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TEACHING ENGLISH USING SONGS Rosemarie Lamothe V. PPT 2

Planning with songs

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Page 1: Planning with songs

TEACHING ENGLISH USING SONGS

Rosemarie Lamothe V.

PPT N° 2

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SAMPLE LESSON

• Old Macdonald had a farm

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Children's Lesson: Old MacDonald Had a Farm

• Level: Beginner (children) Readers. For non-readers the lesson must be adapted.Focus: Vocabulary

• Note: This work was prepared to take advantage of all the potential of a song like “Old Mac Donald Had a Farm” may offer to work with different kind of animals. The methodology used permits any teacher to adapt the matter according to their necessities.

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Objectives:

• Make the students have fun making animal sounds.

• Children should have an active part in singing, making his or her animal sounds.

• The children will also learn to work with each other by presenting their piece in the song.

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Materials Needed to Teach the Lesson:

• The songbook and tape of “Old Mac Donald Had a Farm.”

• The pictures of the animals of the song that contain the sound that each animal reproduces.

• Sheets of paper that children will use to match animals and the sound they make. They must have some pictures.

• Sheets of paper that contain the lyrics of “Old MacDonald Had A Farm” but the lyrics should have some blanks to be completed by each child. They should include some pictures.

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Teaching Procedure: I. Preparing the Class:

• Choose animals the children know or pre-teach the animals for the song – ducks, pigs, horses, sheep etc.

• Make pictures of each animal for all children in the class. These pictures should have written the sound that the animals produce.

• Prepare sheets of paper to match animals and their sounds

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II. Introduction to the Lesson:

• Create a classroom mural titled "What We Know About Farms.”

• Set up a farm display area to generate interest in the new classroom theme (might include straw hats, overalls, farm toys and of course animals).

• Hand out the pictures of each animal to all children in the class. Check that they know the English word for their animals.

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II. Introduction to the Lesson ( cont)

• Make the children think about their favorite animal that lives on a farm.

• Make the student listen to the recording of “Old MacDonald Had A Farm”, and think about what animal from the song they want to be. (Then, they will be asked to participate according to the choice they made).

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III. Step by step Procedures for Teaching the Focus Concepts:

• Listen to the recording of the song line by line; "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" and ask children to join you according to the animal they have selected. If it is necessary, stop the song line by line until they get the idea.

• Sing the song together with the accompaniment provided on tape. Remember children may learn very easily by using echoic memory.

• Promote mimics, gestures, etc. associated to the meaning to make children play a participative role freely. Remember children have energy and want to make noise. Songs will channel these natural inclinations positively.

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IV. Closure and Review of the Lesson:

• Divide up the children into their animal groups to sing "Old MacDonald Had A Farm" song without the accompaniment of the tape.

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Assessing Understanding of the Concept Taught:

– Make the children sing in “a cappella” with their farm animal group. In this way you will listen more closely to discover if the children are pronouncing correctly the most important words of the song such as the name of the animals and the sounds they produce.

– Hand out the sheets of paper that have the lyrics with some blanks.

– Finally, as an option, children may use a paper to match animal sounds to the correct farm animals at class or home.

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Some adaptations

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Finger Pupptes

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Reading place mat

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Make a book