Introducing ESL Airplane

 

 

Copy of ESL Airplane-3

Hi Teachers!

I know it’s been a long time since I’ve posted anything in this blog. I took a break for a while, but I’m back. Well, kind of, anyway. I’ve started a brand new blog called ESL Airplane, and I’m super-excited about it!

It’s going to include everything from In Your Country, plus new sections for quirky news stories, conversation questions and more. I’m gradually going to be moving the content from this site over there and adding lots of new material, as well. It’s still new, and I still have a lot of work to do and things to learn about blogging, but it’s open and ready for visitors.

You should stop by! 🙂

Click right here to check it out: www.ESLairplane.com

 

My favorite little language teaching trick

Imagine the following scenario: I’m teaching a small group Beginner conversation class. I turn to a student and ask, “What did you do yesterday, Maria?” Maria answers, “I go shopping.”

Assuming that Maria has already learned the past tense of “go,” I don’t correct her mistake for her. Instead of saying anything, I respond with a little gesture…a simple wave of my hand, backward over my shoulder. Maria recognizes the gesture to signify past tense and corrects herself. “Oh, no…I went shopping,” she says. “Yesterday….I went!”

In my invisible bag of teaching tricks, the gesture is my personal favorite, especially when it comes to teaching simple tenses. A backward wave means past tense. A forward wave means future, and a point at the ground means present. I find that after I use a gesture once or twice, students catch on and start using it themselves, to help each other. It’s like a gentle nudge to remind them to use something that they’ve already learned.

After enough silent corrections, I generally find that students start correcting their own mistakes without any help from me. Sometimes they’ll even make a mistake, pause, gesture to themselves, and then correct themselves without me even moving a muscle. It’s adorable, and it’s like magic.

So, What’s Your Favorite Teaching Trick?

What little teaching tool or strategy do you depend on for classroom survival? Do you use gestures to give corrective feedback, or do you have another favorite method for error correction?

Please share your tips and ideas in the comment section below. I’d love to hear them!

What's Your Favorite Teaching Trick-