Teaching Oral Skills Communicatively | Page 49

2.1.4. Description and justification This section makes a brief reference to all tasks provided. However, only those referring to speaking activities are justified. Task 1 (see appendix V) is a pre-listening activity with a purpose to activate relevant schemata in the students’ brains. As it also requires students to discuss their experiences in pairs, it gives students the chance to use spoken language to refer to situations which they have experienced. The pictures are not there for students to describe them but they prompt them to refer to their personal experiences. There is an information gap which is created by the fact that each student ignores his/her partner’s experiences and wants to learn about them. The activity is interesting to students as they like speaking about things that happen to them. Task 2 (see appendix V) is a pre-listening activity which helps students create certain expectations before they listen so that they can listen with a purpose. Task 3 (see appendix V) asks students to listen to the text in order to get the general meaning of the text and evaluate their guesses. Task 4 (see appendix V) focuses on the transactional elements of the listening text. Task 5 (see appendix V) focuses on certain conventional phrases and on the interactional elements of the listening text. Task 6 (see appendix V) is a role play activity which gives students the chance to use spoken language extensively in order to solve a problem. Students work in groups of four. There are four roles in each group and each student is delivered his/her role card which contains all necessary information to play the role (the role cards are provided in appendix VI). Student A is someone who wants to make hotel reservation. Students B, C, and D are receptionists at three different hotels. The aim is that Student A finds the cheapest hotel which can fulfill his/her requirements. To achieve this he/she phones all three hotels in turn and asks information from the hotel receptionists. The activity complies with Nation’s criteria about communicative activities. Students act according to roles which ensures that everybody will participate in the activity. The students’ output is not controlled by the teacher who is there to provide help only when this is required by the students. All students withhold some information which the others lack. Student A has to reach a decision and to do this a 49