I did! I was fantastic! It will be part of my clases. Thank you 💞
@SybPet13 күн бұрын
Very mature teaching.
@djmedical5267 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this method. I will try this and see how it can affect my students to speak.
@MohammadhosainRashedi4 ай бұрын
Wow thanks a million. These strategies are great.❤
@lenalee55169 ай бұрын
Well in my class it's mendatory to speak English when they have oral activities and pair discussions or ask me questions etc but what bugs me the most is when they speak their first language when they're working. So i always ask them to keep speaking in English together and without me reminding them they end up forgetting.
@adieyunant81066 ай бұрын
It happend in my class too 😢
@dennersamuel6083 жыл бұрын
I loved the tip! ⭐
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
Great, thanks! Let me know how it goes if you use it.
@dennersamuel6083 жыл бұрын
@@TeachinginHarmony sure 😉
@jacksonamaral3292 ай бұрын
Interesting. Watching from Brazil.
@TakinKhorasanchian8 ай бұрын
Thank you
@jocampusano32 жыл бұрын
thanks
@josestein15323 жыл бұрын
amazing system!
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
I know, right? 😁
@putraa630810 ай бұрын
Hello vicky, I think this way is good but how about if we have more than 5 students? for example until 25 students in one class. is it possible to use this way tho ? thanks in advance
@spooderman179 ай бұрын
11 minutes 11 second video. 11 thousand views. Whow!
@gigimelgarejo47213 жыл бұрын
It's very good... But I have 43 in class and no assistant... 😓
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
Hi Gigi! Yes, I hear you - large classes add an extra layer of difficulty to everything, don't they? Fortunately, this strategy is designed to be used by the students, in groups, so the teacher does not need an assistant, and it will give students the autonomy to check themselves. For it to work well in your class, I recommend breaking the class into groups of around 6-7 students, and making sure the student monitor in each group is someone who will take the job seriously Apart from reminding the monitors to do the ticks every 10 minutes, you as the teacher don't have to do anything, really. Please let me know if you try it, and how it goes. Good luck.
@gigimelgarejo47213 жыл бұрын
@@TeachinginHarmony thanks for the excellent tip! 🤗
@rajaharoon12258 ай бұрын
Is this techinque useful for very little kids of 3 to 4 years or not? Also suggest that teacher should assign a topic for it or not? It will be effective If used for less than 10minutes or not?
@sanikabandivadekar18926 ай бұрын
Nice idea
@eighttb6 ай бұрын
Hello! Thank you so much for sharing with us with these incredible tips. I have a question. Is it a good idea to first use the "reward technique" with teenage studnets who are beginning to learn English and gradually start using the "system of the 10-minutes monitoring"?
@paolasalgado90933 жыл бұрын
thanks for your tip ! (Chile here ;)
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paola! Hope it works for you. (Hola Chile! ;)
@latinpopgirl11 ай бұрын
I like the reward punishment systems better, besides, how can you rely on monitors? What if they don't leave the blanks just to help their classmates
@TeachinginHarmony11 ай бұрын
In terms of getting their friends not to leave blanks, I mean sure - that can happen. But it doesn't matter. The point is that it's an awareness-raising system. They can "cheat" if they want to, but what's the incentive? It's not attached to a reward, so the only person who loses out is themselves. Even if they have been "cheating", and have a card full of ticks, they KNOW they didn't earn them, so they know they're not putting in the effort.
@mzziaey Жыл бұрын
Love from Afghanistan ❤
@diiriye9guure856 Жыл бұрын
This Very well
@diiriye9guure856 Жыл бұрын
Nice teacher
@tasfiatabassum935510 ай бұрын
In this 10minutes time should we give topic for them.to.speak?
@Alex-dy7hg Жыл бұрын
It won't work completely with classes where discipline and motivation are, and this is the case for a good chunk if not the majority of classes in any public school in almost any country. Based on my own experience plus numerous stories from the other teachers.
@TeachinginHarmony11 ай бұрын
Yes, you are quite right - there are always other contextual factors at play in any class. Addressing those behavioural and motivational issues is not a quick and easy fix. This system is one tool I would recommend having in the toolkit, though, as part of a comprehensive approach.
@doneasaadi26 Жыл бұрын
If the class is two hours and a half, can i classify the time into 20 minutes or i cant???
@TeachinginHarmony Жыл бұрын
Hi, thanks for your question. I think you could divide the time however it works for you and your learners. If 20-minute blocks work, then yes of course. If 10 or 15 minutes is better, do that. This may take a little experimentation on your part.
@doneasaadi26 Жыл бұрын
@@TeachinginHarmony thanks a lot for ur answer
@kaysbeautyplace33633 жыл бұрын
Hi Vicki, thanks for the tip. My question is, does this work for younger learners??11 to 13 year olds
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the excellent question! As with most teaching, it depends… on the class, the school, the length of the lesson, the frequency of use, etc. My advice is this: Try it in a small part of a lesson first, like during one group or speaking activity. Then next time, try it in for the last 20 minutes of the lesson (after they’ve warmed up and practised the target language). Then try it for half the lesson, and so on, until they are comfortable trying it for a full lesson. I also suggest being explicit and collaborative about what you are trying to achieve. Brainstorm with them a schedule for working towards the goal of English use in a full lesson. Get them to come up with why and how it will help their language learning. Don’t let them be passive - facilitate their active participation in the whole process. Finally, with younger learners, it’s SUPER important not to attach this to reward or punishment. It’s demotivating for those who can’t do it, and unnecessary for those who can already. I hope that’s helpful. Please let me know how you get on!
@rutielezra2037 Жыл бұрын
Can you tell us what is the example of language / phrases you expect to hear from your kids?
@TeachinginHarmony Жыл бұрын
Well it depends on the level and the lesson topic, I suppose. I would expect them to use the vocabulary, sentence stems, functional language or grammar that we are focusing on in that lesson. This method relies on giving students time and opportunities for language production, so I would need to plan my lesson to include interactive communicative tasks like role plays, discussions and information gaps.
@hilariograciano2857 Жыл бұрын
Wow, that's so Great! Does it work with second Language learning students who get zero fluency and accuracy?
@TeachinginHarmony11 ай бұрын
It can. Like I said - it depends on your class how often or for how much time you use it. You may choose only to use it for 10 minutes every lesson, until that accuracy/fluency starts to build.
@ropecrewman36 Жыл бұрын
Hello. Does this system apply to teaching older adults? (My class greatly varies in age)
@TeachinginHarmony Жыл бұрын
Hi, and thanks for the question. ☺️ Yes, definitely! This strategy could easily be applied to a class of older adults. If you’re worried about how it would be received by them, present it to them in a way that makes it clear it will help with learning. Present it as an awareness-raising exercise, or set it as a class challenge, and see how it goes for one class - or for one portion of your class. Ask them to decide if they are willing to give it a try again next lesson, at least for part of the lesson. Guide THEM to decide how much of the lesson they will self-monitor their English use for. The more they co-operate in decisions about their learning, the more beneficial it will be. Hope that is helpful. ☺️
@katherineretamal32213 жыл бұрын
Hello Vicki! Great strategy. What about online classes? It's hard for me to get my students speaking in English. Is there a tip for this?
@TeachinginHarmony3 жыл бұрын
Hey Katherine. So sorry for not seeing this question earlier! Yes, I agree that things are definitely trickier in an online teaching context. There is a significant challenge getting students to speak at all in an online classroom, and monitoring breakout rooms is much more of a struggle. I have used this system successfully with young adult learners online in breakout room activities. Before they go to the room, I appoint a monitor for each room to tick off the names of the group members who speak English the whole time. Again, there should be no reward or punishment attached to this - just a record at the end of the lesson of what each student did every time there was a breakout room activity. It's awareness-raising for them to monitor their own learning, and if your routine expectation is that each group will self-monitor for English-speaking, it is more likely they will do it. They may lie, but make it clear that they have nothing to gain by lying. You can also get them to record their conversations in breakout rooms for them to listen back to later and check their pronunciation. When working in the main room, I do a lot of vocal exercises - speaking all at once with our microphones on, making animal noises, tongue twisters, cameras off/on roleplays, singing - it helps break down the not-wanting-to-speak barrier in the online space. If all else fails, getting them to type responses in the chat or on the Jamboard, is valid and less stressful. And using vocaroo.com to record themselves speaking helps as well. I hope those are some helpful ideas. Please let me know how you go!
@SathishKumarIndian Жыл бұрын
What about the students who remain silent throughout the class?
@TeachinginHarmony Жыл бұрын
I would need to plan my lesson so that students have the opportunity and the need to produce language in order to complete the activities. Communicative language activities should have a genuine need for interaction - like an information gap or a discussion with a goal they have to achieve - so that students cannot successfully do the activity by remaining silent. Silence can also indicate discomfort or a lack of confidence. My classroom needs to be a safe space where my learners know that making mistakes will not be punished or laughed at. Building rapport with my students and helping them build rapport with each other is crucial here.