Ãëàâíàÿ > Useful Information > For Teacher to Know > English Teachers in Russia & Elsewhere #140


Useful Information

Some Very Useful Web.Sites

Some Facts about Dagestan

Some Facts About Dagestan ( 2)

Some Facts about Dagestan (3)

Some Facts about Dagestan (4)

For Teacher to Know

Future of Caucasus - Language Olympiad

English for Kids

Learn the Christmas Songs!

Olympiad "Future of the Caucasus-2012


Our ID

My Personal Page

Who we are...

How We Use New Technologies

A Trip to Elista,  Kalmykia.

 We Celebrate American Holidays

"Home is Where Your Heart Is II

"Home Is where Your Heart Is".

"Home is Where Your Heart Is" III

Home is Where your Heart is -2011

Access in Action 2011-12

Russian Food in American School

New Friends in the Netherlands. 


Tolerance

Stories

Stories Told by My Students 

Videos

Videos - 2

Lessons in Kindness

Lessons in Kindness II

 American Musicians in Russia

Video conferenmce Samara -Khasavyurt


Library

 Additional Reading

Great American Writers

Great English Writers

Great American and English Actors

Other English-Speaking Countries

Great American Singers - Page 1

Great American Singers - Page 2


Publications

Articles

Reports


How We Spend our Free Time

Let's Dance and Sing

Dagestan is my Home -2010


Exploring America

TEA - 2004


Exploring the United Kingdom

Seminar in the Cold War Period


You Should Know This

Main Symbols of the Countries

Brief History of Russia


ACCESS - 2009

Our Working Days

New Students

Access Students in Orlyonok

Access Students in Orlyonok II

12  plays by W. Shakespeare  


How We Explored Hawaii

Summer Institute, 2009

Get Acquainted with "Celebrate!"

Traditional Songs. HPU (1)

Traditional Songs. HPU (2) 

Traditional Songs. HPU (3)

Hawaii National Dances


Brush Up Your Grammar

Group Indefinite 

Group Continuous

Group Perfect

Group Perfect Continuous

Prepositions

  Other Grammar Phenomena

Continuation


American Slang

Informal English I

Informal English II


VOA special programs

Words and Their Stories


ACCESS -2011-13

New Students


Exploring American Countryside, Summer 2011.

History of State Maine

Visiting Searsmont, Maine

Exploring Maine

Washington DC

 Visiting the Capitol

New York


Ïîëåçíàÿ èíôîðìàöèÿ





English Teachers in Russia & Elsewhere #140

The endless EFL E-textbook for teachers who don't want to spend all their time preparing

 

"Not..., but..."

 Contents
=>  "Not..., but..."
=>  "Sequence or Set"
=>  Remember the Hide 'n' Seek game?
=>  "Who's Got What? - Fruits" online for a limited time



----------------------------------------------------
"Not..., but..."

----------------------------------------------------



It’s been ages since the last issue of ETs in Russia and Elsewhere, so I figured I’d better put something out—something easy and imminently practical.

 
Here are a couple simple activities that train critical thinking, logic, and vocabulary building skills.


The first game is called “Not … but.”


Write the following or (or similar words) on scraps of paper or little index cards.  One student in a group of three or four will select a card and attempt to get the other members to guess what’s written there.


The Describing player picks up a card and looks at the word (without showing anybody!).  Let’s say the word is “The Moon.”  The Describer uses the “Not…, but…” format now.  Example:  “Not the sun, but…” The describer allows a pause for the group members to guess.

 
Or if “no” is written on the card, the clue might be “Not yes, but…” Usually the describer needs just one clue at this basic level.

  ***** words *****

happy, the sun, daughter, soft, old, man, night, thirsty, smart, tall, walk, rich, down, round, alive, sad, land, rude, cold, wet, white, old, loud, me, thank you, tea


Add a bunch of your own words so that groups can work longer. Students take turns.  Rotate the cards from group to group so students get tons of practice.

 
Level 2

 
When that’s finished, try the second level of  "Not.., but…”  Sometimes the describer will need to offer more than one clue here.


Let’s say the word “some” is written on the card.  The describer might give this clue… “Not many, but…”  If group mates don’t guess the describer can follow u with “Not few, but…”, “Not any, but…” 
Eventually the group should guess.

  ***** words *****

silly, grey, leaf, later, animal, the USA, cat, planet, apple, cream, ugly, drink, green, who, desert, forward, laugh, couch, water, near, alone, part, jealous, London, bear, jump, find, strange
   


----------------------------------------------------
Sequence or Set
----------------------------------------------------


 
The next game to play is called "Sequence or Set."

Learners again pick a card on which a word is written.  This time they must offer, as a description, a sequence or set of words that the remaining group members will complete.  Clues, therefore, are groups of words, not sentences.


Example:  On the card is “ocean.”    The describer says, “puddle, pond, lake, sea…”  and waits for the group to guess.  In this case, the describer has offered a sequence: small bodies of water to large. 

Or let's say "eyes" is on the card.  The Describer might say "mouth, lips, nose, ears," etc.  In this case he or she is creating a set in which the word "eyes" would belong.

  ***** words *****
October, winter, blue, pizza, kitchen, 2006, excellent, uncle, huge, puddle, a quarter past 5, morning, Canada, people, tree, gorgeous, dirty, frozen, ape, baby, religion, Buddhism, candy
 

Be sure to add your own words!


---------------------------------------------------
“Who’s Got What?  Fruits” – available now

---------------------------------------------------


For a limited time I’m posting the audios and user manual for “Who’s Got What?  - Fruits” on English Teachers Everywhere.


Of course it’s free. For now.


If you haven’t played "Who's Got What?" try it.  The concentration you get from students is amazing.  It’s a great class management tool and a super listening task.

 

---------------------------------------------------
Hide 'n' Seek Chaos

---------------------------------------------------


 
In ETs in Russia #138 I described a kind of searching game called "Hide ‘n’ Seek Chaos."  I had a chance to try it.  It worked great.  I hid 5 plastic animals around the room.  A couple were obvious; others were hard to find.  Twenty-five 14-year-old kids in groups of four hunted for the animals, but they didn’t shout out when they found them (well, they tried not to); they wrote down the animal locations on a paper: “Lion – on the back of the chair.”  “Rhino – above the door.”


 

 



×èòàéòå â ðàçäåëå "For Teacher to Know":

Ðàññêàæè äðóãó!
E-mail äðóãà: Èìÿ äðóãà:  

Our Friends in Russia and Abroad
Galleries info
Access Khasavyurt in Elista Summer Camp


  Îáëàêà   |   Àðõèâ   |   RSS-êàíàë   |   Êîíòàêòû   |   Ãîñòåâàÿ êíèãà
Âñåãî ïðîñìîòðîâ:
Ïîñåòèòåëåé ñåãîäíÿ: 21