วันพุธที่ 21 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Week#12 Reading skill ( 21/August/2013)


Using Letters to Tell Stories in the EFL Classroom

When we weave stories, one  thread  may  be our personal  life, another thread  may  be our   imagination,  and   other   threads may come from our social experiences. Writing as weaving may  be realized when  we develop a story  within  another  story  or  piece of writing. There are two activities in the based on some theoretical concepts that connect  English as a Foreign Language  (EFL) learning  with  authenticity  and  communicative  competence. The first activity is part of a lesson that involves writing letters to introduce yourselves. The second activity, targeted at advanced teenage learners, demonstrates   how   an  epistolary story-a story  told  by a series of diary entries.

Introducing myself through a letter.

There are one activities in an introducing myself through a letter. 

    This activity is a letter from me.

Class : use beginning EFL learners

Materials : Copies of a letter found in an EFL textbook, a small box, paper, and envelopes

Time required : One to two weeks, depending on class size

      Write a letter to each learner of your chosen class. Use simple language in which you introduce yourself. In the letter, tell them who you are, where you come from, where you studied. Put each letter in an envelope. Write your name and addressee’s name on the envelope and sent to them. Depending on  your learners’ permission and confidence, once you collect their letters, you can read them aloud in class. You can turn this follow-up activity into a game by reading a letter and asking the class to guess who the author is.

Epistolary creative writing

In my teaching, I have used The Color Purple to generate fruitful discussions around thorny issues. I  have adapted some of the letters to suit my learners’ language level by simplifying vocabulary and sentence structure without changing the  message the  author sought to convey. Because this novel may raise controversial  issues, teachers may use other novels instead. Together with reading excerpts from an epistolary novel, learners may also be encouraged to develop their creative writing skills by resorting to weaving their own stories together. One of the topics added to my Literature section was “Letters,” which demonstrated  the use of writing of a short story through letters.

There are one activities in epistolary creative writing.

This activity is epistolary stories.

Class : Use advanced learners

Materials : Paper

Time required : About one month

Each learner writes a  letter to “Dear you.” Included in the letter is the beginning of a true, fictionalized,  or imaginary story. Collect the letters and distribute them, making sure nobody receives his or her own letter. Ask  learners to  reply to  the  letter. In  their response they need to  ask, “And then what happened?. Now that each learner has a letter relationship with another peer, ask the class to continue for a month. While learners develop their stories through the letter exchanges, organize some feedback sessions to provide language support. When they  finish   their  epistolary stories, collect them  to provide language feedback   and   return  them   for  editing work  Editing can  be done in  class in small groups.

     Both activities in this article can be turned into larger projects or units of work that also bring in speaking development if teachers ask students to deliver small presentations about what they have written, describing the process and end product. All in all, the strength that I perceive in using letters is that pedagogic tasks and input sources can be authenticated when there is a real goal underpinning them, a goal that students appropriate and regard as their own.

I think that using Letters to tell stories in the EFL classroom method is the good method because it makes students remember and understand content of lesson.

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