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Through games children experiment
and discover.
Games add variation to a lesson and increase
motivation.
The game context makes the foreign
language
Through playing games, students can learn English the way children learn their
mother tongue
The game makes the reasons for speaking
plausible even to reluctant children.
Why use games.
Games are a welcome break from the usual routine of the language class.
They are motivating and challenging.Learning a language requires a great deal of
effort.Games provided language practice in the various
skills-speaking,writing,listening and reading.They encourage students to interact and
communicate.They create a meaningful context for language
use.
Advantages of using games:
The games should have linguistic relevance.They should have an aim and purpose.All the children should participate.The games should be easy and quick to set up
and carry out.They should be fun for children.
The criteria for choosing games:
1. The games are often used at all stages of the lesson, provided that they are suitable and carefully chosen.
2. The games are used as short warm-up activities.
3. There is some time left at the end of the lesson.
Games should not be regarded as a marginal activity in odd moments when the teacher and class have nothing better to do.
When to use games:
A. Wall displays;B. Using games;C. Using project workD. Out-of-school activities(pen-friends);E. Using drama.
Positive learning environment includes:
1. A game must be more than just fun.2. A game should involve “friendly”
competition.3. A game should keep all the students
involved and interested.4. A game should encourage students to
focus on the language itself.5. A game should give students a chance to
learn, practise, or review specific language material.
How to choose games:
10-minute games;-speaking games;-listening games;-grammar games;-writing games;-action games.
Types of Games:
These games do not take up too much class time. They should be quick to set up and quick to play. They can be used :
-as a fun to start a lesson;-to keep early finishers busy while the rest
of the class completes a task;-to revise focus lexis or structures;-to give students extra practice.
10- minute games :
The most general purpose we use English to -give and receive information;-collaborate in doing something;-share personal experiences and opinions
with a view to building social relationships.
Speaking games.
These games help students have fun and make them listen while you are speaking English.
Each time you speak English you are giving your pupils an opportunity
-to acquire the language;-to absorb the sounds and patterns of the language naturally.
Listening games.
This sort of games can be used in three ways:
-diagnostically before presenting a given structure to find out how much knowledge of the area is already present in the group;
-after a grammar presentation to see how much the group grasped;
-as revision of a grammar area.
Grammar games
Writing is an artificial activity and difficult for several reasons:
The writer has to decide what information the eventual reader needs, and how to express this.
There is a linguistic difficulty, in that the language used in written language is different in most ways from that used in speech.
There is a cognitive difficulty, in that students have to organize thoughts
Writing games.
Action games require the pupils to move about and you have to find any suitable place to play them.
These games will need more time then other games.
Action games.
-Collect together between five and ten picture flashcards illustrating words that you want to revise or consolidate with the children.
-Line up the flashcards at the front of the class. Then give them one minute to memorise the words.
-Tell the children to close their eyes. Remove
one of the flashcards. Then tell the children to open their eyes and to see if they can spot which one has disappeared.
What's missing?
In each question the word”coffer-pot” is used instead of the word which the questioner is trying to guess. This leads to questions such as:
Do you coffer-pot every morning?Do you coffer-pot with your friends?
Other objects which can be used are:
Animals, classroom objects, countries or languages, famous people,food,jobs,tools.
The coffer-pot game.
Language:”Jobs” vocabulary area.
Level: elementary upwards.
Time:30 minutes.
Materials: The short descriptions of jobs.
Procedure:-Tell the students to write the numbers 1 to 6.-Read the six descriptions. The students should
write down the names of jobs.-Tell the students to check their answers in pairs.-Get the students to make their own descriptions
of jobs.
Jobs
Grammar: present continuous to express habitual action.
Level:intermediantTime: 30 minutesMaterials: one time grid per four students;
one die per four students.In class:Give every four students a time grid and a die.
Explain that the numbers on the grid are times. Ask each student find a coin to represent his or her working day.
Times of day.
Put on a tray objects, the names of which you know in English-a pencil, a handkerchief, a glass, a cup…anything.
Put the tray in the middle of the table around which the players are sitting.
They may look at the tray for 30-40 seconds only, and then you must take the tray away.
Then you say “go” and the players have 5 minutes in which they must write down all they can remember.
Can you remember?
This could be done in the classroom. Choose a page in the course book which shows the topic of time in detail.
Ask the class to divide into pairs, A and B.Child A looks at the page and chooses a time on the clock.B tries to guess and asks What the time,Mr.Wolf? Is it 7 o’clock? They can have 5 guesses.
If they fail to guess after five goes, change over and repeat the activity.
What's the time, Mr.Wolf?