Video
What
and why?
In
general, students find the use of videos motivating and stimulating.
Videos are a useful vehicle for learning more about a topic, for
making cross-cultural comparisons and for making the language more
memorable. CEWw is accompanied by a set of videos. These
can be used together with the coursebooks or on their own. The videos
are not intended simply to provide 'language models'. They aim to
enrich the students' knowledge and experience of language use in
relation to the topics in the course by providing interesting extension
material for each of the six Themes at each level of the course.
See the video packs themselves for further details of the videos
and accompanying worksheets. The following notes apply to the use
of videos in general. (There are also further general ideas with
the video booklets.)
Practical
ideas
- Plan
ahead! Book the video player and the video cassette. Check if
a technician will be available. Watch the video and read through
the video script before the lesson so that you are aware of the
language, characters, topic and content.
- Prepare
the students before they see the video so that they have an idea
of what they are going to see. Give them a general outline of
what they will see. This will make it much easier for them to
follow and learn.
- You
can set some tasks before the students watch the video. These
can be of a general nature, about what happens in the video. After
the students have watched the extract from the video all the way
through, you can follow this up with further detailed tasks which
require the students to listen or look for detail.
- Tip:
When you start the cassette put the counter on zero so that when
you rewind and replay you will find the place more easily.
- Tip:
Make sure that all the students can see the screen and hear.
- Keep
the video session fairly short. Ten minutes of video every week
is more useful than 40 minutes every month.
Some
ideas for exploiting videos:
- Play
the video the first time without any sound. Ask the students what
they think the people are saying.
- Students
can watch the section all the way through. Rewind, then play a
part again. Then freeze the frame and ask them if they can remember
what comes next.
- Observation:
the students can do this in teams. Give them a list of items before
the viewing. They have to write down who had or did them, e.g.
'Who had a red car?', 'Who had glasses?', 'Who did Peter talk
to?', etc.
- After
viewing the video extract once, students can work in groups to
write questions for each other. They can then exchange these and
watch the video again to find the answers.
- Talk
about cross-cultural aspects. Ask students to write down after
the viewing four things they noticed which were different from
their culture (objects, buildings, clothes, food, etc.) and four
things which were the same. Put them on the board. Discuss why
the things are the same or different.
- In
advance, choose some sentences from the video script and ask students
what they think the video will be about, what they will learn
about and so on. They can also guess who says the sentences, why,
etc.
- Students
can also be involved in making their own videos.

|