ESL Chanting for Classroom Management
Teaching
ESL can be a rich and rewarding experience for anyone who loves a
challenge. You only need a degree in any
field, and a TESOL or TEFL certificate to get started, after that, it’s simply
a matter of choosing the right school in the country in which you wish to live
and teach. This can be done by surfing a few ESL sites and applying for a job
online, waiting for a reply from some of the schools you’ve contacted, and then
choosing the most appropriate position for you. You’ll usually be able to pick
and choose because you hold the trump card.
So
you’ve stitched up a great teaching job in Asia,
well done! Maybe they have agreed to pay your airfare after a qualifying
period, and help you with your visa and work permit. Hay! You’ve even got free
accommodation. You’re really excited, and so you should be! You’re about to go
to another planet and encounter all kinds of alien cultures and traditions, but
remember, YOU are the alien, or commonly know as “the westerner”, or “the
foreigner”.
You
enter your first class of 10 year olds. You expect everything to be the way it
was explained in the TESOL/TEFL course you took. You have a super wiz bang
lesson plan and the children don’t even seem to care that you’re in the room!
You raise your voice (over the din) to get their attention, and that works, so
you get into the lesson and find that many of the activities and strategies you
thought would be a hit, fall flat. You have some success with some activities,
and manage to finish the lesson in reasonable style. Good work! Now you realize
that it will require some creative strategies for managing the situation, so
you plan to come better prepared next time. This continues for several weeks,
but you’re getting worn down, and falling into routines of doing the same
things that work best, more often in every class. You get so angry sometimes,
with some of the kids that just cause trouble and don’t give a dam about your
precious lessons. So much so that you’ve even resorted to slamming books,
hitting the blackboard, yelling, screaming, and other boisterous techniques for
maintaining “control”.
Time to re-assess the situation, for the benefit of
your sanity, and that of your students, you need a new game plan. Here are some
ideas that have worked for me and MIGHT work for you also.
First and most importantly, you need to get into the
room with style while establishing your authority as the owner of the room, in
a professional and positive manner which will impress everyone and give you the
respect you deserve. TO GET RESPECT YOU MUST FIRST GIVE IT. I include details
on how to get into a classroom this way, and increase student talk time, in
another article entitled: “ESL, Teaching the Silent Way, 99%STT.”
Now, assuming you can get into the classroom and gain
the attention of most of your students for a few seconds this might work.
Establish a set of expectations, draft them using
target vocabulary and structures, and drill them as a pronunciation exercise at
the beginning of each and every lesson. Your students are familiar with this
technique because that’s how they’ve leant everything since day one. You will
get their respect and attention the first time you do it, and every time you do
it. Also whenever you start to loose their attention during the lesson, you can
quickly and easily regain it, while simultaneously having your students
practice pronunciation and use target vocabulary/structures (without them
realizing it).
Exactly what, and how, to do it (don’t be put off by
the audio linguistic nature of what follows. Audio linguistics saved lives
during the war, it works!)
Introductory lesson
Step one
Consider your class’s overall level of receptive
English language ability, (what most of them will be able to comprehend after
an initial introductory lesson). Then, draft up 3-5 sentences, pertaining to
your expectations, in the target language for this group. Remember this is for
the beginning of each lesson, (after you’re in the room), as well as
intermittently throughout the lesson. Be sure to keep the rules positive, say
“I will remember”, instead of “I must not forget”. You may like to use my “ESL
class directed expectations technique” for this, which is covered in another
article by me with the same title.
Step two
Write the rules/expectations/requirements/ or
anything you want to call them, on the board. It’s best not to say anything
while you do this, just let them guess and talk amongst themselves while you’re
writing, this is great for helping to gain your students attention, while
encouraging analytical thinking, and the more advanced students will help the
others who are having difficulty. Maybe someone will say “copy”, you can just
nod, this signal will soon get around the room, so that before you know it, all
your students are writing your expectations in their note books. (The silent
approach)
Sample set of rules: (present simple),
- I
listen carefully to teacher Bill
- I bring
all my books to every lesson
- I speak
English to my friends (this is a positive way to encourage no first
language use)
- I am
ready for every lesson
Change the tenses easily like this:
I will (future)
I am listening (continuous)
I have brought all my books to this lesson (Present
perfect)
Step three
Drill the rules! Do this any way you like, but I’ve
found the best way for me is as follows:
Say “rule number one”, then give an example of the
correct pronunciation while encouraging full participation through your body
language, and do the same for each consecutive rule, gradually begin to prompt
by saying the rule number, “rule number…..”.
Tap the board for rhythm as you present each word (do
this two or three times), then circulate the room to ensure all students are
participating. Encourage by using your body language and facial expressions.
You may have a rule which requires such things as, “no books on your desk”, or
“a pencil, a ruler, and a rubber, must be on my desk”, while you circulate,
check to make sure that all students are meeting the requirements of the
expectations.
Then return to the board and keep the chant going! While the
class is chanting, you erase two or three words from each sentence until you
have a blank board and all the students are reciting each rule by rote. It
helps to tap the place where the words were, each time they recite one of the
sentences, so that a subliminal memory jogger is created (students love the
challenge, and it really works! I’ve had students who can’t remember the words
until I tap the places where they were, and then they remember them).
Step four
Repeat the drill of the rules several times during
the first lesson, using the tapping technique on the places where you had
written them at first (for memory jogging) and allow students to refer to their
note books if they need to. (This establishes the understanding of the reason
for taking notes.) After a few days they won’t need to refer to their notes, so
there is never any need to “control this” remember all students learn
differently, so allow for it!
Implementation
Start every class by saying, “rule number one” etc.
The whole class will start reciting to your prompts; you have their attention
so launch your lesson.
Whenever you lose the attention of the whole class,
say in a normal voice “rule number one”, your class should respond by reciting
rule number one. The first few lessons you should go through all of the rules
in order. Later you can start to mix them up etc. If they don’t respond to your
normal voice, DON”T RAISE IT! Simply make eye contact with an attentive
confident student and say it again. This will get things started. Have
patience, it will soon catch on.
When you lose the attention of a particular student,
say “rule number one”, the whole class will get his/her attention.
If a student is ignoring/forgetting an
expectation/rule, say “rule number….” Where the number is the number of the
rule he/she is ignoring/forgetting.
Summary
Be sure to change the expectations periodically to
match needs.
Use this as a simple classroom management strategy
that can complement any ESL program/syllabus/curriculum.
For more rewarding and speech productive
implementations incorporate the principals which are outline in my article
entitled, “ESL the Silent Way 99%STT”, for everything described above.
About the Author
Bill Boyd offers you this excellent ESL website, see you there:
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