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Starting a lessson
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What and why?
Many things happen at the beginning of a lesson which, as teachers, we
may be unaware of. The first moments of a lesson can establish for a child
how far they feel included and whether they will understand
what is happening. Many things are happening in a childs life, and
to expect them to suddenly switch into an English lesson without
being eased in will often mean that some children dont
make the transition until too late - sometimes not until the lesson is
ending! It may be some days since their last English lesson, or they may
have just been involved in some very different activity (another subject,
a game, playtime, etc.). It is important, then, to build a bridge
into the English lesson.
Practical ideas
- You can play some music as they come into the class or as you get
things ready one of the songs that they know, for example.
- You can start with a round that is, going around
the class. Everyone can say something that they remember from the last
lesson: a word, a song, something that happened spelling anything.
If they dont know what to say, they can just say I learned some
English!
- Instead of a round, you can ask the children to brainstorm
in groups, noting down things that happened or that they remember. You
can ask each group for one or two of the things that they remember.
- You can achieve the same thing with a quiz. Ask the children to look
back at the pages they have covered in the book and find certain things,
for example, particular words, what a person was wearing, how many people
were in a picture, and so on.
- Show and tell is a good way to start a lesson, making
the children feel personally involved. You could ask them to bring in
something that has something to do with English for example,
some English that they have found on a packet, a postcard they have
received, a book in English they have at home, etc.

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