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MoRCE-Net 4 th Annual Conference, 25-27 January 2016, Marrakech, Morocco Reading: A Key to Independent Learning, Creativity and Personal Development Promoting Learner-Centeredness Through Engaging and Energizing Reading and Vocabulary Activities Renata Bobakova, English Language Fellow, Ibn Zohr University, Agadir Activities [Odd One Out] Read a text out loud. Have students follow the text closely & on occasion switch a word for a word that students see. Students can underline, circle, or highlight that word. Use words close in meaning (yellow instead of blue; good instead of pleasant, repeat instead of say again, etc.). [Dear Abby] Look for Dear Abby column on the Internet for inspiration. Write a letter based on your students’ level. Have students read, analyze & then discuss the letter. Ask them to come up with several solutions & pieces of advice to help the writer of the letter. This can be done in pairs or groups. [Reading Sprints] Students read a text in a certain amount of timefor example 4 minutes and mark how far they get in that time. When they are finished, ask them to read the same text, but this time they have to read it in 3 minutes, then 2 minutes, & 1 minute. Finally, have them read it once again in 4 minutes. [Subtitled Movies] Choose a short movie for students to watch. Make sure the movie comes with subtitles. Prepare a handout with questions about the movie. Play the movie for the students without sound. Students read subtitles & answer the questions, the answers to which they compare to each other. [Group Summaries] Give students a text with each paragraph numbered. Give each group one paragraph to summarize on a piece of paper. Give each summary a letter. Hang the summaries around the room. Have students walk around & match summaries with appropriate paragraphs. [Newspaper Treasure Hunt] Distribute old newspapers to students. In pairs or groups, ask them to look for the following: a name, flaw, quality, caricature, classified ad, notice for a movie, country, actor, singer, politician, animal, meal, clothing, weather forecast, city, bizarre news, sport, etc. [Reading With Action] Students work with a text they have already read. They have to read it according to your instructionswhisper it, read it very slowly or very fast, or pretend they are reading it to their grandma, wife/husband, cousin, while standing at a bus station or dancing at a party, or sing or cry it, etc. This can be done in pairs, groups, or as a class activity. [Reading With Emotion] Draw a remote control on the whiteboard. On each button, write an emotion (sad, happy, angry, irritable, scared, disappointed, surprised, jealous, etc.). Flash a laser penor a flashlighton any of the emotions. Students have to read the text while engaging in that emotion. This can be done in pairs, groups, or as a class activity. [Parroting] Put students in pairs and have them work with a text they have already read. One student reads the text one sentence at a time & the partner says each sentence out loud without looking at the text. [Fun Reading Drills] For word recognition practice & contests, ask students to read the text to each other or in front of the class right to left, top to bottom, every other word, zigzag style, etc. [Reading Bingo] Students pick 7 to 10 words to circle in the text they have previously read. Read random sentences from the text out loud. Pause after each sentence. If students hear a word they have circled, they cross it out. If they are the first one to cross out all of their words, they shout out ‘Bingo!’ & they win. [Story/Text Rewriting] Students quietly read a short text three times. Read the text out loud to students two times. Have students read the text out loud to each other one time. Have students write the text with their partners from memory, ideally word by word. Reward the text that most resembles the original. [TV News] Prepare slips of paper with either real or imaginary TV news (or have students write the news). Prepare as many slips as there are students in class if possible. Have students memorize & read the news out loud to the class pretending to be a TV newsreader. [Traffic Lights] Draw two traffic lights (red & green) & put them on the walls. Students listen to statements about the text they have read, one at a time. If they think the statement is true, they walk to the green light. If they think it is false, they walk to the red light. [Upside Down Reading] Students work in pairs. They hold the text upside down & race to read through it. They can then switch partners & read once more. [Stand Up Upon Hearing…] Tell students you will read a text out loud. When they hear an adjective, a modal verb, a preposition, etc., they have to stand up. [Punctuation Ban] Students stand up & read the text one word & one student at a time. When a punctuation [Jokes] Each student gets a different joke. Students read & try to memorize their jokes. They form inner &

Promoting Learner-Centeredness Through Engaging and Energizing Reading and Vocabulary Activities, Renata Bobak

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Page 1: Promoting Learner-Centeredness Through Engaging and Energizing Reading and Vocabulary Activities, Renata Bobak

MoRCE-Net 4th Annual Conference, 25-27 January 2016, Marrakech, Morocco Reading: A Key to Independent Learning, Creativity and Personal Development

Promoting Learner-Centeredness Through Engaging and Energizing Reading and Vocabulary Activities

Renata Bobakova, English Language Fellow, Ibn Zohr University, Agadir

Activities

[Odd One Out] Read a text out loud. Have students follow the text closely & on occasion switch a word for a word that students see. Students can underline, circle, or highlight that word. Use words close in meaning (yellow instead of blue; good instead of pleasant, repeat instead of say again, etc.).

[Dear Abby] Look for Dear Abby column on the Internet for inspiration. Write a letter based on your students’ level. Have students read, analyze & then discuss the letter. Ask them to come up with several solutions & pieces of advice to help the writer of the letter. This can be done in pairs or groups.

[Reading Sprints] Students read a text in a certain amount of time—for example 4 minutes and mark how far they get in that time. When they are finished, ask them to read the same text, but this time they have to read it in 3 minutes, then 2 minutes, & 1 minute. Finally, have them read it once again in 4 minutes.

[Subtitled Movies] Choose a short movie for students to watch. Make sure the movie comes with subtitles. Prepare a handout with questions about the movie. Play the movie for the students without sound. Students read subtitles & answer the questions, the answers to which they compare to each other.

[Group Summaries] Give students a text with each paragraph numbered. Give each group one paragraph to summarize on a piece of paper. Give each summary a letter. Hang the summaries around the room. Have students walk around & match summaries with appropriate paragraphs.

[Newspaper Treasure Hunt] Distribute old newspapers to students. In pairs or groups, ask them to look for the following: a name, flaw, quality, caricature, classified ad, notice for a movie, country, actor, singer, politician, animal, meal, clothing, weather forecast, city, bizarre news, sport, etc.

[Reading With Action] Students work with a text they have already read. They have to read it according to your instructions—whisper it, read it very slowly or very fast, or pretend they are reading it to their grandma, wife/husband, cousin, while standing at a bus station or dancing at a party, or sing or cry it, etc. This can be done in pairs, groups, or as a class activity.

[Reading With Emotion] Draw a remote control on the whiteboard. On each button, write an emotion (sad, happy, angry, irritable, scared, disappointed, surprised, jealous, etc.). Flash a laser pen—or a flashlight—on any of the emotions. Students have to read the text while engaging in that emotion. This can be done in pairs, groups, or as a class activity.

[Parroting] Put students in pairs and have them work with a text they have already read. One student reads the text one sentence at a time & the partner says each sentence out loud without looking at the text.

[Fun Reading Drills] For word recognition practice & contests, ask students to read the text to each other or in front of the class right to left, top to bottom, every other word, zigzag style, etc.

[Reading Bingo] Students pick 7 to 10 words to circle in the text they have previously read. Read random sentences from the text out loud. Pause after each sentence. If students hear a word they have circled, they cross it out. If they are the first one to cross out all of their words, they shout out ‘Bingo!’ & they win.

[Story/Text Rewriting] Students quietly read a short text three times. Read the text out loud to students two times. Have students read the text out loud to each other one time. Have students write the text with their partners from memory, ideally word by word. Reward the text that most resembles the original.

[TV News] Prepare slips of paper with either real or imaginary TV news (or have students write the news). Prepare as many slips as there are students in class if possible. Have students memorize & read the news out loud to the class pretending to be a TV newsreader.

[Traffic Lights] Draw two traffic lights (red & green) & put them on the walls. Students listen to statements about the text they have read, one at a time. If they think the statement is true, they walk to the green light. If they think it is false, they walk to the red light.

[Upside Down Reading] Students work in pairs. They hold the text upside down & race to read through it. They can then switch partners & read once more.

[Stand Up Upon Hearing…] Tell students you will read a text out loud. When they hear an adjective, a modal verb, a preposition, etc., they have to stand up.

[Punctuation Ban] Students stand up & read the text one word & one student at a time. When a punctuation

[Jokes] Each student gets a different joke. Students read & try to memorize their jokes. They form inner &

Page 2: Promoting Learner-Centeredness Through Engaging and Energizing Reading and Vocabulary Activities, Renata Bobak

MoRCE-Net 4th Annual Conference, 25-27 January 2016, Marrakech, Morocco Reading: A Key to Independent Learning, Creativity and Personal Development

mark appears, the student who gets it has to sit down. The last student standing is the winner.

outer circle & either retell or read the jokes to their partners.

[Mimed Reading] Students work in pairs and with a story they have previously read. One student reads the story one sentence at a time. Their partner stands up & mimes each sentence out.

[Human Text] Divide the class into groups. Each group gets a text cut into paragraphs. Students stand up to create a human story to show the order of the paragraphs & compare it with other groups.