Wednesday, December 22, 2004

Scavenger hung

Today we did a scavenger hunt, and I heard one student say, with a little sadness in his voice because his team lost, "And this is the first time I really tried in this class." I conclude from that comment that the event worked with some of the kinesthetically inclined.

We used the last 50 minutes of the class to hunt around the campus for the following items and information:

1. What is on the door to Mr. Kirk's office?
2. What color is the "Gokuri" (a soft drink by Suntory) can?
3. How many sculptures are in front of Professor Yoshimura's office?
4. How many benches at the bus stop (under the roof)?
5. How many silver balls (not apples) are on the Christmas tree on the first floor?
6. How many paintings are there in the lobby of building #9?
7. How many floors in the library?
8. What time is the mail collected from the mailbox in front of the Administration Bldg?
9. There are five kinds of garbage collected at this school. What are they?
10. What is the tallest building on campus?
11. Who is in room 9507?
Bring back a stone, and a dry leaf.
I think they had a good time figuring out what the English meant, collecting the items, and then presenting the information. Another student said, "Teamwork is really important with this." I said that teamwork is important in language learning, and that if they learn best in a team, that they should make one for that purpose.

Next year this is one activity that I would like to do at the beginning of the year to emphasize that point. That if teamwork works for you in other activities, then maybe it would help in learning language.



Mastery orientation

From the beginning of the year, I have been orienting students to mastery rather than getting enough points on quizzes to pass. I posted about this on April 10th, 2004. My reasoning at the beginning was that students oriented toward mastery learn better.

Yesterday was a case in point. I was teaching the class of students repeating the first year English course that they had failed to get credit for. We had a quiz on the unit we had just finished. The students in the first period came in and began the quiz. Actually one student, from now on "student A", came in first, and it looked like there would only be one person. A few more trickled in later.

The format of the quiz is a listening section, followed by a vocabulary section, and finishing up with a speaking evaluation. The students work at their own pace, listening to the tape as many times as they like, and doing the speaking when they have earned enough points on the other two sections that there would be a possibility of passing. When a student has done as much as they can on the written part of the quiz, they give it to me to be graded. If they do not earn enough points, they take it again until they make at least a 90% or better combined score for the written and spoken sections.

No one finished the quiz the first time. Everyone had to take the quiz at least two times. Two students did not finish in the first 90-minute class period, and stayed for the second period. Student A finished the quiz at 20 minutes past the end of the second class period, meaning that he had been there, learning for over three hours. Yes, there are better ways to study a language, but if he is not willing to do it on his own, he has to do it during class time. I gave him ample opportunity to leave. He took a cigarette break between class periods, but otherwise struggled away at the quiz.

My assessment of the class was that the students don't study on their own, outside of class, and as unfortunate as that may be, at least they are doing some learning during class. At the beginning of the quiz period, they complained that they would never be able to get 90%, but they did. They achieved something big, not just a pass with a minimum of points.

My grade report that I hand in this year is going to look strange. Everyone who passes will pass with high A's. Everyone else will be a repeater again next year.

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Last English Communication class for the year

This morning is the last class for the English Communication class for repeaters this calendar year. There will be two more next year and then exams. This morning is a unit quiz.

I met one of the class members the other day at a shop, a forth-year student. He says that he found a job. His next big task is going to be passing the class. If he passes all of the unit tests and the final exam, I'll think about it. Otherwise his attendance is so bad that there is no way I can pass him. I imagine that this guy is going to be quite an asset to his employer. He has a great personality for business.