Showing posts with label susan boyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label susan boyle. Show all posts

Life is no bed of roses, disappointment as an EFL lesson

bed of rosesIf you and your students have been following the Susan Boyle saga (and did the lesson plan) then you'll know that she didn't win the Britain's Got Talent contest last week.

It's disappointing to fail, however, in many respects perhaps it was for the best. Susan's suffering from exhaustion and the pressure may well have been too much if she'd won.

And I'm still very much looking forward to buying her CD!

Have your students ever failed at anything?

Have your students ever been horribly disappointed?

Do they know other people who've tried to do something, who put their whole hearts in but didn't reach their objective?

No doubt.

rosebedLife is not a bed of roses and we don't always achieve the goals we set for ourselves. In many respects, this might the reason the world loves Susan Boyle so much.

About 4 years ago I decided that I would finally get on with living my dream, since I was a kid, of being a movie-maker.

I told my bosses that I needed 3 months off work and went to live in a friend's cottage in Virginia, where I sat and typed 'til my fingers bled - from the crack of dawn to very, very late in the evenings.

Life on Purpose was the final product: a 120 page screenplay, action adventure - Matrix meets Von Trier - and was about a 40 year old man who was dissatisfied with life, wife and family. He ended up in a labyrinth World of the Gods and had to make his way out through a convoluted karmic untangling, ultimately discovering his destiny.

Despite interest, it didn't sell, sigh, so nowadays I teach dogme-style instead and write teaching materials and blogs, LOL!

Would you like to turn this theme of disappointment into a lesson with your students?

Pre-task
Ensure they've kept up2date on the Susan B saga - multiple links here. Send this link via email.

In-class
1. Write the word disappointment on the board. On 4 brainstorming branches, write
  • ways we express disappointment and regret
  • things that people fail at
  • phrases of sympathy & empathy
  • phrases of encouragement and motivation
Elicit as much as possible, supplying a few of your own.

2. Go into story-telling mode, sharing a personal story of your own failure at doing something important - don't supply too many details or wrap it up with the positive outcome. Stop short, perhaps 85% of the story and then let them ask you questions.

3. Accept your students' natural oh, I'm sorries, other empathy noises and their encouragements to fall down 7 times, get up 8.

Answer back naturally as if with a group of friends. You can occasionally glance at the board encouraging through your body language that they should be using some of the phrases and expressions there.

Don't overly correct their English at this stage.

4. Now ask your students what grammar structures you used to tell the story, list these on the board.

5. Then ask them to write the following lists:
  • 3 personal, professional or academic disappointments
  • 2 disappointments of someone in their friendship circle or families
  • 2 disappointments of anyone famous (entertainer, movie star etc)

6. Divide your students into small intimate groups, 3 - 6 members each.

7. Encourage them to work in turns, choosing a disappointment they feel comfortable sharing with each other - they'll have ones that are private and others not connected directly to themselves so if you have students who'd, for personal or cultural reasons, prefer to talk in the 3rd person, they won't be left out.

In my own experience, however, students can easily fill a lesson just talking about themselves ;-).


8. Make sure they are using the phrases you brainstormed at the beginning of the lesson in natural context. Circulate, correcting language. Feedback.

susan boyleTo keep a copy of this lesson tip, simply click on the title (so that only this page is open) then go down to the green eco-safe badge and click to email or print it.

But before you dash off, now I've told you my terrible disappointment of not being an award winning screenwriter, want to share any of your own as-of-yet non achievements?


Useful links related to this posting:
The price of water in airports, anger in the EFL classroom
The role of pride in the classroom

Best,
Karenne
p.s. hat tip to woodcutter for prompting me to get on with writing a follow-up posting dealing with Susan B's loss.

The Susan Boyle EFL Video Lesson

duckWhat is your secret ambition?

If you could go back in time, do something else or be someone else what would you do? What do you still hope to achieve before you die?

Susan Boyle, a Scottish, unemployed 47 year woman just stumbled into fame and fell into the hearts of millions.

By taking part in ITV's 'Britain's Got Talent' competition she showed us that ducklings can still become swans, that dreams must never ever be given up on.

She strode on to the stage with chutzpah, took the jeers from the crowd and with her head held high opened her mouth. The sound that came out made my stomach flip and tears prickle at my eyes.

- I joined her Facebook Fan club.

- I worried about the consequences of her new fame.

- I thought about her cat.

- A friend gave me a play-by-playback of her choice expressions, perfectly imitating her accent.

- I spent way too many hours creating a lesson plan for our students.

Why?

Do they have dreams, goals, objectives they'd still like to accomplish? I bet they do. And I bet they'll love this:

No internet access/ laptop in class? Do A (extend with SimplyConversations AmbitionsAchievements set), then C + D in class and set B + E as post-task.

If you enjoyed using this lesson with your students don't forget to share it with colleagues, and of course, don't hesitate to let me know now what you think of Susan Boyle's performance - go on, tell me, how many times have you watched the video too?

Best,
Karenne

p.s Thanks muchly, Lisa, for helping me out with the editing!
Any possible errors, typos etc though are all mine - find any, do let me know.
thnx.

p.p.s If you like working with videos in the classroom, Jamie Keddie's TEFL clips is 'chocka' with great lessons.

p.p.p.s Here are the links to global teachers who have also been using the Susan Boyle saga in their classes and blogging about it, many different approaches and tips - definitely worth have a look at so you can continue extend the lesson or do something different:
  • Susana Canelo: http://endelvallesi.blogspot.com/2009/04/peoples-appearance_24.html
  • Natasa Grojic: http://lunas994.blogspot.com/2009/04/lets-have-susan-boyle-moment.html
  • Janet Abruzzo: http://civitaquana.blogspot.com/2009/05/susan-boyle-two-lesson-plans.html

Creative Commons License
The Susan Boyle EFL Lesson Plan by Karenne Sylvester is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
 

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