Student
involvement
What
and why?
Student
involvement is probably the single most important factor in language
learning, especially with students in the early secondary school
years. One of the greatest causes of drop-out and student failure
in learning is that they do not feel part of their course. For this
reason, the encouragement of student involvement is one of the key
principles in CEWw. The aim is to involve the students as
fully as possible in their English course, so that they feel it
is theirs and personally relevant to them. CEWw contains
numerous practical ideas in relation to student involvement. The
following are some of the basic principles we have adopted.
Practical
ideas
- Start
from the students. When introducing a new topic, find out what
the students already know about it and what they would like to
know about it.
- Encourage
regular EVALUATION
of how they are learning and take steps accordingly.
- Provide
choices between tasks. Students do not have to be doing the same
things all the time. Allow them to DECIDE
and make room for DO
IT YOURSELF.
- Provide
creative tasks which draw on the students' imagination, experience
and personal views.
- Provide
'larger' TASKS, such
as whole activities, where students can feel freer to work in
their own way.
- Draw
on the MOTHER
TONGUE as a means of involving the students' knowledge about
how language works.
- Involve
students in the production of TESTS
and make tests less threatening.
- Focus
on topics which are worth learning about in their own right, and
which have CURRICULUM
LINKS.

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