Tips for teachers
Предварительный просмотр:
DURING THE LESSON
• Greet your students in English, even if they
are beginners. This will immediately create
a special atmosphere, and establish certain
rules. Introduce yourself, pointing at the
board where your name is written, and then
either call out students’ names in turn, or walk
around, pointing at them and asking, “And you
are?”
• Depending how successful the beginning is,
you may spend a few seconds on telling them
that this is your first lesson of English, too. Alternately,
when your students grumble that this
is their sixth lesson and they are so tired,
act out a little scene. For example, say, “Oh my
God, this is my sixth lesson too, and it’s also
my sixth lesson of English!” Such a remark is
always completely unexpected. Children laugh
at it, and any tension dissolves at once.
• When dealing with children, ALWAYS be
ready for the unexpected.
• Discipline. Never, ever try to over-shout any
noise. Children are noisy by nature. If they are
very quiet, something is wrong. If they cannot
seem to quiet down, start your lesson with the
old trusted staples, like an audio recording, a
funny video clip, or distribute some cards with
simple tasks.
AFTER THE LESSON
• Analyze, but do not overdo it. You survived!
• Decide if you had any problems, think what
you would like to do differently, check how
much you managed to do, what remains to be
done.
• Talk to your own favourite teacher, visit their
lesson if possible, and just watch how they
cope.
• If all went well, it does not mean that the next
lesson will be a success too.
• If everything went wrong and you feel like running
away screaming, or burst into tears, or
bash your head against the wall, remember:
this is normal. You are not alone. Ask your
parents.