supplies the first word, then the student next to him or her the next word, and so on. This activity helps students focus on the word order in English sentences and to think carefully about subject-verb agreement in various tenses.
*Special thanks to Jeremy Harmer for suggesting this line-up technique in his TESOL webinar, “The Fluency Paradox” (2011), freely accessible to TESOL International Association members.
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Alexandra Dylan Lowe teaches English as a Second Language at SUNY Westchester Community College and has written about self-directed learning strategies for TESOL Connections. She also writes a biweekly blog for TESOL International on the use of authentic teaching materials in the ESL classroom.
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Senior Fellow, U.S. Department of State English Language Fellow Program, Worldwide
Elementary Teacher, Northridge School, Mexico City, Mexico
English Language Fellow Program, U.S. Department of State English Language Fellow Program, USA
Postdoctoral Scholar, Center for English as a Second Language, University of Kentucky, Kentucky, USA
Teach ESL Internationally on U.S. Embassy Projects, English Language Fellow Program, U.S. Department of State, USA
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