Background
Sometimes bad news can serve as the inspiration for a good
classroom activity! In the summer of 2014, while teaching a 6-week
intermediate grammar course, I started to become disheartened by the
international events that were dominating the news coverage: the
kidnapping of school girls in Nigeria, the downing of a Malaysian
airplane in the Ukraine, the conflict in Gaza, and the rise of
ISIS-sponsored violence in Iraq. However, despite the bleakness of the
news, I was inspired to create an activity that would teach students
about social modals and encourage them to promote social change using
social media.
My students, at the time, were learning about social modals
(advice, regret, permission, necessity, and obligation), and I was
trying to create an activity to use in conjunction with the lessons in
the course workbook. The grammar course met twice a week for 5 hours
each day, so it was important the activity provide the students with a
break from book learning and exercises. I wanted them to utilize
technology, get some fresh air, move around, and be creative. Therefore,
on one evening, I conducted a little research about hashtags for social
change, created a handout, and spent US$4 for two containers of
sidewalk chalk at Target. I was then ready to spend an hour of the next
day testing out my activity before the class lunch break.
Students’ messages for social change line the sidewalk.
Handout
After our day’s lesson on social modals, I provided my students
with a handout. On one side of the handout, there was the following set
of instructions and graphic organizer:
Instructions
- Look over the list of social change #hashtags. Choose 5 that you feel are important.
- Write one message that promotes social change for each
#hashtag. However, each message needs to use a different
modal!
- After you have drafted your message, write your messages on a sidewalk somewhere on campus.
- Take a picture of one of your messages and post it to the
class Facebook group page or to a social media site, like Instagram or
Twitter.
- Don’t forget to include the #hashtag of the cause.
Hashtag |
Modal |
Message |
1. |
|
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2. |
|
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3. |
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4. |
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5. |
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On the backside of the handout, I provided students with a list
of “50 Hashtags
to Spark Social Change” from the website Your Public Interest
Registry. The website provides a nice array of hashtags for promoting
various issues, such as #climate, #education, #fairtrade, #green,
#humanrights, and #women. The variety of issues ensured that each
student could find several that they cared about.
Sequence of the Activity
First, when all the students had a copy of the handout, I told
them, “There are a lot of things that are not going right in the world,
but that is no reason to be pessimistic. We all have the power to spark
change. What problems in your country or in the world are you concerned
about?” After a brief discussion of their concerns, I directed them to
look at the list of hashtags. I then asked them to select the hashtags
of five issues that they cared about and were willing to promote. They
then wrote the hashtags for their issues in the first column of the
graphic organizer.
The students next selected five modals, or modal-like
expressions, from the day’s lesson that they would use to develop
messages. The social modals (advice, regret, permission, necessity, and
obligation) worked perfectly well for promoting messages of social
change. While students were thinking about how to create a message for
their issues using a particular modal, I walked around the class and
made sure that none of them were repeating a formulaic sentence using
the same modal in order to speed through the activity. For example, “You
should care about the environment. #green”, “You should care about
women. #women”, “You should care about the climate. #climate”, and so
on. Thankfully, the students were motivated to champion issues that they
had chosen and were working quite hard to create interesting messages.
Consequently, as I moved around the class, I spent my time helping
students with the grammar of their sentences instead of policing them to
try harder.
After all the students had completed their graphic organizers, I
told them to bring their handouts and cell phones with them as we left
the building of our classroom. I carried with me the containers of chalk
and my smartphone. (All of my students had smartphones, so no one had a
problem completing the final step of the activity. If, for some reason,
a student did not have a smart phone, I was prepared to take a picture
for them.) When we arrived at the courtyard of the campus, I told my
students that they had to write all five messages, but only had to take a
picture of their favorite message and upload it to the course Facebook
group page. (Our grammar class had a Facebook group page, and by
uploading their pictures to the page, I could verify if the students
completed the last step of the activity.) Also, they were not to write
their messages on any building walls, only concrete ground surfaces! It
was a pleasant summer day, and my students were quite happy to spend
time outside writing their messages for social change on the campus
sidewalks. One student even told me before he headed for lunch, “I
really enjoyed this activity!”
Reflections
Not only did all 16 of my students enjoy this activity, so did
I. I was pleased with their engagement throughout the entire activity,
and no one, thankfully, attempted to write an odious or offensive
message. When creating this activity, I wanted the students to practice
using modals in a manner that engaged them personally and
technologically. Additionally, I wanted them to see themselves as agents
for promoting social change. I think everyone involved, including
anyone on campus passing by the messages, was affected in a good way
after this activity. I will definitely be repeating this activity if I
cover social modals again in a future grammar class and if, more
important, the weather is permitting.
Conan Kmiecik is the international student services
coordinator at the UW River Falls. Before assuming this administrative
role, he was an ESL and composition instructor. He possesses a dual Master's Degree in English - Language and Literature/ TESOL from Winona State University. |