pátek 2. května 2014

Take Your Pen and Get Ready

I used to hate the technique as a student. I found it sooo boring and useless and tiring. “Why the hell are we doing it?“ I kept asking myself. “Is it just to kill time?“

I never told my teacher trainees to try it out and make it part of their lessons. I found it too old-fashioned, traditional and totally uncommunicative. “There is nothing students can get out of it. It is just about drilling spelling and copying blindly what the teacher says.“ I kept telling myself.

I have not used it as a teacher for ages.        Or have I? 

Actually, I do use IT in my classes. I use DICTATION surprisingly often. Even though it is traditional, uncommunicative and old-fashioned  …  I just do it DIFFERENTLY from what I experienced as a student of English back in late 80ies and beginning of 90ies when the grammar translation method was still flourishing in the classrooms.

Inspired by Paul Davis and Mario Rinvolucri (Dictation)  believe that it is important to decide and vary

  • Who dictates
  • Who chooses or prepares the text to dictate
  • What is dictated
  • How long it is
  • How it is dictated
  • What is to be written down

And here is one important question I would like to add:  What do you do with the text that was dictated then? How does it link to the rest of your lesson? 

Ask these questions, too, switch off your autopilots, surprise and challenge your students and test some dictation techniques in your classes.


Whistle/Banana Dictation

Choose a short text, e.g. the first paragraph of a story you are going to read in a course book (5 sentences maximum). Dictate it to the class. Gap some words and whistle instead of them or say “banana”. Students should complete the missing words and write the complete text down.

Would you like to give it a try? Check this Voki

Drawing dictation

Ask one student to come to the board. Give the rest of the class the same picture to describe. They take turns to “dictate” the picture to the student who draws the picture on the board. Use a picture which leads into new topic or which recycles vocabulary you have just studied. Check google clipart, fotosearch.com or cartoon strips.

Alternate Dictation

Prepare a short text consisting of about 10 sentences. Divide students into pairs. Each student gets half of the story, but their sentences or lines alternate, i.e. student A has sentences or lines 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and student B has sentences/lines 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Students take turns dictating their parts of the story to each other. Students then work with the story, e.g. continuing it, coming with a surprising twist …

Student A
1 It is 10 p.m. on a cold Friday and I am standing
2 _____________________________________
3 to persuade him to find my friends. “Can you shout
4 _____________________________________
5 The friends I´m supposed to meet later are

Student B
1 _____________________________________
2 in a smelly phone box speaking to a barman, trying
3 _____________________________________
4 out?” I ask, “or maybe look for them?”
5 _____________________________________
6 in a bar somewhere in Central London, and we haven´t yet …



Upside down

Prepare a suitable text, 3 or 5 sentences max. Dictate it to students, but students should write down the opposites when they can think of any. Of course, each student gets a different version of the story. Then they compare it in pairs/groups. Finally, they can try to reconstruct the original story.

I usually use fairy tales such as Cinderella.

Once upon a time there lived an unhappy young girl. Her mother was dead and her father had married a widow with two daughters. Her stepmother didn't like her one little bit. All her kind thoughts and loving touches were for her own daughters. 



Partial Dictation

Dictate a sentence (a prompt, a question), students write only a response.
I usually revisit tapescripts to focus on functional language and to get students ready for ESOL listening Part 1.
E.g. Could you lend me some coffee, please?
What about going to the cinema tonight?

Riddle me 

Challenge students with  “what” you dictate. Use riddles or jokes as a warmer or a lead—in to a topic.

  • Three eyes have I, all in a row; when the red one opens, all freeze. What am I?
  • I have a tail, and I have a head, but i have no body. I am NOT a snake. What am I?
 Check the answers here.

Variation: Dictate about five questions from here. Then students work in groups trying to answer the riddles

Variation 2: Dictate questions to group A. Dictate answers to group B. First, they try to complete the missing part. Then they work together to complete the jokes

Collocations

Dictate a set of first parts of collocations, students only write down the missing part of the collocation.
E.g. You dicate take/pass/fail, students write down “an exam”. Or you read: “sunny/foggy/rainy”, students write down “weather”.
Then later on, they can reconstruct the prompts again.

Groaning Dictation (from Dictation)

Prepare a list of about 10 to 15 words. Dictate them to students very quickly, without pausing while students are groaning trying to write them down. Then they work in pairs or groups trying to reconstruct the complete list. Then they can predict what kind of text the words come from or what they are going to read about, or write a story using all the words.

Word by Word (from Dictation)
Students work in groups. Each group has a sheet of paper. Group A writes down the first word of a sentence and dictates their word to the other groups. Group B comes up with the second word and dictates it to the other groups. Group C adds a third word and dictates it to the other groups …


Strings of a story

Give each student a strip of paper with one sentence from the text. Give it out in a random order. Students take turns to dictate their sentence to the class. Everyone takes down what is dictated. Then they work in pairs/groups, check the answers and then reconstruct the text, putting sentences into correct order.
Variation: Challenge your students. They have to learn their strip of paper by heart.


Lost in translation

Dictate a sentence in English to student A. Student A writes it down then dictates its Czech version to B who writes it down. B then dictates its English version to student C, etc. Put some “party music” on to make the task more challenging.

It´s (not) me

Dictate sentences to students, e.g. sentences containing a grammar structure which you need to practise with them. Students write down only sentences which are true for them.
E.g. I have never been to London. I have drunk three cups of coffee today. I have never eaten sushi. I have just got married.
Variation: They write down all sentences you dictate but must alter them to make them all true about themselves.

Personally, I believe

Dictate statements related to a topic, e.g. statements on animal rights from NEF advanced.Students only write down statements which they agree with or only write down the response/reaction to it, e.g. using language such as Yes, but …


And here´s a well-know activity you have definitely done, but which is worth reusing from time to time J

Running dictation

Students work in pairs. One student is the writer and the other is the “runner”. The short passage is put on the wall. The runners have to go to the text and return to their partners having memorized the first line of the text, which they dictate. They keep returning to the text until they have dictated the full text to their partner. The role can be swapped in the middle of the activity.



If interested in Dictogloss, Human tape recorder and other challenging activities, check Dictation in our Glossa library. 





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