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Humanising Language Teaching
Year 3; Issue 4; July 2001
Stealing phrases from the Idiolects of Others
Mario Rinvolucri secondary and adult
Level: intermediate to advanced
Time: 30 -40 minutes
Preparation: Get a native speaker to visit your class for 15-20 minutes
ready to speak about a couple of different topics that
motivate them.
or
select a video interview where the interviewee is a native
or
choose a radio interview, where the interviewee is a native.
In class:
- Introduce your speaker who then presents the class with the two or three
areas s/he could speak about. Mini-presentations of each.
The students vote to decide on the one they want.
or
tell the student a little about the interview they are going to view/hear.
- Tell the students that they are to listen for gist but that they are also to
notice any words or phrases that the native uses that they would not use when
speaking English. These could be "words" like, erhm, yep,mmmm, they could
very frequent oral speech features like the "modal" to tend to. They could be
linking phrases that this speaker uses frequently etc…
Tell the students to focus on noting down "simple" words, not any complex
technical vocabulary the speaker uses.
- The speaker gives the talk the group have chosen . 10-15 minutes. The students and you take language notes. If you are a native speaker, your notes will be particularly interesting because they will show, age, gender, regional and idiolectal differences between you and the speaker.
- Ask the students to group in 4's to compare their language notes. If the speaker
can stay on , ask him/her to go round and help the students with language doubts,
eg: " did I get this down right?"
- Go through your own notes with the class, teaching useful stuff as it comes up.
- Assure the students that next time they do this exercise, they will find the double-
tasking much easier and they will have fuller notes.
Note: To get the juice out of this technique, it is best to use it repeatedly as the
students gradually access a great pool of oral language and seriously enhance
their awareness of the spoken code.
Preparing students from the Cambridge FCE and CAE exams, we
organised 2 sessions per week with guest speakers over a 12 week term.
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