Showing posts with label puppets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puppets. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 May 2009

Using puppets and audio to encourage speaking - Update.

Photobucket
Following on from my post on Thursday about Teachmeet ASN-SEN, I have now extracted the audio from my very brief presentation using Audacity and Soundflower, levelled it with the Levelator, edited it to remove the numerous 'ums' and published as episode 5 of my podcast - )Lisibo talks!
Feeling very proud of myself (and I can now recognise the wave pattern of an 'um'!

Make sure you catch the replay of the whole meeting though as it is well worth listening to the other presenters who were brilliant! See for yourself below - and watch here.

Thursday, 30 April 2009

Using puppets and audio to encourage speaking.




I was privileged to be asked by David Noble (@parslad) to join TeachMeet ASN-SEN Online tonight and invited to speak as well! A huge privilege when you look at the other speakers!

I choose to talk briefly about using puppets and sound recording to encourage speaking skills in the classroom. As I teach languages, my examples came from my experience in the primary language learning cl
assroom but, as I said, are equally applicable in other contexts.

If you want to catch what I said, you can watch the replay here

And here are some posts I've previously made about using puppets in the classroom -
Puppets! (video at the bottom of the post)
Los animales hablan
Inspired in IKEA pt 2

And about using sound recording-
5MW on Podomatic


And also moblogging -
La Primavera
Saved by the blog



Tuesday, 11 November 2008

Los animales hablan español.



This afternoon I had the pleasure of the company of Year 2 for a whole afternoon of Spanish!! So I decided to indulge my creative urges and let them loose with the puppets! This caused great excitement - obviously - perhaps a little more than was strictly necessary, but heigh ho!

The idea was to create short role plays in pairs in Spanish using puppets so that we could safely record them using my camera's video facility, then upload them and the kids would be able to watch them before going home. Best laid plans...

I handed out the puppets by naming them in Spanish and asking ¿Quién quiere el mono? for example - the pupils had to guess the animal to 'win' the right to hold it! That was fine. However, as they put the finger puppets on their fingers, the pupils' excitement was a little more exuberant than foreseen and it took a while to calm down sufficiently to set the task. Of course, the pupils immediately wanted to start talking to one another using the puppets and I didn't want to squash that urge, just channel it ;o)

Next problem was that all previous knowledge seemed to have popped out of their heads and for some reason there were very few who could even remember how to answer ¿Qué tal? let alone ask it! However, after a quick revision session we rehearsed and after break we had a go at recording our animal role play, using Smartboard backgrounds as our backdrops.

Below you can see some of the results - some were better than others and, believe me, given the time and effort it took, I'm pleased we recorded anything!

I was thinking of doing some animation with them.... perhaps leave it until I've recovered :o)






Saturday, 21 June 2008

Top tips for Primary Language Teaching and Learning.


I had the privilege to speak at Tile Hill Wood School and Language College on Thursday evening. I was really pleased to be asked by Ana Neofitou, Head of Languages, who I've met a couple of times at Language World and other more local conferences, and Jo Redford who is Assistant Head and who I met in Oxford this year when she introduced The ALL London Show and Tell session in which I participated.

My session was the last of three sessions for Primary teachers in teaching and learning Primary Languages. Previously the group of about 40 teachers had been working in language specific groups and focusing on vocabulary for topics such as sport and animals. My session, entitled Top tips for Primary Languages, aimed to give them an insight into how to deliver PL in an engaging way, making use of free resources and easily acquired skills. I enjoyed expanding on my presentation from Oxford (you can see and listen to it in this slidecast) which I delivered there in 10 minutes - just over an hour was still too short, but I was happier! I just get so excited that I could talk for hours!

Below is the presentation, and also the notes I made for delegates so that there wasn't too much mad scribbling as I gabbled away! Even as a standalone document, I think you can see what I'm trying to say!




Top tips for Primary Languages

Monday, 12 May 2008

Puppets!



Further to my last post, Joe Dale asked me to repeat the section of the Access Network Flashmeeting concerning the use of puppets so that he could record it and publish it on his blog.

I was happy to oblige, and sat down on Saturday morning, surrounded by puppets and tried to replicate what I said about puppets. I introduced my puppets and gave some ideas for their use in the PLL classroom. You can watch the video on Joe's blog - and also read - and hear- his explanation of the rigmarole he went through to publish the post. Hope he thinks it was worth it ;o)

And, as an added extra, here are some pictures of my puppets - there are more on my Flickr puppets set (see stream on left). Thanks to my helpers (amazing what the promise of a Euro point can do!) who you can also see in modelling action in the clip below!

Friday, 9 May 2008

Access Network Show and Tell Flashmeeting


Earlier this week David Noble tweeted a request for someone to attend a Flashmeeting on 8th May for his Access Network. Seeing it as an opportunity to virtually meet some new people, to help David and to leave school on the bell, I volunteered to share some ideas about using puppets and also some ideas for eTwinning.

On a very hot afternoon six of us met on Flashmeeting with David sharing about using GoogleEarth and also about ScotsEduBlogs. David is much more advanced in his Flashmeeting skills than me and managed to post his URLs using the URL button so they popped up for us - I managed to forget about this facility until too late, and posted any that I used in the chat. I hope that my contribution was helpful - I learned plenty from the part of David's talk that I caught.

Below are the links I promised to post to my blog for anyone who is interested ;o)

Puppets - the following blog posts might interest you -
Inspired in IKEA part2 - ideas for where to get and what to do with puppets
Diez animales- an idea for using puppets with song to demonstrate understanding and increase motivation!

eTwinning
I quoted some of these sites in the meeting but I'll repeat them anyway!
Have a look a the post I wrote last week about my talk at Beaumanor Hall for teachers of pupils with SEN in special and mainstream schools - there are several useful links including to the project at Sackville School run by Anne Jakins I mentioned and to a few projects/ideas I mentioned. You can also find the links to the outcomes of Whitehouse Common's project with Spain.
There are other posts on eTwinning on my blog - use the search feature on the right- perhaps you'd be interested in this one as well.
The British Council site has an eTwinning section and then there is the eTwinning portal where you register your interest, search for partners and can record your project.
And then there is the all important eTwinning Ambassadors page.

Wednesday, 13 February 2008

Inspired in IKEA part 2


In the previous post, I suggested some ways to use items from IKEA in my teaching. Storage, cushions and soft shoes were all mentioned. This post focuses on items to enhance and facilitate speaking and listening in PLL.

One of the main obstacles I find in getting pupils to speak Spanish (or French, German, or any other language) is the 'hang up' that it sounds funny. Whilst this is not such a big problem, in my experience, in PLL, there is still some reticence on the part of some pupils to speaking the foreign language. Using puppets is one way of getting around this. Puppets come in all shapes and sizes - you can download patterns for card finger puppets here and here: you can use sock puppets - see Jo Rhys-Jones' video in which pupils converse using their alien sock puppets; you can use glove puppets - I have a HUGE collection of those (including Ana and Jaime); and you can use finger puppets.

As well as charity shops , jumble sales and my childrens' toyboxes, IKEA are the main source of my finger puppets. TITTA are sets of 10 finger puppets, costing £5. I have three sets (about time they brought out a new set!) - a sea set (right), a fairytale /royal court set (not pictured) and a jungle set (left). Pupils prefer the animals and give them names and different voices. By using the puppets they are distancing the 'funny noise' that some of them associate with speaking Spanish etc and displacing it onto the puppet. Using silly voices is another useful ploy - and is encouraged - as long as the voice doesn't make understanding impossible! Additionally, puppets seem to increase confidence and encourage creativity in a way that 'turn to your partner and practice the phrases' doesn't. Not hard to see why when you're dealing with kids who associate role play with using props and dressing up and having fun.

If you were at the IoW conference in October, or even read about it, you may have seen a picture of me as a cat! For the benefit of those who haven't, here it is!
The previous week I had popped over to our nearest IKEA in search of gingerbread for Christmas and come across these lovely animal masks and ears! There's cat, a dog (with floppy ears on the mask), a rabbit (ears on a headband as well as mask) and a bear. I've used these in a similar way to the finger puppets - these give pupils even more to 'hide behind' as they are masked! We've used them for storytelling and for songs like El granjero tiene una granja. Always a clamour to wear them so there's the incentive to take part and contribute to the lesson too, as 'I only choose people who are working hard and trying their best' ;o)

Well today, I made another discovery - more masks and this time not just animals! An alien with antennae, a flower, a spider, a princess, a dinosaur, a ladybird and a bumblebee form the latest set of play masks. This time I managed to find two 'willing' volunteers to model them for me (although I didn't completely escape as you can see!).



As well as using these masks for the activities mentioned above, I'd like to use them to encourage pupils to be creative and make up their own (simple) stories that they can act for one another.

You'll notice that some of the pictures are framed by a green and blue 'stage'. Today IKEA were selling puppet theatres for 49p - made of cardboard admittedly but nonetheless worth a small investment! As demonstrated by my 'dos voluntarios', they can be used as a stage for conversations using the masks, and would work equally well with finger, sock or stick puppets.

Can't wait to have a go in the classroom! But until then, I know two people who'll be having fun giving me more ideas!

Tuesday, 6 November 2007

Diez animales

Today, I had Year 2 for Spanish for the whole afternoon . I usually have them for between 45 and 60 minutes before swapping with the art teacher for Year 1. As Year 1 are doing a pottery module, I was asked if I would have Year 2 for a 'double' to give the littlies more time to get stuck into the clay (hopefully not literally!)

So we had the time to do all kinds of things! First of all we had a look at ¡Quiero mi plátano! (I want my banana) a Talking Big Book from Early Start and b small publishing. We read the story together with the pupils working out the meanings of words from the context and by looking for cognates. They even made the link between the colour 'naranja' and the fruit 'la naranja'. Once we had read the story, we had a go at some of the puzzles based on animals and fruit. The favourite was the 'reveal' game where a picture is hidden by seven numbered tiles and pupils have to choose a tile to uncover and then make a guess as to (in this case) the animal or fruit. This enabled the pupils to practice numbers as well as the new vocabulary, and was accessible to all as there were two options given for the answer thus allowing the less confident to make a 50/50 choice, whilst the more advanced guessed before the options were given.

We then went back to a favourite song we had learnt a couple of weeks ago - Diez animales en la pared. One afternoon I was inspired to rewrite Ten green bottles in Spanish as the class needed some number practice and bottles aren't interesting - to 6 year old anyway ;-). Diez animales en la pared was the result. The original was created in five minutes (how long I had before the class arrived!) on the SMARTboard, but the beauty of that is that you can export the file as a Powerpoint and then use it on other IWBs (great as WCPS had Promethean!). In the original, the pupils took it in turns to make an animal fall off the wall; in the powerpoint version, I animated it so that the animals fell off the wall on cue so that I could ask the pupils to predict which animal will fall next. Today it was a popular move to revisit the song which was particularly surprising as at this point choir members had to go off to rehearse for the Christmas production, leaving six boys and me!

And we had a great time! Such a good time that I recorded them for posterity - and you can listen by going to my new Box of goodies! (you can also download the powerpoint if you want!) We didn't stop there either - break came and I was inspired again - why not take the classroom outside - so we did. Outside went the box of puppets and we had another chorus of Diez animales this time using the puppets as the actors and the shelter as our stage. The boys weren't happy with the outdoor picture so we moved to the cloakroom for some more!

Then we went back to the class and made our own walls with animals on. So
me walls were more successful than others (don't think we have any future bricklayers in the class!) but the animals were selected and named (mostly!) in Spanish. Comments at the end of the lesson included 'That was fun, Señora, do I have to stop now?', 'I've just put it in my desk to finish tomorrow - is that OK?' and 'Oh! I missed it all cos I was at choir!'.



Next week we'll go back to ¡Quiero mi plátano! as we're moving on to talk about fruit, but I'm sure we'll have to sing Diez animales again!



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