Participation
What
and why?
Particularly
in large classes, some students may seem reluctant to participate
orally and contribute to the lessons. There may be a number of reasons
for this. There may, for example, be a number of negative factors
such as being afraid to make mistakes in front of others, feeling
that they will appear stupid, fearing that they will be corrected,
or otherwise lacking in confidence in front of a large group. On
the other hand, many students naturally say very little. They may
feel that they learn best through listening and observing - silence
is their preferred LEARNING
STRATEGY. Before you insist on students participating orally
in the lesson, it is best therefore to think about why they
are not participating. What may seem a problem to you may not, in
fact, be a problem to them. It is important to respect the personal
preferences that different students may have. There are, however,
a number of things that you can do to improve the chances of students
participating.
Practical
ideas
- If
there are one or two students that are persistently quiet, you
could talk to them after a lesson to find out what they think
about it. Alternatively, you could make up a questionnaire which
all students can answer.
- If
possible, try to arrange the seating so that all the students
can see you clearly and so that they can see each other. A horseshoe
arrangement or circle is best, or try and push the desks together
into pairs or groups.
- Accept
that some students are quiet and may feel happier contributing
in a less obvious way - perhaps by producing exercises and puzzles
for a class EXERCISE
BOX, or helping to organise the PARCEL
OF ENGLISH, or bringing in pictures and 'realia' for other
activities.
- Some
students may dominate the class by being over-noisy or always
answering questions first. If this is a problem, you could divide
the class into four quarters and say that you will accept an answer
from each group in turn.
- Some
students may be reluctant to 'act out' in class. They may prefer
to record a conversation on cassette at home for you to listen
to later. Don't force students to speak out loud if they are not
willing or ready.
- Make
sure that the students understand that many of the activities
in CEWw are open-ended so that a variety of answers are
acceptable and 'right'. It is what they think that is important.
- Encourage
students to understand the importance of everyone's contribution
in GROUPWORK
and that the work that the quiet students do often supports the
work of the more dominant ones. Allow students to work at their
own PACE (see also TASKS
IN BLOCKS). This will give the more apprehensive students
an opportunity to work without pressure.
- The
DECIDE ...
EXERCISES also allow students freedom to choose what they
prefer to do. Give the quieter students encouragement while they
work, to build up confidence.
- You
could make a particular point of praising weaker or quieter students
and of accepting what they say (even if this contains many errors)
in an effort to build up their confidence.

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