Showing posts with label English Teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English Teaching. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 May 2016

Secondary School Job of the Day!!

Are you an English Teacher, looking for a September 2016 start in Tonbridge, Kent?
TimePlan Education, working in partnership with their client school, is looking for an English teacher who has taught successfully across key stage 3 and 4. The position is a full-time contract starting September 2016. The successful candidate must be committed to achieving high standards and able to inspire students across the ability range at KS3 and KS4.
This single sex school in Tonbridge, Kent is a forward-looking school with a track record of innovation. In 2013 this school was judged to be 'good' by Ofsted saying that they are a 'caring and supportive school'. The school aims to create a positive, secure and happy learning environment where all students experience friendship, respect and success.

As a Performing Arts College the school offers an active but disciplined learning environment and an innovative approach to teaching.

The school offers an inclusive and diverse curriculum, which provides both academic and applied learning opportunities, prepares students for higher education and employment. It has a flourishing mixed sixth form, with an strong record of success in students achieving entry to the university or college of their choice, including Oxford.

To be considered for this English teaching vacancy based in Tonbridge, Kent you will need to;
  • show you are an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner.
  • have the willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team.
  • support the school ethos at all times during your working days.
  • possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge.
It is essential that you understand the school's academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims.
In return we offer:
  • a dedicated key contact at the TimePlan South East office.
  • TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet teachers who are teaching at schools in your placement area.
  • opportunities to aid your professional development.
  • pay to scale.
If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position in Tonbridge, Kent, Please apply online today or call on 01732 373340. TimePlan are the number one teaching agency for jobs in the south east.

Monday, 11 January 2016

Secondary School Job of the Day!!

English teaching job available in Cranbrook, Kent .
Are you a qualified English teacher looking for a teaching position starting at the beginning of next term?
TimePlan Education is working with this academy to recruit a keen and committed English teacher for a full time role commencing January 2016 and running to the end of the academic year in the first instance. Applications are welcomed from teachers at any stage of their teaching career, overseas teachers are also welcome to apply.

This is a thriving and successful co-educational 11 to 18 Secondary School in the Weald of Kent. It has an established record of excellent examination results and outstanding achievement. The school has gained specialist college status in sport, mathematics with ICT and vocational education.
High expectations are set for both behaviour and learning and students are always encouraged to strive for their best.

Does this English teaching job in Kent sound ideal for you?
All successful applicants must:
  • be able to deliver good and outstanding teaching practices as the norm
  • have experience teaching English in a secondary school
  • have a willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team
  • be able to create an enriching, supportive and high performing learning environment
  • to support the school ethos
  • be an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner
  • possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge
It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims.

In return we offer:
  • pay to scale
  • professional classroom support from our team of Headteacher consultants throughout the length of your contract
  • a dedicated key contact at the South East office
  • TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet professional teachers from all over the planet who are teaching at schools in your placement area
  • opportunities to aid your professional development.
If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position please apply online today or call Paul Chuter on 01732 373340 at TimePlan, the number one teaching agency for English teaching jobs in Kent.

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Secondary School Teaching Job of the Day!!

English teaching job available in Cranbrook, Kent .
Are you a qualified English teacher looking for a teaching position starting at the beginning of next term?
TimePlan Education is working with this academy to recruit a keen and committed English teacher for a full time role commencing January 2016 and running to the end of the academic year in the first instance. Applications are welcomed from colleagues at any stage of their teaching career, overseas teachers are also welcome to apply.
A thriving and successful co educational 11 to 18 Secondary School in the Weald of Kent. It has an established record of excellent examination results and outstanding achievement.The school has gained specialist college status in Sport, Mathematics with ICT and Vocational Education.
High expectations are set for both behaviour and learning and students are always encouraged to strive for their best.
Does this English teaching job in Kent sound ideal for you?
All successful applicants must meet the following requirements:

  • have experience of teaching English
  • be able to deliver good and outstanding teaching practices as the norm
  • have a willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team
  • be able to create an enriching, supportive and high performing learning environment
  • to support the school ethos at all times during your working days
  • be an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner
  • you will possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge

It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims
In return we offer:

  • pay to scale
  • professional classroom support from our team of Headteacher consultants throughout the length of your contract
  • a dedicated key contact at the South East office
  • TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet professional teachers from all over the planet who are teaching at schools in your placement area
  • opportunities to aid your professional development.

If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position please apply online today or call Paul Chuter on 01732 373340 at TimePlan, the number one teaching agency for English teaching jobs in Kent.

Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Secondary School Job of the Day!!

Are you an English Teacher, looking for a January 2016 start in Rochester , Kent ?
TimePlan Education, working in partnership with their client school, is looking for an English teacher who has taught successfully across Key Stage 3 and 4. The position is a full time contract starting January 2016. A successful candidate must be committed to achieving high standards and able to inspire students across the ability range at KS3 and KS4.
This Maidstone school is a small but very friendly school with a warm family atmosphere. It is an all-ability school and, as such, welcomes students of all abilities. They are a specialist sports college and have excellent sporting facilities. The school has also benefited from a recently completed new building programme with a new state of the art hall and drama facilities and a new Mathematics building.


The school is a National Challenge school that holds several awards, including the Intermediate and International Award. This Maidstone school has a thriving Sixth Form. The school's examination performance is now one of the most improved in Kent

A successful and flourishing 11 to 18 co-educational school in the Medway Valley area of Kent. This school was rebuilt in 2007 and provides their community with modern, well resourced facilities yet has an ethos founded on traditional values. They provide a friendly, caring and disciplined environment whilst ensuring students have extensive learning opportunities to unlock their self-belief and aspirations.

To be considered for this English teaching vacancy based in Rochester, Kent you will need to;
  • show you are an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner.
  • have the willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team.
  • support the school ethos at all times during your working days.
  • possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge.
It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims.
In return we offer:
  • professional classroom support from our team of Headteacher consultants throughout the length of your contract.
  • a dedicated Key Contact at the TimePlan South East office.
  • TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet teachers who are teaching at schools in your placement area.
  • opportunities to aid your professional development.
  • pay to scale.
If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position in Rochester, Kent please apply online today or call on 01732 373340, TimePlan the number one teaching agency for jobs in the south east.

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Secondary School Job of the Day !!

Are you an English Teacher, looking for a January 2016 start in Rochester , Kent ?

TimePlan Education, working in partnership with their client school, is looking for an English teacher who has taught successfully across Key Stage 3 and 4. The position is a full time contract starting January 2016. A successful candidate must be committed to achieving high standards and able to inspire students across the ability range at KS3 and KS4.
A successful and flourishing 11 to 18 co-educational school in the Medway Valley area of Kent. This school was rebuilt in 2007 and provides their community with modern, well resourced facilities yet has an ethos founded on traditional values. They provide a friendly, caring and disciplined environment whilst ensuring students have extensive learning opportunities to unlock their self-belief and aspirations.
To be considered for this English teaching vacancy based in Rochester, Kent you will need to;
show you are an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner.
have the willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team.
support the school ethos at all times during your working days.
possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge.
It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims.

In return we offer:

professional classroom support from our team of Headteacher consultants throughout the length of your contract.
a dedicated Key Contact at the TimePlan South East office.
TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet teachers who are teaching at schools in your placement area.
opportunities to aid your professional development.
pay to scale.
If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position in Rochester, Kent please apply online today or call on 01732 373340, TimePlan the number one teaching agency for jobs in the south east. 

Friday, 27 November 2015

Secondary School Job of the Day!!

Are you looking for an English teaching position in Medway?

Timeplan Education are looking for a English Teacher for a English teaching job starting January 2016 through to the end of the academic year for the right candidate.

The ideal candidate would be enthusiastic and committed to achieving high standards and able to engage students across the ability range at Key Stage 3 and Key Stage 4.

This innovative and forward thinking Medway school is located in Chatham and has recently moved into a brand new academy building with state of the art facilities. They are a Church of England Academy, specialising in Maths, ICT and Music.

The modern facilities and resources are second to none and there are many opportunities for staff and pupils to learn and perform, using everything from traditional instruments to cutting edge electronic resources. This school aims to achieve two things: excellent behaviour and outstanding teaching and learning.


This English teaching job in Chatham, Kent will require a teacher whose key deliverables involve:

- Delivering good and outstanding teaching practices as the norm

- Supporting the English faculty in its aims to continually improve results

- A willingness to implement changes and developments in the National Curriculum

- Creating an enriching, supportive and high performing learning environment

- Supporting the school ethos at all times during your working days.

You will be an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner. You will possess excellent behaviour management skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge.

It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims and drive for continuous improvement.

All applicants must fulfil the following criteria:

* be UK qualified or hold a recognised teaching qualification

* be qualified to teach English

In return we offer:

* competitive rates of pay

* a designated Key Coordinator

* Pay to scale

* opportunities to aid your professional development.


If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position please apply online today the TimePlan office on 01732 373340.


Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Secondary School Job of the Day!!!

Are you an English Teacher, looking for a January 2016 start in Rochester , Kent ?
TimePlan Education, working in partnership with their client school, is looking for anEnglish teacher who has taught successfully across Key Stage 3 and 4. The position is a full time contract starting January 2016. A successful candidate must be committed to achieving high standards and able to inspire students across the ability range at KS3 and KS4.
A successful and flourishing 11 to 18 co-educational school in the Medway Valley area of Kent. This school was rebuilt in 2007 and provides their community with modern, well resourced facilities yet has an ethos founded on traditional values. They provide a friendly, caring and disciplined environment whilst ensuring students have extensive learning opportunities to unlock their self-belief and aspirations.
To be considered for this English teaching vacancy based in Rochester , Kent you will need to;
  • Show you are an imaginative and forward thinking classroom practitioner.
  • Have the willingness to form part of a successful and enthusiastic team.
  • Support the school ethos at all times during your working days.
  • Possess excellent teaching skills and an ability to lead classes with pace and sufficient challenge.
It is essential that you understand the schools academic standing and have a sincere commitment to sharing long-term aims.
In return we offer:
  • Professional classroom support from our team of Headteacher consultants throughout the length of your contract.
  • A dedicated Key Contact at the TimePlan South East office.
  • TimePlan South East teacher socials where you can meet teachers who are teaching at schools in your placement area.
  • Opportunities to aid your professional development.
  • Pay to scale.
If you are interested in applying for this English teaching position in Rochester, Kent please apply online today or call on 01732 373340, TimePlan the number one teaching agency for jobs in the south east.

Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Brilliant English ideas: tried and tested tips for lessons


A treasure trove of ideas from teachers across the UK to help add excitement to your English lessons, including syllables using football, vim and verb, Bard language and farm fun
A treasure trove of ideas from teachers across the UK to help add excitement to your English lessons, including syllables using football, vim and verb, Bard language and farm fun

Ages 5 to 7

Top score

Teach syllables using football. Ask children to suggest two teams, such as Chelsea and Liverpool. The result here would be Chelsea 2 — because there are two syllables in the name. Liverpool scores 3.
Once you put that idea in front of a class, they start devising their own games. They even start announcing it like the results on the radio. Extensions involve exploring how the use of syllables can help us spell the names of teams. Manchester United, Wigan and Everton all provide good examples — though it galls me to see Man U notch up so many syllables. Children can search for the team that scores the most. If you include the Scottish divisions, you can find high scorers.
Huw Thomas is head of Emmaus Primary, in Sheffield

Ages 4 to 11

Under cover

The great trunk mystery took a writing project to a new level by developing pupils’ questioning and writing skills. A battered trunk was filled with various unusual objects, ranging from a feather boa to a carved walnut. In Monday assembly, the school secretary interrupted normal proceedings to announce its mysterious arrival. The trunk was brought into the hall and excited debate ensued as to whether we should look inside.
Eventually, it was opened and classes later took turns to examine its contents closely. The local press covered the story and tension mounted about the identity of the trunk’s owner. Meanwhile, a wide variety of text types were produced across the school in excited response.
Finally, the mystery person appeared in another assembly in the form of a “Swiss Countess” and her chauffeur, courtesy of the local amateur dramatic society. She gave a convincing account of her life through the objects and the children listened spellbound — even the cynics in Year 6.
Nadia Stanbridge is a Year 4 assistant head at Steeple Morden Primary in Cambridgeshire

Ages 7 to 11

Piece of cake

A good, accessible way to explain genre is through making a cake. I bring in recipes and we talk about how different ingredients, combined together, make different types of cakes. Having established this, we move on to different types of books and that we recognise these by their different ingredients. There  only remains the terminology of genre and conventions to be mentioned to replace type and ingredient. As a class, we then have a go at “baking” different genres. Pupils write, in the format of the exemplars, recipes for different types of writing. For instance, a gothic cake might require 10g of ghosts, 5ml of blood, a spoonful of vampires and a mix in a graveyard. Drawing what these genre cakes would look like can be fun too.
Chris Bond teaches at Warwick School, Warwickshire

Vim and verb

Acting can help reinforce the idea of what an adverb is, and how it can complement an accompanying verb. Ask the class to write down the present participle of a verb secretly on a slip of paper, then to do the same with an adverb of their choice. Fold the pieces of paper and put all the verbs in one box and all the adverbs in another. Invite a child to come up and pick a verb and an adverb from the boxes.
Their job is to act out the random combination; speaking is not allowed. Thus they may pretend, for instance, to swim sadly. Other pupils are invited to guess the verb and adverb. A point could be gained both for a correct guess and a convincing piece of acting from the child.
This activity is great fun and adaptable, and could be used as a regular lesson starter or “spare time” game.
Paul Warnes is a supply teacher in Kent

Bard language

Shakespeare’s language is often an enormous barrier. I used an online “Shakespearean insult generator” to help inspire the children. We are studying A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
We began with three short extracts from a scene in which Lysander, Helena and Hermia are quarrelling. I read this as dramatically as possible, then asked for volunteers. Pupils practised in pairs before acting in front of the class. I then gave out the insult generator: a three- column list of nouns and adjectives from Shakespeare which the children could combine and preface with “thou” to produce phrases such as: “Thou droning, hell-hated foot-licker.”
In pairs, they chose favourite phrases and stand up and insult another pupil. This pupil retaliates with his or her own phrase. Finally, the children created written phrases which they extended into sentences or short paragraphs, using the extracts from A Midsummer Night’s Dream as models.
Joanne Jones is literacy co-ordinator at Gipsey Bridge Primary in Lincolnshire

Free expressions

As children develop story- writing skills, an additional element we seek is the inner voice of characters — insights into their thoughts and feelings.
Gather newspapers and glossy magazines and ask children to hunt through them, finding as many diverse facial expressions as they can. Then ask them to make  cloud-shaped thought bubbles, like those in a comic strip. Their task is to write what their chosen faces are thinking or feeling, but stress that they should be imaginative and unpick the feeling in a few sentences.
So “I feel happy” needs developing. It could become, “I feel happy because I won the  lottery.” Or, “That means I can make my dream come true and sail round the world.” This enriches the children’s narratives.
Huw Thomas is head at Emmaus Primary in Sheffield

Farm fun

Young spellers struggling to tell you why you add an “s” to “key” or “toy” but change the “y” in “baby” to “ies” clearly need a helping hand — so why not enlist the help of Old MacDonald?
Pupils can have great fun setting nouns ending in “y” to the tune of “Old MacDonald had a farm”.
A shop makes more sense than a farm for example, “And in that shop he had some toys.” The class then sing the question Y or I-E-S? instead of the chorus ee-ay-ee-ay-oh, and each time a different pupil completes the verse “with an A-Y- S” or “with an I-E-S“, as appropriate. Give them a couple of moments’ thinking time to consider their options and remember the rule (vowel before the y, just add s; if there is a consonant before the y, change to ies). Then on cue, each pupil should — hopefully — have reinforced the spelling rule and set it memorably to music for an increasingly varied and imaginative set of words.
John Gallagher is head of English at Stratford-upon- Avon Grammar School for Girls in Warwickshire

Tangoed

Dance auditions and literacy don’t normally mix, but it’s certainly one way to liven up a lesson on prefixes.
Divide pupils into groups of four and assign a prefix to each group member: dis, un, mis and im. Ask everyone to write a word beginning with their prefix. Check spellings, then copy the word on to card and cut it in two, separating the prefix from the rest of the word. Ask groups to shuffle their eight cards before moving to the hall. There, every group swaps card packs. Start the music as pupils deal their cards and then skip around hunting for their partner until all are paired up. Hold a final audition when all the cards have been collected, shuffled and dealt. How long will all the partners take to be matched? To finish, partners should tango to the front of the hall with a flourish and announce their combined word.
Eileen Jones is a literacy specialist in Warwickshire

Kitchen sink drama

Newspaper articles can be a good source of stories for literacy. The Times ran a story about a hamster called Henry, who got stuck behind the kitchen sink. A neighbour tried tying hamster ladders together, then two community wardens used a wire with cord spiralled around it for him to climb. Finally, they cut the base from a yoghurt pot and lowered it on wire to scoop him out. Nothing worked until the vacuum cleaner was called for and put on its lowest setting. Henry was sucked gently on to the end of the nozzle.
I produced an annotated copy for teacher use, highlighting unfamiliar vocabulary and noting adverbial clauses and a mind map of all the directions in which we could take this story. The poem structure was to select a preposition under, over, above, next to or across, then pair it with a noun such as sofa, curtains or toy box. Finally, add an exciting or powerful verb. The result was lines such as:
“Under the sofa Henry scuttled. Up the curtains Henry scrabbled. Inside the toy box Henry nibbled.”
Michelle Gregory is AST/ literacy leader at Oakfield First School in Windsor, Berkshire

Ages 11 to 14

Top of the pack

A resurgence of interest in Top Trumps, the card game, helped my pupils think about characterisation and setting in relation to a text as a whole. I explained the conventional appearance of a Top Trumps card with its picture and table of values and showed some examples.
The children’s task was to design a small pack of Top Trumps for their text. Their first task was to decide, as a class, on the list of “ratings” that would appear on every card, which had to be relevant to the text. For example, “Evilness” might be included in Macbeth (cards can have any character from the text and any key setting from the text on them). Pupils then decided which characters and settings they were going to put on their cards, then thought about the respective profiles they were going to create.
Provided with some card, pupils were set homework to make their Top Trumps. The follow-up activity was to bring the cards in to play the game. However, before starting, pupils had to justify to each other why their profile on each card was as they had decided. The game allows all to interact on a basic level with key aspects of the text.
Chris Bond teaches at Warwick School in Warwickshire

Talk show

Here’s a simple game designed to help pupils understand the importance of adjectives. English Pupil A sits with their back to a screen (a large card or an electronic whiteboard, for example) showing a picture. Without explicitly naming it, Pupil B describes the image in such a way that Pupil A can guess what it is.
To encourage more subtle and imaginative descriptions, each picture could be accompanied by a short list of “banned” words. For instance, a picture of an elephant could have “trunk” and “tusks” banned. Guessing a picture gets the players a point and moves them on to the next picture. Teams have two minutes to score as many points as possible.
This game is great for speaking and listening and encourages pupils to be thoughtful and creative with their use of descriptive words.
Irfan Shah teaches at Lawnswood High School in Leeds


Ages 14 to 18

Boxing clever

Put your pupils into the ring for a round of verbal boxing to assess their oral skills of arguing, discussing and persuading, in English and other subjects. Divide into teams of three to six. Set up home and away matches and give each home team a motion to argue. Give pupils time to prepare their arguments for both the home and away matches.
Each match begins with two teams sending one of their members into the ring, the classroom, for the first round. After two minutes of robust debate, in which each “boxer” tries to out-argue their opponent, the round ends and the boxers return to their respective corners for one minute; either to tag a fellow team member into the ring or collect new ideas to use in the next round.
The best argument over three rounds decides the winning team. This series of lessons soon runs itself, leaving you time and space to listen, assess and record pupils’ achievements.
Josephine Smith is head of English at Casterton Community College in Rutland

The king is dead

Have you ever reached the end of a Shakespeare tragedy to discover that, despite having an overview of the plot and a grasp of the major themes, even your brightest and keenest A-level English pupils are unclear about some of the finer details?
To remedy this, have pupils establish the causes of death of the pile of corpses at the end of King Lear by setting them the task of writing a brief — and possibly humorous — obituary of each character. This encourages pupils to look again at the text and helps  consolidate what happens to whom and why. My Year 13 group produced fruitful discussions about Shakespeare's intentions and audience sympathies, as well as responses to the tragic ending of the play.
Heather Owens is deputy headteacher at King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Girls, Birmingham


Ages 11 to 18

Step into their shoes

“I’ll do it too.” Pupils may become more motivated in a timed or independent assignment if they see that you, their teacher, are doing the same thing. Set out the instructions for the task and put yourself in their shoes. For example, begin with: “Before we start, let’s discuss what’s worrying us — for instance, we don’t know how to start.” (This is a common one in the English classroom.) Or that “we won’t have enough time” (possibly leading to some collaborative planning before embarking on the task).
Once you understand the instructions, undertake the same task as your pupils, and under the same conditions. As you do the task (for example, a set of comprehension questions or piece of creative writing), jot down any problems you encounter and use them as a basis for a plenary summing up.
This technique can be extended by copying your work for the class for the next lesson and, if you are feeling brave, allowing them to critique using their knowledge of what constitutes success in this type of activity.
Kerry Hopkins is head of English at The Grammar School in Leeds

Grammar games

Grammaticus is a card game I developed to teach grammar. It consists of a set of 110 playing cards, with words on one side and their word class (verb, noun, adjective) on the other, and a colour for each word class. You can adapt card games — rummy, racing demon, snap — aiming to structure sentences or collect words of a certain word class instead of collecting suits or making straights.
Although developed with A-level pupils in mind, the games would work well lower down the school.
David Kinder teaches at Alton Sixth Form College in Hampshire

Ages 15 to 16

Colour me happy

To encourage my pupils to use a wider range of punctuation, I tell them to highlight all the full stops with one colour. They then choose a new colour for different punctuation. By the end, they might have used yellow for full stops, red for commas and blue for semicolons. Those who use a good range of punctuation have colourful drafts, while others have not.
This gives pupils immediate feedback and a sense of fun about developing their writing.
Anne Carman teaches at Ripley St Thomas C of E High School in Lancaster

Teenage kicks

Here’s a sure-fire way to get the first piece of written coursework done with a new GCSE English group and get to know the pupils. It’s based on the long-running celebrity Sunday newspaper magazine feature “A Room of My Own”.
Teenagers are often equally proud of their own space at home and, with the right prompts, can turn this into an original piece. Questions that get them thinking include how the room reflects their personality, clues about their past and future, and the thing they’d save if the room was on fire. Getting pupils to map their room at home is a vital first step. They see things they took for granted. And the map then forms the basis for individual oral assessment as they describe it.
Some less adventurous pupils tend towards listing the room’s contents, so why not give them a different perspective? How would the room seem to a detective searching for clues about the occupant? I have even had a piece narrated by one pupil’s PC as it was unpacked and set up. The written piece can qualify as explore, imagine, entertain, as well as personal description.
John Gallagher is head of English at Stratford-upon- Avon Grammar School for Girls in Warwickshire

Musical memories

“Our castaway today has been lost in Sainsbury’s and successfully destroyed all the aliens in Halo 2.” This is a typical introduction to my Desert Island Discs lesson, a speaking and listening activity for GCSE. (The idea came from the BBC Radio 4 programme.)
Pupils write some autobiographical material for me and I interview them. I ask about family, early experiences, memories, hobbies, achievements and ambitions. The interview is interspersed with selections of their favourite music.
They are allowed to take three pieces to the island and are permitted a book and a luxury item, in addition to a religious text and the works of Shakespeare. The pupils explain their choices.
This is an excellent way for them to gain a mark for an extended speech in front of their class.
Francis Farrell teaches at Sale High School in Cheshire
Source: http://newteachers.tes.co.uk/news/brilliant-english-ideas-tried-and-tested-tips-lessons/45543

Saturday, 16 May 2015

Grammar matters - if u want 2 b loved


If your students loathe lessons about syntax and spelling, explain how ‘bad’ language can be a romantic turn-off
Grammar can arouse heated debate - even among adults who are well- acquainted with its intricate rules. But students may be intrigued to learn it can also be a turn-off.
“Abuse” of the English language has the power to sabotage friendships and even romantic relationships, according to dating website OkCupid. The site looked at 500,000 first contacts between its users and concluded that “netspeak, bad grammar and poor spelling are huge turn-offs” when creating a first impression and developing an online relationship.
Some of the biggest passion killers were “ur”, “u”, “wat” and “wont”, the website concluded. Online suitors also loathed “luv” and “realy”. Yet they liked the correct use of apostrophes - something that is often the first thing to be abandoned in text-speak.
“Our negative correlation list is a fool’s lexicon,” said Christian Rudder, co-founder of OkCupid. “These all make a terrible first impression. In fact … the worst six words you can use in a first message are all stupid slang.”
Men, he added, were most likely to use clumsy or offensive language, such as misguided physical compliments.
Grammar is a linguistic minefield. For some it provides clarity and shows finesse but others regard it as the domain of pedants. How do your students feel? How important is language to them? And when would they choose to use it more formally?
When the BBC reported this story on its website it noted that the 17th- century poet John Dryden is said to have popularised the idea that you cannot end a sentence with a preposition. Centuries later, Winston Churchill, evidently amused by the debate, is said to have commented, “This is something up with which I will not put.”
Meanwhile John McWhorter, a linguist at Columbia University in the US, says that “moral panic” over grammar, which in ancient times was twinned with philosophy as a discipline, has been around since at least AD63.
Of course, there is a serious point to grammar. “The writer who neglects punctuation or mispunctuates, is liable to be misunderstood … for the want of merely a comma, it often occurs that an axiom appears a paradox, or that a sarcasm is converted into a sermonoid,” Edgar Allen Poe wrote.
Arguments about the correct use of grammar are unlikely to go away and students are unlikely to abandon text-speak on their mobile phones. But they may take more interest in the correct use of language if it helps them to write a persuasive Valentine’s Day card.

Class questions

  • How does the grammar used by Shakespeare or Chaucer differ from today’s? (You could also compare obsolete vocabulary and slang with modern words.)
  • Is there any point to apostrophes? Do we need them or are they just a nuisance?
  • Should native English speakers be taught grammar in more detail, as speakers of other languages are?
  • How many words can you remove from a sentence before it becomes incomprehensible?
  • What is the literary value of a more refined or complicated sentence structure?

Modern foreign languages

A whole new fútbol game
The use of social media sites in language learning does not have to preclude good grammar - in fact, it can introduce students to words through a familiar medium.
We begin with a lesson starter of verb conjugation. “Tuiteo, tuiteas, tuitea …” The group soon deduces the words’ meaning - tuit (tweet) and tuitear (Twitter) will be included in the 2014 edition of the Royal Spanish Academy’s dictionary.
Next we follow an El Clásico football match between Real Madrid and Barcelona on the Twitter feed of sports daily Marca. Students quickly appreciate the value of the medium: bite-sized chunks of colloquial language prompting immediate intellectual engagement. A yellow card is instructive. “¿Amarilla? (yellow) That means the noun must be feminine.” Then up pops the construction antes de plus infinitive (“before doing something”).
Twitter is a rapid-fire vocabulary builder, multiplying your stock of “ar” verbs in minutes: marcar (mark), salvar(save), ganar (win) and, more unusually, amonestar (to warn or admonish). It is grammar coaching by stealth.Estrella means “star”, for example. More exotic is the expressive power of the reflexive verb estrellarse, as Karim Benzema’s strike explodes off the side netting. Given a choice, which teacher wouldn’t have Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo on their side?
Dr Heather Martin is head of modern languages at St Faith’s Independent Prep School in Cambridge, England

History

It’s all Greek to me
Today, the term “grammar” can be used as a generic and derisory way to refer to any aspect of English to which people object. But historically people viewed it very differently. The word grammar derives from the Greek grammatike (tekhne) meaning “(art) of letters” and in ancient times it was often linked to philosophy.
The first known attempts to study grammar took place in Iron Age India, perhaps as early as the 6th century BC. In the West it emerged as a discipline among Hellenistic scholars from the 3rd century BC. The oldest extant treatise in Greek on the subject is the 2nd century BC Art of Grammar, attributed to Dionysius Thrax. Latin grammar developed by following Greek models, while the Auraicept na n-Éces, an Irish primer, may have been written as early as the 7th century AD.
In the Middle Ages, grammar was considered one of the seven liberal arts in Europe, alongside disciplines such as rhetoric and arithmetic. It was not until the latter part of the 18th century that grammar came to be widely understood as a subfield of the emerging field of modern linguistics.
There has always been a difference between language as it is written and as it is spoken, with the rules of grammar being derived from the way language was used by the upper classes. In this way, it became essential not only for communication but as an indication of the user’s standing in society. It would be interesting to get your students to dissect this in historic essays, letters and poems.

English

Way with words
While we live in an age of relentless mass communication - think Facebook and Twitter - some say there has been an equally unstoppable decline in the quality of how we use language.
It is against this backdrop of emails, texts and tweets that dynamic septuagenarian N.M. Gwynne brings usGywnne’s Grammar, a little book of grammatical treats designed to engage and enthuse even the most reluctant teenager (and which may also show their teachers a thing or two).
A former businessman who worked in London and Australia before turning to teaching, Gwynne has taught the children of a Silicon Valley millionaire via Skype and instructed students as young as 2 in Latin. His teaching repertoire includes English, Greek, French, arithmetic and history, and in a single day, Gwynne says, he has taught people as far apart geographically as India, Europe and the US.
But his message is simple: “We cannot think without words…we think in sentences…all our thoughts can only be properly expressed in a complete (for which read grammatically correct) sentence.”
The response to the book has been universally positive. Witty, engaging and highly educational stuff.
Gwynne’s Grammar: the ultimate introduction to grammar and the writing of good English is published by Ebury Press. www.gwynneteaching.com.

Related resources

  • Brush up on grammar basics with TES Connect’s flash cards. bit.ly/GrammarFlashcards
  • Try a resource from TESEnglish, full of lesson starters on spelling, punctuation and grammar.bit.ly/SPaGactivities
  • Explore the history of the English language with lessons on Beowulf and the Lord’s Prayer in Anglo Saxon. bit.ly/HistoryOfEnglish
  • Use milpin’s Spanish Grammar Notebook (Cuaderno de Gramática) to help students remember the key points. bit.ly/SpanishGrammarBook

Further resources

source : http://newteachers.tes.co.uk/content/grammar-matters-if-u-want-2-b-loved