Course Profile   Beginning Communications in English, ESL Level 1, open, Public

 

Unit #2:  A Time For All Seasons

 

Activity 1 | Activity 2 | Activity 3 | Activity 4 | Activity 5 | Activity 6

 

Time: 20 hours

Unit Developers: Jane Campbell, Hazel Excell, Denise Gordon, Jane Hill, Elaine Iannuzziello, Paula Markus, Eleanor Minuk, Jane Sims, Ero Siouga, Betty Ann Taylor.

 

Development Date:  April, 1999

 

Unit Description

 

In this unit, students will acquire essential English language structures to describe the passage of time, the seasons, and celebrations in Canada. Students will be able to locate and extract information in reference materials and from media works. Through studying Canada’s common customs and holidays, students will demonstrate the ability to use simple English sentences in oral and written communication, including personal likes and dislikes.

 

Strands and Expectations:

 

        Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.01X, AORV.02X, AORV.04X

Specific Expectations: AOR1.01X, AOR1.02X, AOR1.04X, AOR1.05X, AOR2.01X, AOR2.02X, AOR2.03X, AOR3.06X, AOR4.01X, AOR4.03X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.01X, AREV.02X, AREV.03X, AREV.04X

      Specific Expectations: ARE1.04X, ARE2.01X, ARE3.04X, ARE3.05X, ARE4.02X

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.01X, AWRV.02X

Specific Expectations: AWR1.01X, AWR1.02X, AWR1.04X, AWR2.01X, AWR2.04X, AWR2.05X, AWR2.06X, AWR2.07X

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations:  ASCV. 01X, ASCV.02X

      Specific Expectations: ASC1.01X, ASC1.03X, ASC2.04X, ASC2.05X, ASC2.07X

 

Activity Titles ( Time + Sequence )

 

Activity 1

What is the Date?

4 hours

Activity 2

What Time is It?

3 hours

Activity 3

Weather and Seasons

4 hours

Activity 4

The International Weather Scene

3 hours

Activity 5

What are you Wearing?

2 hours

Activity 6

Celebrations

4 hours

 

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     knowledge of the English alphabet and ability to copy English words and phrases 

     familiarity with the school and school routine

     an initial vocabulary of words related to identity, the classroom, the school, the family, the home and some methods of transportation

     awareness of the question and answer language pattern and a beginning comprehension of simple verb tenses and personal pronouns

 

Unit Planning Notes

 

Most students will have mastered the critical skills required for this unit such as telling time, filling in a calendar, and discussing celebrations in their first language. To enhance cognitive development students should be given opportunities to use their first language and then explain their ideas in English. In this unit, using their first language, students will make a birthday or greeting card, write about a celebration in their country of origin and contribute to the creation of a picture dictionary of clothing. To make the picture dictionary more meaningful for the students, arrangements could be made ahead of time to have representatives from the class present this book to a much younger class at a nearby elementary school.

 

Teachers will wish to make arrangements for the class to have access to computers; students will be creating spread sheets and entering information from the Internet into selected fields.

 

For practice in listening to other voices, teachers may wish to ask friends or colleagues to tape scripted weather reports. In the resources there are listed many picture and simple story books. These books are available at many public libraries. Reading stories to beginning language learners is an important teaching strategy to foster literacy skills in English.

 

Teaching and Learning Strategies

 

Think/Pair/Share, language experience stories, worksheets (fill in the blanks, matching, word search, cloze, scrambled words, modelling language patterns), small group work, use of overhead projector, guided writing, pre reading and post reading exercises, guest visits, audio tapes, visual materials, information technology, word processing, Internet searches, activity centres, teacher read-alouds, silent reading, viewing videos, community surveys, making a collage, language games, student created books, journals, sharing languages and cultures.

 

Assessment/Evaluation Techniques

 

   Activity                    Type                            Tool                                 Categories

Activity 1

Formative

Summative

Class Birthday Chart

Vocabulary Quiz

Comm/Application

Knowledge

Activity 2

Formative

Summative

Dictation Morning Routine

Time Vocabulary Quiz

Know/Thinking

Knowledge

Activity 3

Formative

Summative

Seasons Collage

Dates/Time/Weather Test

Think/Comm/App

Know/Thinking

Activity 4

Summative

Formative

Summative

Postcard Task

Computer Skills Mastery

Weather Spread Sheet

Know/Think/Comm/App

Know/Think/App

Know/Think/App

Activity 5

Summative

Summative

Formative

Multilingual Book Pages

Clothing Poster

Self-Evaluation of Group Work Skills

Know/Think/Comm

Know/Comm/App

Comm/Thinking

Activity 6

Formative

Summative

First Language Paragraph

Graphic Organizer

Know/Comm

Know/Think/Comm/App

 

Expectations which are assessed through the assessment tools for each activity are denoted by the iconic symbol < in the activity expectation lists.

 

Resources

 

Acosta, Joan. Canada, Coast to Coast, Second Edition. Toronto: ITP Nelson Canada,  1999.

Acosta, Joan. Coast to Coast Reader. Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1987.

Bailey, Cindy. Start up Multiculturalism. Markham: Pembroke Press, 1991.

Berish, Lynda, and Thibaudeau, Sandra. Canadian Concepts Books 1 and 2. Toronto: Prentice Hall Allyn and Bacon, 1997.

Berish, Lynda; Thibandeau,Sandra; and Wilson, Maria De Rosa. Grammar Connections 1. Toronto: Prentice Hall Regents, 1995.

Carver, Tina Kasloff; Fotinos, Sandra Douglas; and Cooper, Clarice. A Canadian Conversation Book One. 2nd ed. Toronto: Prentice Hall Allyn and Bacon,1997.

Carver, Tina Kasloff; Fotinos, Sandra Douglas; and Olson, C.K. A Writing Book, English in Everyday Life. New Jersey: Prentice Hall Regent 1998.

Chabot, John. 101 Illustrated Crossword Puzzles. Virgil, Ontario: Full Blast Productions, 1994. (These materials are reproducible)

Chabot, John. Thematic Activities for Beginners in English. Virgil, Ontario: Full Blast Productions.

Grennan, Maggie. The Canadian Oxford Picture Dictionary, Beginner’s Workbook, Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Hadfield, Jill. Elementary Communication Games. England: Addison Wesley Longman, 1984.

Langevin, D., Macchia, J.P., Ladner, T., and Offenhim, S. When’s the Next Holiday? 2nd ed. Toronto: Canadian Resources for ESL, 1996. (These materials are reproducible)

Lipszyc, Carol. People Express. Don Mills: Oxford University Press, 1996.

Metropolitan Toronto School Board. Great Beginnings: ESL in the Junior Division, Suggestions for Classroom Teachers, 1990. (Now the Toronto District School Board)

Molinsky , Steven, and Bliss, Bill. Line By Line Book 1 . Toronto: Prentice Hall, 1983.

Molinsky , Steven, and Bliss, Bill. Side by Side Secondary School Edition, Book 1. Toronto: Prentice Hall, 1997.

Nishio, Yvonne Wong. Longman ESL Literacy, Second Edition.  White Plains, NY: Addison Wesley Longman, 1998.

O’Malley, J. Michael and Lorraine Valdez Pierce. Authentic Assessment for English Language Learners: Practical Approaches for Teachers.  Addison Wesley, 1997.

Parnwell, E.C. and Grennan, Maggie. The Canadian Oxford Picture Dictionary, New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.

 

Multicultural Calendars

Multicultural Calendar. Creative Cultural Communications, 99 Harbour Square, Suite 2108, Toronto, M5J 2H2. (Website : www.multicultural calendar.com)

 

Multifaith Calendar Distributed by Unity Arts, 1-800-465-3287

 

Video

Seasons. Dan Gibson Productions. Solitudes, 1131A Leslie Street, Suite 500, Toronto, M3C 3L8. (416 510-2800).

 

Websites

www.multicultural calendar.com

HHTP://www.oise.utoronto.ca/~aweinrib/sle/esl.httml.  This website provides links to ESL professional development sites while offering  interestimg  activities for students.  Highlights include: Canadian Language Benchmark Literacy Assessments, Centre for Canadian Language Benchmarks, Computer Resources for ESL, TESL Ontario, TESL Canada, and Dave’s ESL Cafe.

 

 

Activity #1:  What is the date?

 

Time: 240 minutes

Description: The calendar, personal and national celebrations will be the vehicles for English language development in this activity. Students will practise simple questions and answers. They will create a birthday or greeting card for a friend using their first language. They will read short passages and be introduced to two national holidays in Canada. The grammatical focus will be reviewing the question and answer pattern and learning to use the simple past of the verb to be.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

        Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.01X*, AORV.02X*,

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.01X, AOR1.02X, AOR1.04X*, AOR1.05X, AOR2.01X,

                                             AOR2.02X, AOR3.06X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: ARE3.05X*

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.02X<

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.02X, AWR1.04X*, AWR2.01X, AWR2.05X*, AWR2.06X,

                                            AWR2.07X

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: ASC1.01X*, ASC1.03X*

 

Planning Notes

 

     Materials required for this activity include a calendar, student agendas, a template of a calendar month on an overhead, an overhead projector, flash cards, construction paper, markers and a draw program on a computer. 

     Prepare a set of flash cards of the names of the months.

     Complementary language practice activities can be found in Canadian Concepts 1, Grammar Connections 1, A Canadian Conversation Book, Elementary Communication Games, Great Beginnings, Word by Word Beginning Workbook, Canadian Oxford Picture Dictionary Beginner’s Workbook.

     This activity includes reference to students’ birthdays.  Occasionally, some students may be uncomfortable with revealing or talking about their birthdays. In some cultures, the concept of celebrating a birthday is viewed differently. Teachers will need to be aware of and sensitive to these possibilities.

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     names of the days of the week and numbers

     simple sentences and questions using the verb to be

     reading headings and filling in a chart

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

1.   Provide students with a blank master of a calendar month. Using an overhead fill in the names of days of the week, number the squares consecutively and place the name of the month at the top. Review the names of the days of the week and review numbers for students who are still not familiar with this vocabulary. Teach the names of the twelve months. Select listening and speaking activities from a selection of beginner ESL texts to practice this vocabulary. Also introduce the words, yesterday, today and  tomorrow and teach the simple past of the verb to be. Model: Yesterday was Tuesday. Friday I was sick. etc. Students will do a short vocabulary quiz to show their mastery of the vocabulary of the calendar.

 

2.   Using a calendar for the year, record students’ birth dates. Review the  ordinal numbers taught during orientation to the timetable and teach the rest of the ordinal numbers to thirty-first.  Have students form sentences stating their month and day of birth. In small groups have students complete a chart listing the names and birth dates of each member in the group in calendar order, January to December.  Model the question forms: When is your birthday? and How old are you? This chart will be assessed for accuracy and completeness. Students might write a simple journal entry describing their last birthday celebration. Once again, be aware of cultural differences in valuing the celebration of birthdays.

 

3.   To reinforce the continuing validity of the students’ first languages, have students make a birthday or other type of greeting card for a fellow student or friend. If there is a computer in the room, some students might like to use a draw program to complete this task.

 

4.   Using the concept of personal birthdays, present the concept of a national birthday. Give students a short passage about Canada’s birthday; such a passage can be found in beginner ESL reading texts. (Refer to Unit 4, Canada Coast to Coast  Read the passage aloud while the students follow silently. Ask students to identify words they do not understand and try to infer the meaning from  the text. Have the class read the passage together and then ask for individual volunteers. Next, ask specific concrete questions about the passage such as : When did Canada become a country? How many colonies joined together to form Canada? etc.

After the students have read the passage several times and can answer the content questions accurately,  convert the passage to a cloze activity to reinforce vocabulary.

 

5.   See Appendix #1: Queen Victoria’s Birthday. This passage may be used to reinforce the reading strategies taught through Canada’s Birthday. To convert this to a cloze exercise take out key words and provide students with a list of vocabulary to choose from. The passage could also be used as a quiz.

 

Assessment/ Evaluation Techniques

 

1.   Chart listing names and birth dates for completeness and accuracy  (Formative)

2.   Vocabulary quiz relating to reading passages (Summative)

 

Accommodations/Special Needs

 

     have a supply of picture dictionaries to assist visual learners

     scribe for individual students as necessary

     underwriting, overwriting, copying words for literacy students

     tape Canada’s Birthday and Queen Victoria’s Birthday passages for listening centre

     Appendix 1 may be used for either remediation or enrichment

     students might wish to make monthly templates on the classroom computer

     Longman ESL Literacy, Unit 4 contains literacy activities based on the calendar.

 

Resources

 

Acosta, Joan. Canada, Coast to Coast, Toronto: ITP Nelson Canada, 1999

 

 

Activity #2 :  What Time is It?

 

 

Time: 180  minutes

Description: Students will learn to express time in English; they will learn language associated with daily routines and write a teacher-directed paragraph. Students will be guided through stages such as finding appropriate words, writing sentences and then linking them to produce a complete text. They will also practice listening to times or schedules in recorded messages. The grammatical focus will be reviewing the third person singular form of common verbs.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

      Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.01X, AORV.02X*, AORV.04X

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.04X, AOR1.05X*, AOR2.01X, AOR2.02X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.02X*

      Specific Expectations: ARE1.04X*, ARE2.01X

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.02X<

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.01X, AWR1.02X*, AWR2.01X, AWR2.05X, AWR2.06X, 

                                             AWR2.07X

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.02X

      Specific Expectations: ASC2.04X

 

Planning Notes

 

     It is possible to purchase a rubber stamp of a blank clock face from suppliers of educational materials.

     To reinforce listening skills, students will be calling locations which offer a prerecorded message. Many cities now have access to Talking Yellow Pages which provide a wealth of amusing or practical information. However, any source that would have a prerecorded message may be used. Choose a site, phone ahead and transcribe the message. Make a modified cloze exercise based on this script. Select other sites for students to call.

     Complementary language practice activities on telling time can be found in Canadian Concepts 1, Canadian Concepts 2, Grammar Connections 1, A Canadian Conversation Book, Elementary Communication Games, Word by Word Beginning Workbook, Canadian Oxford Picture Dictionary Beginner’s Workbook.

     Materials required for this activity include a clock or a demonstration clock with movable hands (a reproducible one is available in Longman ESL Literacy), a variety of pictures of people performing daily tasks in the home, file cards, multiple drawings of clock faces, telephone books or newspapers which list places in the community. Pictures used for the daily routine task should represent the cultural diversity of Canadian society.

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     knowledge of numbers in English

     recognize verbs used in daily routines

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

 

1.   Teach students how to tell time in English including time vocabulary: o’clock, morning,  noon, afternoon, evening, night, midnight, dawn, alarm clock, wake up, sleep, etc. Using a variety of oral and written activities and language games from beginner ESL texts, have students practice this vocabulary. To assess acquisition of time vocabulary, give a short quiz matching times to pictures, telling the time on clock faces, etc.

 

2.   Move on to daily routines and reintroduce simple action verbs, present tense, which were used in Unit 1, Activity #5. Divide students into small groups and have students match pictures to written sentences; then students write the sentences in the correct order. Cloze passages, fill in the blanks, matching times in column A with appropriate verbs in column B; there are many ways to practise these skills.

 

3.   Read The Day of Ahmed’s Secret aloud to the class. Discuss how each day he had a set routine. Brainstorm the morning routine of the students. Teacher will record the routines on the board in point form. Have students number the entries in chronological order. Demonstrate a time line visual, using the steps in the morning routine.

Students then compose sentences in the third person using the points on the board. The class then puts the sentences in paragraph form using such words as first, next, after, then, finally, to establish chronological order. Students then copy the paragraph into their notebooks and prepare for a short dictation of a routine. This will be written in the next  class.

 

4.   Once students are familiar with telling time, discuss Daylight Savings Time,  Standard Time and time zones. Students can practise this concept by playing games devised by the teacher or using exercises found in beginner ESL texts. An excellent story book to read to students at this time is Nine O’clock Lullaby by Marilyn Singer. This book depicts what various people are doing at one moment in real time across the time zones of the globe.

 

5.   Introduce this next strategy by reading a transcribed phone message to the class. Then distribute the modified cloze exercise of the transcribed message. After students have listened to the message read again and have them complete the cloze exercise. Choose one site in the Talking Yellow Pages section of the telephone book under Entertainment. Explain to the students how to use the phone to reach the site and ask students to listen for the specific starting times of a film or television program, etc. Have all students phone the same site and compare information in class the next day. To practice this listening activity, students could phone different sites during the next week or so. Information gathered may be added to the Community Directory begun in Unit 1, Activity # 6.

 

Assessment / Evaluation Techniques

 

     dictation of passage describing morning routine of a student (Formative)

     quiz on time vocabulary (Summative)

 

Accommodations/Special Needs

 

     as enrichment, students could call other locations in the community to discover opening and closing hours, times of theatre showings etc.

     scribe personal routines of students who are not yet able to write in English

     tape the two story books for practice at the listening centre

     literacy learners could complete a teacher made pattern book with the pattern At seven o’clock I...At nine o’clock I...

     Longman ESL Literacy, Unit 3, contains literacy activities related to numbers and telling time.

 

Resources

 

Anno, Mitsumasa, et al. All in a Day. New York: Philomel Books, 1986.  Another good read aloud.

Heide, Florence, and Gilliland, Judith. The Day of Ahmed’s Secret. New York: Lothrop, Lee and Shepard Books.

Singer, Marilyn. Nine O’clock Lullaby. Harper Trophy, 1991.

 

 

Activity #3:  Weather and Seasons

 

Time: 240 minutes

Description: Students will focus on weather as a vehicle for English language learning. They will view a video, practise listening to weather announcements from the radio and gather information from a short televised weather report. They will learn to transfer and record information on a graph. They will review the material at activity centres to prepare for a major class test. The grammatical focus will be teaching present continuous verbs and adjectives associated with weather and seasons.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

      Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.01X, AORV.02X*, AORV.04X*

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.05X, AOR2.01X*, AOR2.02X, AOR4.01X*, AOR4.03X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.04X*

      Specific Expectations: ARE1.04X, ARE2.01X, ARE4.02X*

     

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.04X*

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.02X*

      Specific Expectations: ASC2.05X*

 

Planning Notes

 

     Preview a video such as Seasons which depicts the four seasons in Canada and has very little narration.

     Prepare several audio tapes of weather forecasts. To help students get used to listening to a variety of voices, ask colleagues or friends to tape one or two of these.

     Arrange to have access to a television to view the weather forecasts for several days.

     The materials required for this activity include a template of a temperature grid, a selection of pictures depicting the four seasons, and a collection of graphics depicting weather terminology such as sunny, partly cloudy, etc. These can be obtained from newspaper weather maps.

     An outdoor thermometer could be a useful aid in this activity.

     Complementary language practice activities on weather and seasons can be found in Canadian Concepts 1, Canadian Concepts 2, Grammar Connections 1, Great Beginnings, 101 Illustrated Crossword Puzzles, Word by Word Beginning Workbook, Oxford Canadian Picture Dictionary Beginner’s Workbook, A Canadian Conversation Book.

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     vocabulary associated with telling time and daily routines

     mastery of the vocabulary of numbers

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

 

1.   Prepare students for a video showing how the weather in Canada changes during the year. Introduce the concept of seasons. Watch a video showing the four seasons in Canada. Divide the class in four groups and have each group create and label a collage of their drawings and illustrations on one page depicting a season for the picture dictionary. Provide samples of collages from other subject areas to model expectations for the students.

2.   Teach the vocabulary and graphics associated with weather and seasons: temperature, sunny, cloudy, snow, rainfall, partly sunny, winds, windchill, freezing, Fahrenheit, Celsius, degrees,  etc. Have students match graphics to  adjectives describing the weather. Such exercises are found in many beginning level ESL texts. For the next week or two record the daily temperature on  a classroom graph. Students should have their own copy in their notebooks. Also record the daily weather on a calendar each day.

3.   Using prerecorded audio tapes of weather reports, have students practise answering questions based on these presentations. View a televised weather report with students; elicit key information orally after the report. The following day provide students with a chart to be completed while they watch the program again.

4.   To practise the vocabulary and skills in this section of the unit and to prepare for a test, have students complete the following six activities at centres set up around the classroom:

           answer questions based on audio-recorded weather reports

           complete a cloze exercise on a passage of writing about the weather

           accurately record ten temperatures on a grid

           draw faces on clocks to record listed times

           match weather graphics to appropriate vocabulary

           place sentences about a daily routine in order

5.   The day before the actual test, give a mock test to the class. Review the kinds of questions that will be included and provide samples of all questions and what the assessment criteria will be.

 

Accommodations/Special Needs

 

     for more advanced students, rotate a globe to explain how seasons are determined and teach scientific terms such as: equinox, winter and summer solstice

     in small groups, have students write and tape a weather forecast for the next day

     have a written script of the prerecorded audio tapes at the listening centre

     use a beginner literacy text such as People Express , Unit 7 to reinforce language structures

 

Assessment / Evaluation Techniques

 

1.   Test on dates, time and weather (Summative)

2.   Seasons collage (Formative)

 

Resources

 

Dillon, Leo and Diane. To Everything There is a Season. Toronto: The Blue Sky Press (a division of Scholastic), 1998. An illustrated read-aloud of the biblical verse.

Lipszyc, Carol. People Express. Don Mills: Oxford University Press, 1996.

Rucki, Ani. When the Earth Wakes. Toronto: Scholastic, 1998.  A simple and poetic passage through the seasons.

 

Video

Seasons. Dan Gibson Productions. Solitudes, 1131A Leslie Street, Suite 500, Toronto, M3C 3L8. (416 510-2800).

 

 

Activity #4:  The International Weather Scene

 

Time: 240  minutes

Description: Students will learn to describe the weather, read weather maps and locate information in lists. They will become familiar with terms such as air quality, UV readings and precipitation. They will write a short message about  the weather to a friend in another country and begin to edit their own compositions.

Using a spreadsheet students will record information located on the Internet. Students will also begin a list of careers associated with weather. The grammatical focus will be reviewing adjectives, learning to use the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives and beginning to learn to use the future tense.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

      Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.04X*

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.04X, AOR2.02X*, AOR2.03X*, AOR4.01X*

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.04X*

      Specific Expectations: ARE4.04X*

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.01X<

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.02X*, AWR1.04X, AWR2.05X*

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.01X*, ASCV.02X

      Specific Expectations: ASC1.03X*, ASC2.02X

 

Planning Notes

 

     Make arrangements to use computers with access to the Internet during this activity; since specific web sites tend to change from day to day, check a source such as the periodical Classroom Connect or use a search engine to locate a site before starting the lesson.

     Become familiar with making spreadsheets using three or four fields.

     Materials required for this activity include file cards for recording short messages, a copy of an international weather report (such as that found in a national paper), copies of Appendix 2. Composition Checklist and a spreadsheet program.

     Complementary language practice activities on weather and seasons are the same as in planning notes for Activity #3.

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     vocabulary of weather, numbers and  temperatures

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

 

1.   Photocopy an  international weather map and a list of temperatures in major cities around the world. Teach the vocabulary of the headings on  the weather report, e.g. precipitation, almanac, UV readings, air quality, etc. Review listening skills What is the temperature in ______? Introduce comparatives and superlatives: Where is the hottest place? Which is hotter? Model answers, hotter than and colder than.

 

2.   Give class a word search, crossword puzzle or other language game using weather vocabulary. Students will add to their Career List, begun in Unit 1, Activity #3, occupations pertaining to weather such as cartographer, meteorologist, announcer, forecaster, snowplow operator, Hydro repair person, etc.

 

3.   Using file cards, have students write a postcard to a friend describing the weather to-day. This card should then be addressed fully and correctly, using the skills learned in Unit 1, Activity #5. After the teacher models the text of a postcard, students must write a paragraph in complete sentences to describe the weather to their friends. This description should include their personal opinion of the weather. Before handing their postcards to the teacher, students should use the Composition checklist to edit their work. See Appendix 2.

 

4.   Introduce the future tense of the verb to be.  Model: The temperature in Halifax will be ..... Give students a worksheet with questions such as: What will the temperature be in Halifax on Monday? A possible journal topic may be a prediction of what the weather will be the next day.

 

5.   Select one of the Weather web sites and begin by researching the temperatures in Canada and moving on to temperatures in students’ countries of origin. Using a spreadsheet, set up fields for city, days of the week, average /mean temperature or other additional details. Students must record information in the correct field for several days.

 

Assessment / Evaluation Techniques

 

1.   Assessment of postcard task. See rubric in Appendix 3. (Summative)

2.   Mastery of spread sheet and skills associated with online literacy. (Formative)

3.   Assess spreadsheet (Summative)

 

Accommodations/Special Needs

 

     Students who are more computer literate should assist students with limited computer skills.

     Scribe for individual students as needed.

     For literacy students, bring in samples of written postcards to use as models.

     Literacy students can practice word recognition with large word cards and visuals.

 

Resources

 

Internet Sites

Weather Website: www.theweathernetwork.com

 

 

Activity #5:  What Are You Wearing?

 

Time: 120 minutes

Description: Students will develop language structures pertaining to clothing, especially seasonal clothing. They will become familiar with seasonal clothing safety issues such as frostbite, sunstroke, etc. Students will create a multilingual picture book and will practise descriptive writing. The grammatical focus will be on learning descriptive adjectives associated with clothing, and reviewing  present continuous verbs.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

      Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.02X*

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.04X*, AOR1.05X, AOR2.01X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.02X

      Specific Expectations: ARE2.01X

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.01X*, AWRV.02X

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.02X*, AWR2.07Xv<

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.01X, ASCV.02X*

      Specific Expectations: ASC1.02X*, ASC2.07X*

 

Planning Notes

 

     Materials required for this activity include: a Polaroid camera, clothing advertisements and catalogues, a scrap book, glue sticks and coloured pens.

     Some students may want to draw a picture of themselves rather than have their picture taken.

     Complementary language practice activities on clothing can be found in Canadian Concepts 1, Canadian Concepts 2, A Canadian Conversation Book, 101 Illustrated Crossword Puzzles, Word by Word Beginning Workbook, Oxford Canadian Picture Dictionary Beginners Workbook.

     A simple clothing related reading selection is in Canada, Coast to Coast, Unit 27: Teens Love These T-Shirts.

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     Use of present continuous

     Question and answer patterns

     Comparative and superlative forms of adjectives

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

 

1.   Have students make a multilingual clothing picture book. On each page there should be a picture of an article of clothing, its English name, and corresponding name(s) in the students’ first languages. This book could be a gift for the local elementary school.

 

2.   Using the Polaroid camera take a picture of the students in the room. Discuss descriptive words such as: colours, textures, materials etc. Use a matching exercise to reinforce descriptive adjectives, e.g. big, small, dark, light. Have each student compose a paragraph entitled: I Am Wearing...  When complete these paragraphs should be shared with writing partners. Collect the pictures, shuffle them and redistribute among the class. This time students will write a new paragraph in the third person, describing  what a classmate is wearing. When everyone is finished writing, students can make a poster which includes their own photograph or illustration, their paragraph and their classmate’s paragraph.

 

3.   Using two pictures, one of summer clothing and the other of winter attire, introduce the concepts of: sunstroke and frostbite. Have students label the necessary clothing and other items e.g. sun hats, sunglasses, sun screen, sandals, gloves, scarves, boots etc. to prevent these measures. Use exercises such as: Who Wears What at Work, and add professions to the list of careers.

 

4.   Divide students into small groups and provide a supposed budget of $100.00 to purchase winter clothing. The group must decide by negotiating on one set list of clothes. Before the activity begins, model polite forms of disagreement and the language of negotiation.  For example: I think. . . , Could we. . . . , How about . . . ? Students may also be reminded of the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives. Have students evaluate their performance by filling in a checklist of criteria that have been established beforehand in a class discussion. (See Appendix 4)

 

Assessment / Evaluation Techniques

 

1.   Pages in the multilingual picture book. (Summative)

2.   Posters: I Am Wearing . . . (Summative)

3.   Student evaluation of negotiating and group work skills. (Formative) (See Appendix 4)

 

Accommodation/Special Needs

     Do information gap activities and games to reinforce learning of clothing vocabulary such as a “Concentration” game with word cards of various clothing items.

     Do a TPR listening activity where students colour in line drawings of clothing items with different colours according to the teacher’s or a partner’s instructions.

     Scribe for individual students as needed.

     Literacy students practise word recognition with word cards and visuals.

     Create a “living Venn diagram” on the floor with 2 hula hoops. Students place visuals of actual items of clothing in the circles by classifying according to winter/summer, male/female, and other distinctions.

 

Resources

 

Duvall, Jill D. Ms. Moja Makes Beautiful Clothes. New York: Children’s Press, 1997.  Read aloud.

Feder, Jane.  Table, Chair, Bear: A Book in Many Languages.  Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1995.  Colourful example of a multilingual picture book.

Gilman, Phoebe. Something from Nothing. Toronto: Scholastic, 1992.  Patterned read aloud.

Hoban, Tana. Colors Everywhere. New York: Greenwillow Books, 1995.  Read aloud.

Lipszyc, Carol. People Express. Don Mills: Oxford University Press, 1996. Unit 10.

 

 

Activity #6:  Celebrations

 

Time: 240 minutes

Description: In this activity students will learn about Canadian celebrations and share information about celebrations in their countries of origin. They will review the language of time and dates. They will write in their first language and explain their writing in English. Additional time will be spent on this activity throughout the year as holidays occur.

 

Strands and Expectations

 

      Strand: Oral and Visual Communication

      Overall Expectations: AORV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: AOR1.04X*, AOR1.05X

 

      Strand: Reading

      Overall Expectations: AREV.03X*

      Specific Expectations: ARE3.02X*

 

      Strand: Writing

      Overall Expectations: AWRV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: AWR1.02X*

 

      Strand: Social and Cultural Competence

      Overall Expectations: ASCV.01X*

      Specific Expectations: ASC1.01X*, ASC1.03X*

 

Planning Notes

     Materials required for this activity include: having a calendar to record annual Canadian celebrations, multicultural calendars and translation dictionaries. The  Multifaith Calendar, is available from Unity Arts, phone: 1-800-465-3287

     Collect and display resources relating to holidays and celebrations around the world. (See resources.)

     A month by month generic calendar template can be found in Great Beginnings.

     Complementary language practice activities can be found in Canadian Concepts 1, Canadian Concepts 2, A Canadian Conversation Book, When’s The Next Holiday?

 

Prior Knowledge Required

 

     Vocabulary of time and dates

     Familiarity with paragraph format

 

Teaching/Learning Strategies

 

1.   Mark Canadian celebrations on the calendar beginning with New Year’ s Day and ending with Boxing Day. Include non statutory holidays such as June 21: First Nations Day, October 31: Hallowe’en, etc. Choose the next approaching holiday and discuss: date, symbols, clothes, customs, special foods, gifts  etc. that may be a part of this celebration. With the class develop a graphic organizer using these headings which students may then use with other celebrations.

2.   Using a variety of exercises such as those found in beginner ESL texts, have students list holiday names, match pictures to dates, and discuss in pairs the specific features of a number of Canadian holidays. Have students volunteer how national birthdays are celebrated in their country of origin or select the Canadian New Year and ask how and when the new year is celebrated around the world. Remember to ask what year is currently being celebrated. Record this information on a class poster.

3.   Post multicultural calendars on the wall and allow students time to look at them. Ask students to select a special day which is celebrated in their country. Give students two blank graphic organizers. Have them complete the organizer for the celebration of their choice in their first language. Using this organizer students can write a paragraph about the celebration in their first language. Let them know they will be asked to explain this celebration the next day in English.  They will fill in a second graphic organizer using English words this time. Assess the composition written in the first language simply as done or not done.

4.   In pairs, using the graphic organizer, have students explain their selected celebrations to each other. After they have explained to their partners ask for volunteers to explain their celebrations to the whole class.

 

Assessment / Evaluation Techniques

 

     Passage written in first language (Summative)

     Graphic organizer (Summative)

 

Accommodations/Special Needs

 

     Pair students who speak the same language.

     Provide scribing assistance as required.

     The inclusion of a written first language description of a national holiday will validate students’ experience.

     Encourage the use of translation dictionaries to tell about their holidays in English.

     Collect and display visual resources depicting celebrations in other cultures.

     Students may wish to bring pictures or other materials associated with their celebration to show the class.

 

Resources

 

Chandler, Clare.  Festivals: Harvest.  Wayland Publishers, East Sussex, England, 1997.  (Other titles in this series by various authors include Carnival, Chinese New Year, Christmas, Divali, Easter, Id-ul-Fitr, Passover.

Jackson, Alison.  I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Pie. New York: Dutton Children’s Books, 1995. Patterned read aloud for the Thanksgiving holiday or any feasting occasion.

Kadodwala, Dilip.  A World of Holidays: Divali.  Austin, Texas: Steck-Vaughn, 1998.

(Other titles in this series by various authors include: All Saints, All Souls and Halloween; Carnival; Chinese New Year; Christmas; Easter; Hanukkah; Holi, Id-ul-Fitr; Passover; Thanksgiving.

Kindersley, Barnabas, and Kindersley, Anabel. Celebrations! Bolton, Ontario: Fenn Publishing and UNICEF, 1997.

Langevin, D.; Macchia, J.P.; Ladner, T.; and Offenhim, S. When’s the Next Holiday? 2nd ed. Toronto: Canadian Resources for ESL, 1996.

Parry, Caroline. Let’s Celebrate. Toronto: Kids Can Press, 1987.

Viesti, Joe and Hall, Diane.  Celebrate in South Asia.  N.Y.: Lothrop, Lee and Shepard, 1996.

 

Multicultural Calendar: Creative Cultural Communications 99 Harbour Square, Suite 2108, Toronto, Ontario. M5J 2H2.

Multifaith Calendar, Unity Arts, 1-800-465-3287

Websites  www.multicultural calendar.com

 

Appendix #1

 

ESLAO: Unit #2, Activity 1:  What is the Date?

 

Queen Victoria’s Birthday

 

Before 1867 there were four colonies in Canada. Queen Victoria was the queen of

Great Britain and the four colonies. Her birthday was May 24th. People in Britain and Canada celebrated her birthday.

 

        In 1901 this celebration became a national holiday. Today we celebrate this holiday on the first Monday before May 25th. Many places in Ontario have fireworks, picnics and parades. This holiday is the first long weekend of the summer season.

 

1.     Who was the Queen of Great Britain and the four colonies?

2.     When was her birthday?

3.     When do Canadians celebrate her birthday now?

4.   How do Canadians celebrate this holiday?

       

 

Modified Cloze Passage:

 

Queen Victoria’s Birthday

 

 

      Before 1867 there were________ colonies in Canada. Queen Victoria was the queen of ___________________ and the four colonies. Her birthday was May _____. People in Britain and Canada celebrated her birthday.

 

      In 1901 this celebration became a national ____________. Today we celebrate this holiday on the first _____________ before May 25th. Many places in Ontario have fireworks, picnics and parades. This holiday is the________long weekend of the summer season.

 

 

Words:  first, holiday, four, 24th, Monday, Great Britain

 

Appendix 2

 

ESLAO: Unit #2, Activity 4: The International Weather Scene

 

 

Composition Checklist

 

a)  Mechanics

 

Capitalizes letters correctly 

Uses appropriate punctuation

Spells words without errors

Uses correct verb forms

Writes address completely in the correct form

 

b)  Form

 

Indents first word of paragraph

Uses margins

Uses appropriate capital letters

Writes one sentence after another

Spaces correctly between words

Writes legibly

 

c)  Content

 

Includes content appropriate to the topic

Uses vocabulary about weather

Expresses personal opinion

 

 

Appendix 3

 

ESLAO: Unit #2, Activity 4 - International Weather

 

RUBRIC FOR ASSESSING POST CARD TO A FRIEND

Categories

50-59%

60-69%

70-79%

80-100%

Knowledge/

Understanding

-uses vocabulary associated with the weather: seasons, precipitation, temperature

The student demonstrates:

limited use of weather vocabulary

 

 

some use of weather vocabulary

 

 

considerable use of weather vocabulary

 

 

thorough use of weather vocabulary

Thinking/

Inquiry

-expresses personal opinion on weather

The student demonstrates:

limited expression of personal opinion

 

 

some expression of personal opinion

 

 

considerable

expression of personal opinion

 

 

thorough expression of personal opinion

Communication

 

-uses correct form of addressing mail

 

 

-uses writing conventions: simple present tense, periods, capitals, spelling, indents

The student demonstrates:

limited use of correct form of addressing mail

 

limited use of writing conventions

 

 

some use of correct form of addressing mail

 

some use of writing conventions

 

 

considerable use of correct form of addressing mail

 

considerable use of writing conventions

 

 

thorough use of correct form of addressing mail

 

thorough use of writing conventions

Application

 

 

-addresses postcard completely and accurately

 

-applies understanding of topic to content of postcard

The student demonstrates:

 

limited completion and accuracy with address

 

 

limited understanding of topic to content of postcard

 

 

 

some completion and accuracy with address

 

 

some understanding of topic to content of postcard

 

 

 

considerable completion and accuracy with address

 

considerable understanding of topic to content of postcard

 

 

 

thorough completion and accuracy with address

 

thorough understanding of topic to content of postcard

 

 

Appendix 4

 

ESLAO: Unit #2, Activity 5: What Are You Wearing?

 

 

Student Evaluation: Group Working Skills

 

Name:______________________________ Today’s Date:_____________________

 

Names of Students in the Group:_________________________________________

 

_____________________________________________________________________

 

 

How often did you do the following things in your group today? 

 

Circle the word  yes, no or sometimes  for each:

                                                                                                                  

                  Task                                                Personal Opinion                Comment                                  

1.  I listened to others in my group.

 

A Lot

Never

Sometimes

 

2.  I asked for information.

 

A Lot

Never

Sometimes

 

3.  I gave information.

 

A Lot

Never

Sometimes

 

4.  I gave my opinion politely.

 

A Lot

Never

Sometimes

 

5.  I disagreed with others politely.

 

A Lot

Never

Sometimes

 

 

Complete these sentences:

 

1.  I like to work in groups because:__________________________________________

 

________________________________________________________________________.

 

2.  I can_________________________________________________________________.

 

3.  I want to improve_____________________________________________________.

 

4.  I need help with________________________________________________________.

 

 

 

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