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PR1931E Year 1 English Speaking and Listening 1 Overview and Storytelling

PR1931E Year 1 English

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PR1931E Year 1 English. Speaking and Listening 1 Overview and Storytelling. My story. Discuss together. Discuss together. What are the key differences between oral and written narratives?. What is the importance of language. The structure of the course . The 3 modules The assignment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PR1931E  Year 1 English

PR1931E Year 1 English

Speaking and Listening 1Overview and Storytelling

Page 2: PR1931E  Year 1 English

My story

Discuss together

• What is the importance of language

Discuss together

• What are the key differences between oral and written narratives?

Page 3: PR1931E  Year 1 English

The structure of the course

• The 3 modules• The assignment• The directed tasks

Page 4: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Objectives of today’s session

• You will consider your own experience of teaching and learning of English and be introduced to key strands of the subject

• You will consider the place of storytelling in language development

• You will learn storytelling games and how to use a story map to support crafting of vocabulary and sentence choice

• You will be introduced to talk boxes

Page 5: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Models of oracy

• MacLure (1994) identified four models of oracy

• Personal growth• Cultural transformation• Improvement of learning• Functional competence

Page 6: PR1931E  Year 1 English

The importance of oracy

• Vygotsky (1978) drew attention to:• The cognitive benefits that interactive talk

gives to young children• Bruner (1983) highlighted:• The role of the adult in scaffolding children’s

learning through talk

Page 7: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Reflection

• What is your experience of speaking and listening?

• How do you feel about being listened to?• How do you feel about speaking to others

(groups, individuals, friends, strangers etc)• What are the connections with children?

Page 8: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Oracy is as important as Reading and Writing

• We divide English into three language modes – Reading, Writing and Speaking and Listening

• Which is the most important?

Page 9: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Stories

• Tell a partner -

• A story you tell a close friend• A story that is frequently told in your family

household(s)• A story told by the nation

Page 10: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Stories giving objects meaning

• Using your object/photo you have brought form small groups and tell each other the story attached to it

Page 11: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Our own experience of telling stories – the importance of oral narrative

• Humans experience their world as story. We define our identity through stories – our story

• We apply narrative to everything to impose meaning. Narrative is a primary act of mind

• Oral narrative is of fundamental importance to humans and their identities

Page 12: PR1931E  Year 1 English

How does this relate to the classroom? Storytelling

• Teachers have found that oral story telling in classrooms has been very successful

• Resources such as Storysacks support oracy• Learning how to story-make is an important

process for young children• Little Red Hen

Page 13: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Little Red Hen Reception Storytelling

Page 14: PR1931E  Year 1 English
Page 15: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Monkey See Monkey Do

Page 16: PR1931E  Year 1 English

The storytelling and story-making approach involves:

• learning and repeating oral stories • building the confidence to develop them

through telling • extending this development into writing • creating 'new' stories orally as a preparation

and rehearsal for writing.

Page 17: PR1931E  Year 1 English

The development of storytelling

• Storytelling is built through a 3-step sequence:• Imitation: straight retelling of learned stories. • Innovation: developing, extending and

changing elements of a story. • Invention: creating a 'new' story.

Page 18: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Benefits of using the storytelling and story-making technique:

• Builds valuable banks of language and narrative patterning which can very productively be incorporated into later writing.

• Builds confidence to create 'original' stories and to rehearse them orally or mentally (although even these often draw on or 'magpie', previously learned or read ideas).

Page 19: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Reflection: What I have I learnt?

• That S&L underpins and is as important as reading and writing

• The we experience our world and ourselves and others through story

• Some ways of encouraging S&L in class

Page 20: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Follow up

• Read PNS Storytelling by Pie Corbett on learning network

• Look at some of the books recommended in the next few slides on storytelling

• Learn the Little Red Hen yourself off by heart

Page 21: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Bibliography• Britton, J. (1970) Language and Learning, London, Penguin• Bruner, J. (1983) Actual Minds, Possible Worlds,

Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press• MacLure, M (1994) “Talking In Class; Four Rationales for

the rise of oracy in the UK” in Stierer, B. and Maybin, J. (Eds.) Language and Literacy Learning in Educational Practice, Clevedon, Multilingual Matters

• Rose, J. (2005)Rose Review interim report, London DfES• Vygotsky, L.V. (1978) Mind in Society, Cambridge MA

Harvard University Press

Page 22: PR1931E  Year 1 English

Useful books on Storytelling

The Art of Storytelling for Teachers and PupilsElizabeth Grugeon and Paul Garder

Speaking Out: Storytelling and Creative Drama for ChildrenJack Zipes