
A
to Z of Methodology
Index
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Pairwork
What
and why?
Pairwork
involves students working in pairs simultaneously. The reasons for
the use of pairwork are similar to those of GROUPWORK.
Pairwork allows more students to get more practice. It also provides
a change of pace to a lesson and helps to sustain motivation. Students
working in pairs are able to share ideas and help each other. However,
pairwork can fail if it is not set up well. This can lead to students
getting distracted, becoming disenchanted with English and, eventually,
misbehaving.
Practical
ideas
- Ensure
that students know exactly what they have to do before they begin
any pairwork activity. Run through a few examples with the whole
class. Initially at least, pairwork tasks need to have a clear,
concrete focus, for example on completing an exercise, doing PATTERNED
PRACTICE, preparing some INTERACTIVE
WRITING, preparing questions and so on.
- For
variety, different students can be paired together. Students can
be moved around the room or they can be put into pairs with students
to their left or right, in front or behind.
- Give
the students a time limit so that they know when they have to
finish.
- Students
can work in pairs to produce questions, exercises, etc. for other
pairs to do.
- If
the task does not actually require pairwork, the students can
choose whether they want to work in pairs or alone.

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