The third class I observed this term was Natalie Upshaw's
Group 1B speaking class in the afternoon. The class had a lot of the same students from
the previous class I observed so I felt very comfortable joining the class and
all of them remembered me. Luckily the
topic yesterday was clothing, a subject I am quite enthusiastic about! Natalie
split us up into 2 groups, boys and girls. She wrote 3 questions on the board
for us to discuss.
1. How do people
dress in your country?
2. Is it different from
the way people dress here?
3. What are some
traditional clothes that people wear in your country?
She
made sure everyone had a picture dictionary and basically unleashed us. At
first the girls were reluctant to talk and seemed rather nervous. Luckily, Ruth
broke the ice and agreed to go first. We instantly had to go over a new
vocabulary word, "Tank Top." Natalie explained the difference between
a sleeveless shirt and a tank top, I think everyone understood but it was hard
for the French speakers to pronounce. Miriam
happened to be wearing traditional garb that day so we spent a lot of time
looking at her elaborate dress, it was a gorgeous purple color with a lot of
silver embroidery. We had a really great mix of cultures at the table, 1 girl
from Mali, 1 from the Ivory coast and 2 from Saudi Arabia. We all spent time
pulling up pictures on an Ipad showing traditional gowns from our countries and
they girls even wanted me to participate! Once we got the ball rolling,
discussion was hard to stop. Natalie allowed time at the end for each student
to give a brief 2-3 minute presentation about their cultures clothing and she
helped clear up any minor grammatical mistakes.
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| A pretty jalibya shown to me by one the Saudi Arabian students-She said they often wear these inside the home |
I
thought that Natalie had great discussion questions which were really open
ended and allowed the students to create a broad range of conversation. She was
also diligent about making sure that the students only spoke in English, particularly
since the students would often back slide into their native language out of
frustration. I do think that there was a
noted lack of enthusiasm from the instructor (although I think anyone would
pale in comparison to Vicky's upbeat personality) but I do think it rubbed off
on the students, particularly at the beginning of class however, I'm sure there
were a number of circumstances that could have influenced this, we can't all be
peppy all the time! Other than that, the class was great and a real joy to
participate in. Out of all the classes I think a speaking class would be the
most fun to teach.

i observed her class too, and did notice the lack of energy (maybe being right after lunch?).
ReplyDeletethe spontaneity offered by the discussion questions seems to have led to fruitful conversations.