Speaking is a very important skill, because of this we have to give them
activities to develop the ability to express themselves through speech. Besides,
we have to motivate them starting with activities developing this skill from
the very beginning.
Children expect to
learn quickly and can feel disappointed if there are not immediate results. For
this reason, we should provide them many opportunities to speak English as soon
as possible. In controlled and guided activities our goal can be that pupils
produce correct language. We should correct their mistakes when they are
produced, but if we establish situations in which free communication is
encouraged, we should not correct their mistakes. In this case, we can write
down what they should be corrected and we will do it later. Besides, if
children ask you if something is correct or incorrect, we can answer them.
At the beginning, the
teacher has to make controlled and guide practice, since children do not know
using a language appropriately and we must help them in many ways. Therefore,
children will start learning formulaic language. It means that they will
start learning chunks (listen and repeat the same sentences to remember it) of
language and this helps them at least. In this case, drawing can also be useful
for presenting language.
As I said before we
have to start with controlled and guide practice. Controlled practice
and presentation are closely linked. Children should start practicing the
language that has just been introduced. In these practices, they had better not
to make many mistakes. In these activities children have to start asking
similar question and they can do it in pairs. Drawings and puppets can be
useful too. In the case of guide practice, it is usually done in pairs or
groups. They can make some questions about the same topic and answer it. For
instance they can use some images and make question about it and the others
answer it.
We cannot forget dialogues
and role play. In speaking both are very important. Dialogues are a stage
between guided and free practice. Controlled dialogues can turn into free
practice progressively. First of all, the dialogue is presented by the teacher.
After listening to the dialogues, then some pupils could practice it with the
teacher. Finally, children will work in pairs. Role play is another way of
presenting dialogues and it is connect with real life situations. The
improvisation is involved in role plays, because of this, pupils are given
situations but they can decide which words they are going to use. We can
control some role plays and others just give some directions and children could
interact in a free way. It is really important that before starting the role
play, children have to know the dialogues. There are some advantages of
dialogues and role plays: questions and answer are controlled; communication is
encouraged; intonation, stress, facial expressions, etc. are worked; language
is practiced in a particular situation.
When children have
practiced all these kinds of activities, then they can access to free
activities. The difference of this activity is choice, since pupils can say
what they want and also they can choose the way to say it. Free activities
present some features: They are not highly controlled by the teacher; genuine
communication is encourage, these types of activities connect the work in the
classroom with real life situations; attention is focused on the message
instead of on the language; in these activities fluency is more important that
accuracy; a game element is usually related to these activities; there is
usually an information gap.
There are many speaking
activities that are classified from tightly controlled to freer activities.
These are Look, listen and repeat (the teacher show a picture and tells the
pupils the word, the pupils repeat it); Listen and participate (this is often
used when children are listening to a story. Pupils are encouraged to repeat
some words or sentences); Reading aloud (Like bingo, children have to read
words aloud); Memory games (children will develop memory, concentration, etc.);
dramatization (children can act out a situation, a dialogue or a story. This
activity can be connected to others); Rhymes, action rhymes, songs, chants,
tongue twister (chunks of language are learnt. These activities are usually
linked to movement, actions and imitation); Retelling a story (Pupils have to
retell a story that the teacher has previously told them or they have read);
Using flash cards, etc.
In short, speaking is
necessary in education, it is a very important skill in children lives, since
they must learn to communicate with others in an appropriate way. They must understand
others and be understood. Therefore, we have to give them the necessary tools
and present activities that help them to improve this skill. We have to
motivate and help them when they need it in an adequate context.


















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