The Oral Language Book; Sheena Cameron and Louise Dempsey
Traits of Effective Teachers of Oral Language
- Explicitly teach speaking skills
- Engage in dialogue not monologue
- Model, scaffold support and guide speaking and listening learning in the classroom
- Create a safe respectful talking environment
- Explicitly teach listening skills
- Explicitly teach vocabulary
What am I doing already? What can I do differently?
What am I already doing?
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What can I do differently?
Ideas are taken from Sheena Cameron and Louise Dempsey's The Oral Language Book
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Explicitly teach speaking skills
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Encourage students to speak in sentences, not one-word answers.
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Modelled and shared, guided and independent speaking and listening approach gradually releasing responsibility (Pearson and Gallagher, 1983)
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Engage in dialogue not monologue
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Say and do activities
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Think-pair-share instead of hands up…. I still need to work on ‘no hands up’
Think, pair, walk and talk
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Model, scaffold support and guide speaking and listening learning in the classroom
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Provide devices and opportunities for students to record and listen back to themselves speaking.
Model correct sentence structures, encourage students to use correct sentence structures.
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Scaffold speaking and listening using talking strips
Doughnut circles
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Create a safe respectful talking environment
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Really listen to students and encourage students to really listen to each other.
Value and encourage the use of heritage language in the classroom.
Allow for think time and allow students to work with a partner or in small groups.
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Explicitly teach listening skills
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Engage Games with focus on listening carefully
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Barrier Games
Construct charts describing what good listeners do
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Explicitly teach vocabulary
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Drama and role play
Retelling
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Word pictures
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Cameron, C & Dempsey, L (2016). The Oral Language Book, Auckland: S&L Publishing Ltd.
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