Wednesday, February 11, 2009

"With Napoleon Brandy, made in France and not in Minnesota" p30

Teaching stuff:

As a way to encourage students to push themselves out of their normal four sentences in Dialogues, I have created character cards. The trick is to incorporate the character into whatever dialogue we are working on. It forces them to be a little more creative, and think about how they are putting the vocabulary together. These are the characters I have so far:
  • A strict teacher
  • A Vampire
  • An obsessive comic book collector/artist
  • An angry waitress
  • A parent of 4 young children, who you are looking after during the dialogue
  • A university student
  • A Pirate
  • A Superhero (state your name and superpowers during the dialogue)
  • A caffeine addict, you need to drink at least four cups of coffee a day
  • Someone vain
  • You have a disease where you fall asleep every 5 minutes, but only for 10 seconds at a time
  • A presidential candidate (think about campaign promises)
If you have any suggestions for more that would be great! I am currently compiling a list of situation cards as well.  I used these in my more advanced classes, but even then had to explain some of the vocabulary/concepts.

3 comments:

Cicero Paine said...

A disgruntled ABD hoping for employment?

jeremy said...

advanced? really?

Brieggy said...

More advanced, but yes. I use it in combination with other topics. Example: Going out to eat dialouge: Use at least 10 of the vocabulary words, a character card, and a menu.