Infonews n°337 from 30/08/2008

I hope you all had nice holidays and feel ready to go back to school. This special back-to-school Infonews comes to you a bit earlier, because I know how much some of you worry and look for new ideas for the first day of school. This guide is full of ideas and advice for the first days. Next week, I will send you more information about the events in the calendar, the US elections, Europe and other themes that you may want to start the year with.
Note that I’m sending it from a new system. I hope it comes out all right, but if not, do tell me and I'll send you another version.

I wish you will get a nice school, a good timetable and friendly students!

Christine Reymond

Sommaire

Back to school

An original way to start
A traditional way to start
Tips and ideas to take a good start

Activities ordered by level

Primary School : Level A1
Lower secondary school, level A2
Upper secondary school : level B1 and above

Teaching Practice

OpenEnglishWeb


Back to school

In Le Café pédagogique, I updated the “back to school” page, with lots of suggestions for the first day of school. Since the page will be online only on Monday, I copy and translate here the “back to school” part, but you will also find on this page useful sites of reference (online on September 1st, in French)
http://www.cafepedagogique.net/lesdossiers/Pages/rentree08_anglais_Sommaire.aspx
You can also find precious “back to school” resources on Michèle Henry’s website in Nancy-Metz :
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/backtoschool2.htm

Here are over 50 addresses to find an original or a traditional activity for the first day of school. Then there are tips and advice for new teachers, that can also be useful to us all, followed by activities ordered by level, from A1 in primary school to B2 in secondary school. The essential is to start the school year with an open mind, take some distance from the artificial methods and tricks that turn your students into trained pets, and establish in the class an atmosphere of mutual respect and trust, where everyone will collaborate to the common task with his/her own capacities and get something from it (including the teacher who can also learn from the students!).

An original way to start

The following long list of "back to school" sites will allow you to choose the activities that will suit you best on Monday to:
- allow the students to get to know you and/or the other students through "ice-breakers", or organise communicative activities based on personal information. English speakers like this way of getting to know each other, but some French people find it too inquisitive. If you are a new teacher, remember that you don’t have to answer all questions and avoid saying that you have no experience or giving your home address…
http://www.educationworld.com/a_lesson/lesson/lesson019.shtml
http://honolulu.hawaii.edu/intranet/committees/FacDevCom/guidebk/teachtip/breakice.htm
http://www.eslcafe.com/idea/index.cgi?Ice:Breakers
- invite them to write a "friendship cinquain" (a short poem with 5 verses) introducing another student that they have interviewed in English: here is the worksheet with the questions.
http://home.att.net/~teaching/langarts/friendsh.pdf
- play "Truth or Lies" : each student writes three sentences saying something special or surprising about himself, with only one true statement and two false. The others must guess which one is true. It is an opportunity to use questions in an authentic context, make statistics and graphs, and help students know each other. What is interesting there is that each student will give a positive image of him/herself.
http://www.eslhq.com/forums/esl-forums/esl-games-activities/first-day-activities-318/2/
- ask your students to make self portraits or booklets about themselves presenting what they like, where they live, their family, their experiences, etc. You can give them an example through a montage about yourself (a slide show or a collage of pictures and words) and ask them to comment on it. But be careful about questions about the family or the family tree which can be unsettling for students with a complex personal history or family problems.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/crafts/books/backtoschool/
- organise a "get-to-know-you scavenger hunt": a variation of the ice-breakers, with printable student activity pages:
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/crafts/backtoschool/scavengerhunt/
- create a dynamic around a class project that can last a month or a year, but give the students a goal to achieve and the opportunity for a long term involvement. This can be researching information (through a webquest or something else), creating (a poster presentation, an exhibition or a webpage), or acting (working with correspondents, adopting a pet virtually, doing something to improve or protect the environment, presenting a cultural fact or a monument, etc.). eTwinning is the best place to find a project or partners and to advertise for your project and find classes to work with you.
http://www.etwinning.net

A traditional way to start

You can start with a text like this "back to school" , but avoid giving a positionment test on the first day : allow some time for the students to feel comfortable again with English : laying them a trap on the first day is not fair!
Back to school in the world (B1)
Texts in which students from all over the world describe their back to school spirit. You can assign a different country to groups of students who will report it to the class, and you can encourage them to find what is common to several students and also themselves. This can lead to a "back to school" discussion in class, during which students can talk about their fear and expectations for the coming school year.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2001/0904/p13s1-lekt.html

Back to school audio and video files

From ESL lab, a dialogue about school supplies, level A2 and above (including high tech stuff like a palm pilot…)
http://www.esl-lab.com/supplies/suppliesrd1.htm
*** Discover the Pulse Smart pen: a video and a site about a pen that records what is said as you write. Intriguing, not useful, but it will make your students talk and provide you with the opportunity to review school supplies and then go on to classroom English and/or discuss and write together a good behaviour chart.
http://www.livescribe.com/ http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/home/permalink/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20080818006232&newsLang=en
another video about back to school new gadgets and gismo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJUnS2Uxf8Q
recommendations for parents of pre-teens that can be discussed with students (with cultural elements like locker)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaC-vcncStI&feature=related

Tips and ideas to take a good start

Advice for students teachers and beginners, with concrete suggestions that can really help.
http://www.ac-versailles.fr/pedagogi/anglais/formation/backtoschool/
27 tips to help a new teacher start the year.
http://www.vtnea.org/ti-1.htm
10 tips for new teachers.
http://www.teachersfirst.com/tenpoints.shtml
Teachers’ Dos and don'ts (for what to do and avoid doing in class).
http://www.adprima.com/managemistakes.htm
Guide for beginner teachers (and not so new too!): how to get organised, how to react, use humor, etc. Very comprehensive site with interesting suggestions of activities.
http://www.education-world.com/a_curr/curr264.shtml
How an American primary school teacher starts the year : inspiring !
http://www.fvsd.ab.ca/stm/classroom_management_tips_and_be.htm#beginning of the year
First day activities : interesting suggestions to take a good start.
http://content.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=3340
http://www.kimskorner4teachertalk.com/classmanagement/firstday.html
Teaching Heart (tips, lessons, poems, games).
http://www.teachingheart.net/backtoschool2.html
Abcteach (worksheets for activities for all levels, like class survey, I am a star, my goals, poems)
http://www.abcteach.com/directory/theme_units/back_to_school/
First School (worksheets for Preschool)
http://www.first-school.ws/theme/h_back_to_school.htm
About.com (lots of links with ideas to plan your courses and suggestions to manage your classes and organise activities, like "brain friendly" or "getting to know your classmates")
http://esl.about.com/library/weekly/aabackschool_teacher.htm
A Canadian website designed for teachers, with theory and concrete tips.
http://www.2learn.ca/mapset/Enjoy/back2School04/enjoyschoolfinal.html
and an interesting page about how to build a project
http://www.2learn.ca/Projects/ProjectCentre/projintro.html
Eduhound : a site of links to sites of teaching tips and activities. Rich and varied.
http://www.eduhound.com/cat.cfm?subj=Back-to-School

Activities ordered by level

Primary School : Level A1

For kindergarten and beginning of primary school : coloring pages, handicrafts, etc.
http://www.dltk-kids.com/school/
Suggestions of activities, ideas to organise the classroom and the lessons, games, songs and much more…
http://www.proteacher.com/030005.shtml
http://atozteacherstuff.com/Themes/Back_to_School/
http://www.bry-backmanor.org/backtoschool.html
http://www.kinderkorner.com/back.html
Poems and songs sung to famous tunes, but no sound.
http://www.preschooleducation.com/sback.shtml
http://www.songs4teachers.com/backtoschool.htm
A site of labels, lists and plannings to print from which you can teach the days of the week, the basic school supplies, the chores or the school schedule with a « to do » list. With those personalised plannings, the students will make theirs the vocabulary because it regards their own specificities and activities. You can use those documents to teach the vocabulary on levelA1 and to reactivate it on level A2 and then go further by asking them to produce more complex sentences.
http://www.billybear4kids.com/graduation/back2school.html
This site teachers students in English how to cover a book. This activity is really useful because most students don’t know how to cover a book properly, and doing it in English make this boring activity seem new and fun…and they will use English naturally!
http://www.billybear4kids.com/graduation/back-to-school/book/cover.html

Lower secondary school, level A2

Ideas for activities, puzzle and so on…
http://www.theteacherscorner.net/seasonal/back-to-school/
http://www.childfun.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=166
http://www.caslt.org/research/backtoschool.htm
Suggestions that you can adapt to your class : like « me in a bag » or « school scavenger hunt » where students discover their new school on their own, looking for the required landmarks and items to find. A new way to make them discover what they can find in the library or how to go to the canteen : and in the following lesson, they will ask each other questions about how to get around in the school and where they found such and such information, and they will use the vocabulary to give directions and describe locations.
http://www.yesiteach.org/back.htm
School wacky tales : field trip tale. Students have to suggest words in the required grammatical forms, and the machine produces automatically a wacky text. This is fun, and you can then ask them to find the word that would make the text « normal ». Meanwhile, they will review the organisation of the words in a sentence and what words belong to the same category.
http://www.eduplace.com/tales/content/wwt_008.html
various activities for secondary school : word scramble, stories about yourself, plan ahead, bring your own inner inventor, one to one, getting to know you, what I really like, etc.
http://www.eduplace.com/monthlytheme/august/school.html

Upper secondary school : level B1 and above

Various unusual activities
http://www.lessonplanspage.com/BeginSchool.htm
See especially this "welcome to school letter” loaded with bad pieces of advice that students have to spot and correct. This activity can lead to a review of « classroom English » and to building together a catalogue of good behaviour in class.
http://www.lessonplanspage.com/SSLAOGremlinsGoToSchool-SchoolLifeIdea56.htm
For a more psychological approach, here are tips and activities for all levels to create a « class community » or « promote positive behaviour », but also to learn how to react non-violently to bullying and deal with disruptive behaviours. You can use those pages as teachers’ recommendations or study them in class to reflect about school behaviour and even write a guide for other students.
http://www.teachervision.fen.com/tv/curriculum/backtoschool.html
Preparing to study : this iste invites students to review their working environement at home and make sure it is appropriate, but beware of discrimination : this site is aiming at priviledged students, sufficiently well off to have all a good place to work at home, and all the required equipment. If yours are not this type, just forget about this activity !
http://www.how-to-study.com/preparing-to-study.htm
10 ways to motivate your child to learn : read this page with your students and invite them to comment. This will lead them to talk about their motivation, how they deal with school work and what are their relations with their parents regarding work. But be careful because some students may consider this activity as inquisitive. Consider doing it once a trusting relation has being installed between the teacher and the students, and also between the students themselves.
http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=1304
Here are the back-to-school recommendations from the national education board in the USA: statistics about schools, information for teachers and parents, about financial aids, school and internet safety. A rich and varied site that you can encourage students of human sciences and economics (ES) level B1+ or B2 to use to discover information that they can later report to the class and debate, comparing those information to what happens in France.
http://www.usa.gov/Topics/Back_to_School.shtml#vgn-for-educators-vgn
Tools for school : This site is appropriate for secondary school students level B1+ and B2. It’s a very comprehensive site, meant as a homework helper for US students. You find language art, literature, biographies, measures and converters, encyclopedias, history, geography, quizzes, sciences, physics, chemistry, math, and even some educational games such as a hangman), Like the previous site, you can encourage students to browse through and choose topics they like, then produce speeches and interactions (PPC or PPI : prise de parole en continue ou en interaction, inter-questionnements) to inform the class about their findings, comment the resource and discuss how it can be used by them as a study helper.
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/01school1.html
BBC Learning English now also features a site for teachers where you can download worksheets and activities to use the resources of the site in class. Note also the "working abroad" section, with quizzes, worksheets, audio files and transcripts, texts, grammar, pronunciation, crosswords, etc. A lot of resources and activities excellent for STG et BTS students.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/teachingenglish/index.shtml

Teaching Practice

OpenEnglishWeb

Sur les listes de professeurs d'anglais e-teach et eTeachNet, des collègues avaient souhaité la création d'un espace sur Internet dans lequel ils pourraient mettre au service de la communauté leurs idées, préparations, liens, plans de cours, séquences, pratiques TICE...
Un petit groupe de fervents adeptes du libre l'a fait, et a créé un espace où chacun pourra déposer ses créations (originales), échanger des documents et même rédiger des documents à plusieurs. Les voici:
http://www.openenglishweb.org/spip.php?page=contributeurs
Ils se sont regroupés pour fonder l'association Open English Web (Association loi 1901) qui s’adresse aux enseignants d’anglais et aux apprenants en mettant à disposition de tous, sans but lucratif, et avec une philosophie de service public, des ressources pédagogiques et des outils destinés à l’enseignement ou à l’apprentissage de l’anglais langue étrangère via l’Internet ou d’autres supports.
Elle a pour objectifs :
de favoriser le travail collaboratif entre collègues,
d’accueillir sur son site des ressources destinées à l’enseignement de l’anglais ;
d’utiliser la licence Creative Commons telle qu’elle est définie dans la Charte et de promouvoir les formats libres et ouverts ;
de promouvoir l’utilisation des T.I.C.E. comme outil de travail et d’apprentissage.
Consulter la charte, puis allez visitez le site, qui propose déjà des contributions très utiles, comme de nombreux fichiers audios libres de droits.
Les membres de l'association seront aussi naturellement très heureux de voir leur bébé grandir, nourri par les contributions des collègues. Et ils espèrent que cet espace permettra de concevoir tous ensemble des supports et des outils utiles à tous.
Le site :
http://www.openenglishweb.org/
Pour contacter l’association : contact@openenglishweb.org


Ceci est un message de la LISTE INFONEWS
réalisé par Christine Reymond
lycée Blaise Pascal, Rouen, France
E-Mail: christine.reymond@ac-rouen.fr
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