Gale Workman
TP#16
Sept. 25, 2014, 8 a.m.
Hecht House
Sore is oh-so foundational and Jihan is level three. During the
past three weeks I have observed their strengths and weaknesses. Sore reads and
writes significantly better than she speaks, and listening is her weakest
skill. Jihan is a strong listener and reader; he's a good speaker. Jihan
learned English grammar in Korea from a Korean-speaking teacher. He's working
hard to understand English grammar now.
Today, we used letter tiles from my BananaGrams game to build
vocabulary of high-frequency (mostly two-letter words). I taught grammar along
the way -- prepositions and conjunctions -- even verb mood.
I asked each student to get paper and pen to compile a
vocabulary list of new words as we played. We reviewed their lists to conclude
our session.
The l44 letter tiles were face-up in the center of the round
table. I asked Sore and Jihan to select titles to line up the alphabet across
the table. We discussed how the Spanish and Korean alphabets are different.
Next, the students extracted the vowels from the alphabet, and I
determined they understood the terms vowel and consonant.
I pulled out the "E" tile -- the most frequently used
vowel -- and asked the students to place one consonant in front of the E to
make an English word. Jihun moved the B tile to make BE. Perfect! I asked each
student to speak a sentence using the word BE. I praised, and I corrected
errors. We continued the game using each vowel.
When the word IF was played, Jihan spoke a sentence correctly
using the subjunctive mood: if I were. I praised him and explained his correct
use of subjunctive. He put the term on his vocab list because, he said, he
struggled with IF, and knowing what grammar to study will help him.
When Sore played the word ON, I demonstrated prepositions as
showing relationship between nouns: Gale sits on the chair, and I sought feedback
from the students that they could use other prepositions correctly.
To the word AN, Sore added the letter D, and we had an
opportunity to discuss conjunctions. Jihan was interested in FANBOYS ... took
notes and asked questions. Sore wrote the term conjunction on her vocab list.
Our final round was building the longest word we could from AN.
It was EXPAND, built by Jihan and used as EXPANDED in his sentence. Sore caught
that difference, so it allowed for a quick lesson on adding ED to make a verb past
tense.
I love the tile game idea! You are so creative with your lessons. And great idea to have them keep a list of vocabulary words they do not recognize - I do this for my child tutee, however, I write the list and keep it myself.
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