Students are given a list of discussion questions that require an extended response and encourage the use of the target language. They discuss these questions with their partner.
Variation: Walk around the Room-- Example
The same idea, but the discussion questions are now posted around the room. With their partner, students have to walk around the room. When they get to a discussion question they stop, talk about the question, and then when they have finished the discussion, they move on to the next question.
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Walk Around the Room Discussion Questions: Vocabulary and Grammar (Gallery Walk)
(TESOL ideas--Any Vocabulary Set, Any Grammar Point)
In a previous post, I mentioned discussion questions as a possible freer practice for vocabulary items.
A slight variation of this activity is to post the questions around the room. The students have to walk around the room with a partner. As they come to each question, they discuss the question with their partner. They then continue walking around the room until all the questions have been discussed.
(This is opposed to the standard activity, of giving the students all of the questions on a worksheet, and having them discuss the questions with the partner while seated at their desks.)
The advantage of having the students walk around the room is primarily just to get the students moving. Especially during longer classes (i.e. more than 1 hour). Sometimes it's easy for us as teachers to forget how difficult it is for many students to sit still and focus for long periods of time. (As teachers, we are constantly moving around the room, so we always feel that the class is active, but sometimes we forget that the students need to move to.)
This activity works equally well for grammar practice. In fact, I've previously mentioned this activity in my collection of practice activities for grammar.
Note: I've seen other teachers refer to this activity as a "Gallery Walk". I have previously used the term Gallery Walk to refer to an activity for giving feedback on student writing, but I suppose any activity that requires students to walk around the room and view something can be considered as a gallery walk.
Below are two sample activities to illustrate. The first is discussion questions for the vocabulary set for Reflect Reading & Writing 6, Unit 5, Reading 1: Painting Prehistory p.101-107. (The questions are adapted from the suggestions in the teacher's book). The second activity is a series of questions meant to contrast present simple with present continuous. I have previously posted that activity HERE.
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