When teaching in a class these days, students themselves (or
caregivers, like parents) have safety paramount in their minds. This
means that students may wish to minimize contact with other students.
One manifestation of this is students not wanting to sit together but to
sit apart (aka “exam mode”—sitting one desk away from others, room
permitting). On the surface, this may seem like an insurmountable
obstacle. This is because many EFL classes nowadays are all about
helping students to develop the skills needed to communicate with
others. One important element of learning to communicate is practicing
the act of communicating. How can students practice communicating if
they are reluctant to be close enough to communicate? It is time to
reexamine how to communicate with others in an EFL classroom.
Groupwork
The first thing to think about is how to deal with groupwork.
Many EFL teachers use groupwork throughout their lessons to facilitate
communication among students. Groupwork has many pros but, now, one con:
Students need to sit together. They do this to communicate with one
another to solve a puzzle, come up with a solution, or negotiate
something.
One way to continue using groupwork is by having students
communicate from a distance using their mobile phones. Ideally, students
will use earbuds to prevent feedback or background echoing. Apps abound
to do this with either text chat or video chat: Google Hangouts, KakaoTalk
Chat, Naver
Line, and so on. One advantage of using these apps for
groupwork is that the teacher can keep a record of the student chatting
texts.
Another is that research has shown that even texting can help
with skill-building of language students; specifically, Blake’s (2009)
study looked at how different kinds of teaching arrangements impacted
students’ oral fluency improvement. The study compared three classes of
university ESL students in three different class configurations:
practice speaking using internet text chatroom only, practice speaking
face-to-face only, and practice speaking without any interaction. The
results showed that the internet chat class significantly outperformed
the face-to-face and no interaction classes in oral fluency gains.
Mobile Games
The second way to mitigate risk in the classroom and keep
students happily engaged is through the use of mobile games. One example
of an EFL classroom-friendly mobile game is Spaceteam ESL. This game is
built to enhance many language skills: listening fluency, oral fluency,
oral reading fluency, and even vocabulary development. Groups do not
need to sit face-to-face or huddle together to play this game. It can be
downloaded for free from Google Play or Apple Play store.
I hope these suggestions were helpful and they bring more
lively dynamics to your class in the face of these virus
threats.
Reference
Blake, C. (2009). Potential of text‐based internet chats for
improving oral fluency in a second language. The Modern
Language Journal, 93(2),
227–240.
David Berry is a PhD student, an undergraduate
English Department professor at a university in Korea, and a homeschool
dad. His PhD research focus is digital game-based learning and
integrating video games into the EFL classroom and curriculum. His other
research interests are instructional design and peer feedback. He
completed an MA in TESOL at Biola University in California, USA. He has
been teaching EFL and English for business purposes at various
universities in Korea and the Middle East for about 20 years and has
presented at numerous international conferences. Since 2009, he has been
on the board of reviewers of TESOL Journal. |