Inspirational English, May 2017 Inspirational English, May 2017 | Page 8

Continued from previous page Please share with us a "Zero Resource" activity that we can easily use when we have some spare time at the end of a lesson. A great activity that will keep your class on their toes is the adaptation of the “hedbanz” popular game. Not only do we play it with our young learners in order to revise every day vocabulary such as food or animals but also with older students to practise their idiomatic expressions, phrasal verbs etc. The game can be played in pairs or small groups. You will need rubber bands, pictures and/ or small pieces of carton paper with idioms, phrasal verbs or any other vocabulary you wish to revise with your students. Each student wears a card around the head and without looking at it, tries to guess the word/expression found on it by asking 3-4 questions. If the student gets the right answer he or his team gets one point. The winner is the student or team with the most guesses. This activity works on multiple levels as it contains an element of fun, practices speaking skills and revises vocabulary. It also builds on interpersonal skills as we mentioned earlier on. You also run workshops for teachers. What are the three top teaching tips you would like them to remember when they leave? I run my workshops in the same way I teach – I try to instil enthusiasm in teachers and encourage collaboration among them. At the same time, my goal is to trigger critical reflection mechanisms in teachers – step back, recapture past experiences, mull them over, evaluate them and eventually make future adjustments or changes to teaching practices. When they leave my workshop I want them to remember that there isn’t just one way to teach such and such, that there is a way to move away from teacher centred instruction and conduct student centred lessons, and that there is a way to plan fun packed lessons that are appealing to a variety of learning styles. 8