I wanted to share this information with my classmates,as it could be very useful for catedra II and of course our future as English teachers!The Four "P's" of Lesson Planning | |||||||||||||||||||||||
by K.J. Wagner, M.A.
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THE GREATEST SIGN OF SUCCESS FOR A TEACHER IS TO BE ABLE TO SAY, "THE CHILDREN ARE NOW WORKING AS IF I DID NOT EXIST."-MARIA MONTESSORI-
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
The 4 P´s of Lesson Planning-Very helpful for Catedra II !
HOMEWORK
"Learning Teaching" by Jim Scrivener
PPP as a lesson sequence
The most basic and maybe common teaching sequence, that teacher use for
all type of classes, is known as PPP, Presentation-Practice-Production.
The PPP model is one way of categorizing/planning main stages of a
lesson.
- First, the teacher presents an
item of language in a clear context to get across its meaning. This could
be done in a variety of ways: through a text, a situation, a dialogue etc.
- Students are then asked
to complete a controlled practice stage, where they may have
to repeat target items through choral and individual drilling, fill gaps
or match halves of sentences. All of this practice demands that the
student uses the language correctly and helps them to become more
comfortable with it.
- Finally, they move on to the production stage, sometimes called the 'free practice' stage. Students are given a communication task such as a role play and are expected to produce the target language and use any other language that has already been learnt and is suitable for completing it.
Here
some examples of classical PPP lesson plans, labeled with the E-S-A stages(Harmer):
- Build up a situation or context
(Engage)
- (Present) Introduce the grammar point
(Study)
- (Practice) Controlled/restricted
practice (Study or Activate?)
- (Produce)
Freer
practice
(Activate)
- Warm up
(Engage)
- Listening or Reading
(Activate)
- Careful listening or reading
(Activate)
- (Present) Highlight the grammar
point (Study)
- (Practice) Controlled/restricted
practice (Study or Activate)
- (Produce) Freer practice (Activate)
Conclusion – my personal opinion and proposal
PPP offers a very simplified approach to language learning. It is based upon the idea that you can present language in neat little blocks, adding from one lesson to the next. However, research shows us that we cannot predict or guarantee what the students will learn and that ultimately a wide exposure to language is the best way of ensuring that students will acquire it effectively. Teachers therefore have to adapt their planning to the necessity and level of their students. Not every lesson has to be (and cannot be) based on a PPP model. There are also other ways of structuring/using the stages of a lesson.
Overall, I
think PPP lesson plans are very limited.
It would be convenient if good lessons only needed 3 key steps, but I
think good lessons need a lot more.
During my
research I found a really interesting model that called especially my
attention. I would like to share it here with you and don’t hesitate to
comment! It is called EDUCARE? Normally used in general education, but I think
it is very useful for language learning:
EDUCARE?
Explanation
(= clarification of language or skills by the teacher, through reading, through
discovery tasks, etc.)
Demonstration
(= in ELT, listening to or reading examples of English in use)
Use (= the more
controlled/restricted practice steps, including drills)
Check/correct
(= self/peer/teacher correction; tasks to check understanding; CCQs, etc.)
Aide-memoire
(= getting handouts, writing summaries of the lesson, etc.)
Review/recycle
(= seeing and using the language again, and again, and again)
Evaluate (= free/realistic/authentic use and
consideration of the effectiveness of that use)
? (= a chance to ask
questions)
The aim is
to ensure that over a period of every few classes, with a good degree of
flexibility in the exact order, learners should be provided with all of the
above.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
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