Centers and Small Group Instruction
for Foreign Language Classrooms
Jessica HaxhiMaloney Interdistrict Magnet School
Waterbury, [email protected]
Japanese Language and Culture Program
http://teacherweb.com/CT/maloneymagnetschool/japanese/
Wiki for Resources and Handoutshttp://maloneyjapanese.wikispaces.com/(“For World Language Teachers” Section)
What is “small group instruction?”
Why use Small Group Instruction?Lessons from the Homeroom
• opportunity for “guided reading”
• teachers can engage the learner
• teachers can use “strategic coaching”
• teachers can “scaffold” the learning
• students develop as independent learners
Taken from Ford, M.P. & Opitz, M.F. (2002) “Using centers to engage children during guided reading time: Intensifying learning experiences away from the teacher.” The Reading Teacher
Why use Small Group Instruction and Centers in our FL Classrooms?
Students
• develop individual study skills• develop group work skills• get one-on-one time with teachers• get to interact with technology, realia, or content• can access a variety of activities in all of the 5 Cs and for various intelligences• appeals to the “iGeneration”
Why use Small Group Instruction and Centers in our FL Classrooms?
Teachers
• can get to know students more individually• can collect a variety of data all at once• can use materials that are difficult to use in large groups• can reduce class management issues• can sit down for awhile!
PlanningHow much time for each center?
• A whole class period• Half a period• One-third• One-fourth• One-fifth
PlanningBrainstorming Activities
• Teacher Table
• Four to five student centers
The Teacher Table
What could you do...
if you had 20 minutes
with 5 of your students
around a table?
K-2
3-4
5-6
7-8
Student CentersWhat types of things can
your students do on their own?
PlanningThe Best Centers
• can be used independently
• can be used by all
• have accountability
• are not too hard to make or change
• build around class routines
Taken from Ford, M.P. & Opitz, M.F. (2002) “Using centers to engage children during guided reading time: Intensifying learning experiences away from the teacher.” The Reading Teacher
Planning Let’s Get Specific• What are the objectives of this unit? What do students need
to know and be able to do?• What learning and practice would best be done at the
teacher table? • What experiences are best done in small groups or
individually?• What skills really need extra practice or support?• What are engaging realia, videos, etc. for this unit? • What materials and technology do I have access to?• How shall I group students to maximize learning?
PlanningGrouping Students
• Depends on your objectives• heterogeneous groups • homogeneous groups (assessing oral)• behavior issues
• Ways of Keeping Track of Groups– class list highlighted– construction paper list-up– nametags in bunches
• If a particular center is an assessment, keep track of who is absent for that center each day so that you can send them to it next class.
PlanningKeeping Students in the Target Language
• Very tricky!
• Keep them busy.
• Maybe use a reward system.
• Maybe use a penalty system.
• Buy iPods!
• Build in accountability...
PlanningAccountability for Students
• Teacher– Collect papers each time and check– Ask homeroom teacher to circulate
• Group (with lead student)– Group checklist – Lead student collects finished papers – Group behavior system – gain/lose points, money, etc.– Group test at end
• Individual student– Checklist for each student as they go through centers (objectives or activities)– Completing a packet as they go– Correcting papers as they go, inserting in folder– Test on content at end – Behavior system for good work/problems
Cassette Player Recorder
• $16 new• very easy to use• almost retro cool!• Best for one-time use for your scoring purposes
Digital Voice Recorder
•$25-200•Easy for kids to use•Uploads to computer so you can save for the future•Must make them say their names each time
Computer Sound Recorder
• Already on any PC in Accessories>Entertainment• Students can delete and re-record until it is perfect• Saves easily to computer• Kids can name files with their own names•May need a microphone
Photostory 3 for Windows
• Students can record something specific to a photo that you or they have put in.
• Students can delete and fix it until it is perfect.
• Requires whole-class training, using some English.
• Requires plan for saving to disk or computers.
Flip Camera
• About $150 each• Very easy to use• Doesn’t require tapes• Students can instantly view• Uploads to computer for
saving for later
Other Recording Options
• Regular video camera
• Camera already installed on computer
• For voice – www.audacity.com
• For creativity – www.voki.com
Activity Ideas
• Interpersonal (two-way conversations)
• Interpretive (listening/reading/watching)
• Presentational (creating a final product)
• Culture
• Connections
• Comparisons
• Communities
The 5 C’sThe 5 C’s
Interpersonal SkillsTeacher Table
• Having simple conversations about personal information• Talking about likes, dislikes, or opinions• Playing “Go Fish” or a variation• Describing pictures• Talking about a holiday, folktale or books read in class• Role-playing with puppets or animals• Introducing or using situation cards• Hints:
– Always ask “push” questions– Have a class list, rubric copy, or laptop for recording
scores and making notes
Interpersonal SkillsStudent Centers
• Practicing a situation card or known dialogue
• Learning new content with vocabulary, hint sheets, dictionaries or computer kiosks
• Using puppets, cell-phones, or walkie talkies to make it fun
• Recording with laptops, digital recorder, iPods, flip camera, or cassette player
Interpersonal SkillsStudent Center Games
• Hangman• “Guess who?” or Eggspert games with a
designated leader• Teacher-created games with dice• Candyland or Chutes and Ladders (no English!)• Go Fish• Culturally authentic games• Online games with one student as “Vanna
White”
Listening Center • Books• Songs• Conversations• Poetry• Speeches
• Listen for a certain word and count instances• Teacher-created simple listening test• Listening comprehension test• Fill in the missing words (with or without word bank)• Match what you hear to a picture• Listen and put book pictures in order• Put words in order (on sentence strips or copies)
• Tapes• iPods• Laptops
Interpretive Skills
Watching Center• Cartoon• Song video• Conversation video• Drama• Other YouTube find!30
• Put scenes in order by pictures• Put written sentences describing scenes in order• Match pictures from story to written sentences• Answer main idea questions• Answer comprehension questions• Write a sentence about different scenes or characters
• VCR• Laptop
Interpretive Skills
Reading Center• Books• Poetry• Articles• Advertisements• Cartoons
• Look for a certain word and count or highlight• Find words that begin with “_” and list• Put summary sentences in order• Choose best sentence to describe character, main idea, problem, solution.• Answer comprehension questions.• Draw a picture to illustrate poem, paragraph, etc.
Authentic Materials
Interpretive Skills
Reading Center
Teacher-created Materials
• Matching words to pictures• Matching words to stamps• Stamping words under pictures with letter stamps• Matching words to definitions• Draw illustrations for words or paragraphs• Word fill-in with sentences • Character fill-in (Japanese/Chinese)• KARUTA with laptop or with student leader
Interpretive Skills
Presentational Speaking Centers
• Partners work with situation cards and prepare
skit for performance later
• Practice a short dialogue
• Readers-theater: read story, decide how to act
out, practice with props, act out later
• Create a Photostory, based on pictures students brought in or teacher prepared
Peer-score and peer-coach using rubrics Record practice OR final product with digital recorder, laptop, iPod, flip camera, or cassette.
Presentational Writing Centers• Write word for each letter of your name, animal you love,
etc. • Label a picture or pictures• Draw a picture with a word repeated • Write a word, phrase or sentence for each picture• Write poetry, stories, etc.• Create a Construction paper organizer• Write into a Photostory picture on computer
Options:dictionaries or notword lists or not
Culture-Based Centers
• money rubbings• learning about and practicing specific customs • playing culturally authentic games• accessing websites in the target language• viewing cultural topic videos • eating, drinking something from culture• creating models of food or art from clay or
other medium
Art-Based Culture Centers
• match art piece to sentence that describes it
• brainstorm words or phrases about each art piece
• one partner describes, other points to the art piece
• do “color-by-number” of art piece, 1 = rojo 2 = verde
Connections: Math Centers
• one student reads number card, others use straws, base 10 rods, blocks, etc. to create number
• measuring various objects in Metric and British
• writing greater than/less than sentences
• monetary conversions and websites
• Sudoku (characters or written words)
• Written word math (cinco x cinco = ___)
Connections: Science Centers
• What in the room is magnetic? (room is labeled - list up in target language)
• What in the room is metal, wood, etc.?• Classifying animals by various characteristics
and creating chart• Putting together life-cycle pictures for plants,
animals, etc.• Listening to a YouTube video explaining
simple science concept in target language
Connections : Art, Music and PE Centers
• Make a target culture craft• Draw a scene to be labeled later• Compare 2 target culture songs for various
characteristics• Write a few sentences about why one song is
better.• Learn a dance step or dance
from written directions, video, etc.
Comparisons-based Centers
• Creating Venn diagrams (written or pictures) or other graphic organizers.
• Writing about own family, home, etc. versus target culture family, home, studied (perhaps English)
• Investigating written work in both languages (ex. same picture book in two languages) and answering questions about similarities/differences
• Looking at maps from different countries and answering comparison questions or highlighting countries.
Communities-based Centers
• Native-speaker visitor(s) as the center (be sure to give task or games!)
• Reading, listening to or writing pen pal letters
• Looking at video from pen pals• Looking at YouTube video of peers• Constructing an email, letter, picture, etc. to
share with native speakers• Creating something in target language to be
shared with the school or home for the purpose of language sharing/teaching
Assessment
How does assessment fit into Small Group Instruction
and Centers?
Classroom Set-upPriorities
• Easy to change quickly
• Match activity to setting
• Provide logical circular flow
• Have a way to signal centers change
On a Cart• “Center in a Box”• CD/DVD to put in classroom
computer• Talk with teacher about using
his/her reading table• Start with less centers (or even 1
group at your table)• Learning Stations Concept
Giving Directionsfor Centers
• Written sheets on table
• Instructions on slides of Powerpoint
• Go over on first day of centers and/or previous class
• Walk them through transitions
For Early finishers...
• Word searches
• Crossword puzzles
• Color-by-directions
• Continue drawings
• Help others
Tracking Student ProgressSelf-Assessment
• “Can Do” Checklist for students as they go through centers
• “Can Do” Checklist for after centers are complete
Work that Students Correct
• Keep answer papers in a separate area, near you, or on a later slide of Powerpoint
• OR, correct as a class after last center
Work you need to score• Collect in “Finished Work” folder for later grading• Put folder on desktop of computer with class name
for students to save recordings into • Consider recording/videotaping assessments at
your table for later scoring• Consider having your computer in front of you to
enter scores• Consider having rubric in front of you to score as
they speak
A final note...
• Let unit goals drive center activities
• Do your best to have every activity be a language activity
• Don’t spend TOO much time making centers
• Use centers, whole group, and partner activities to maximize learning
• Enjoy!
Unit ___________________________________ Grade_______________________Centers Objectives:________________________________________________________________
InterpersonalCommunication
InterpretiveCommunication
PresentationalCommunication
Other “C” Other “C”
Communication Cultures Connections
Comparisons Communities
Communication 1 Communication 2 Culture
Math Art
Teacher Table
Unit __My Family and Your Family________ Grade______4th/5th _________________Centers Objectives: Practice family and hobby vocabulary (speaking/reading/writing), understand longer conversations, practice for later assessment describing your own family picture
One Laptop
Reading words – Slap the Word Game
Family member wordsSports/Hobbies words
Teacher Table:Identify family clip art pics, Identify sports/hobbies pics; Answer questions about how many people in their family; Teacher shares a photo or drawing of her (or a famous person’s) real or imaginary family and talks about names, ages, birth months, and likes/dislikes of members – asks students for input
Create Family ConstructionPaper Fold-Up Book
Draw family member face or write name on front flapOn inside:Write (mother, father, etc).Write birth monthWrite one hobby they likeWrite one food they like using dictionaries
iPods
Watch Shingomama video and put words of song in order.Watch conversation between teachers and answer comprehension questions.
Find the Word in Context
Look at pages from websites or an article printed and highlight family member OR sports words. Give students tally of how many of each they should find.Challege – ask a few comprehension questions about readings