- •Read the tips how to get the students’ attention in class. Give examples of their application in educational practice.
- •2. Read the tips how to strengthen teacher's relationships with the students and answer the questions that follow.
- •Questions
- •Give some tips (which have not been mentioned) how to get the students’ attention in the classroom and strengthen the teacher's relationships with them.
- •Skim the text and fill in the gaps with the words which you think may suit. Preventing Conflicts in the Classroom
- •Complete the sentences with the appropriate derivatives of the following words: impress, argue, practice, confident, notice. How to Prevent Collisions During the Lesson
- •Find the mistakes in the text and correct them. How to End the Lesson Calmly
- •1. Read the text and analyze the ways of pedagogical communication organization.
- •2. Think of the pedagogical recommendations you could give in relation to the verbal and non-verbal behavior of the teacher.
- •How does non-verbal communication differ from verbal communication?
- •The Basic Form of Communication
- •1. Read the information on what teachers should wear and express your point of view whether the teacher's dress code should exist. How What You Wear Affects What You Accomplish as a Teacher
- •2. Make up a list of do’s and don’ts that the teacher should follow while dressing for class.
- •3. Think of wear clichés which are typical of different teachers. Describe the style of dressing one would see in the class of a) Maths; b) Russian; c) p. T.; d) Drawing; e) Singing; f) English.
- •1. Skim the text and fill in the gaps with the words which you think may suit.
- •2. Complete the sentences with the appropriate derivatives of the following words : refer, psychology, prefer, motive, initiative, punishment.
- •Verbal Immediacy
- •3. Expand the text by adding some sentences which would contain relevant information.
- •Questions
- •Is teacher gender a factor in pedagogical communication?
- •Male Versus Female Teachers
- •Read the text and answer the questions that follow.
- •Questions
- •Agree or disagree, motivate your point of view.
- •Conduct an Oxford debate “Male Teachers versus Female Teachers.”
- •Skim the text and fill in the gaps with the words which you think may suit. Gender Gap (Part I)
- •Complete the sentences with the appropriate derivatives of the following words : effect, social, care, imply, differ, assess. Gender Gap (Part II)
- •Translate the text into English. Атмосфера психологического комфорта
- •Read the text and prove that the teacher is a man.
- •Give the same sequence of career events, pedagogical impressions and personal emotions from the female standpoint.
- •What difference do styles of teaching and stereotypes make?
- •Communication Styles
- •Indirect Communicators
- •1. Read different descriptions of communication styles. Define which descriptions agree with a particular communication style.
- •Choose some teaching style / styles that you will be comfortable with when you plan, prepare and deliver your classes. Explain your choice.
- •Make up your own classification of communication styles.
- •1. Insert the suitable prepositions (if necessary). Effective Communication Strategies
- •Skim the text and fill in the gaps with the words which you think may suit.
- •Is Your Teaching Method Bad?
- •Translate the text into Russian.
- •Read the text and sum up the stereotypes of teachers existing in the media. Stereotypes of Teachers in the Media
- •Make up a top ten list of stereotypes relating to teachers and teaching.
- •What are pedagogical taboos?
- •The Characteristics of Taboos
- •Read the tips for travelling teachers and comment on taboos existing in different countries. Helpful Notes for Travelling Teachers
- •Sum up the pedagogical taboos existing in Belarus.
- •Since pedagogical taboos are historically exposed to changes think of the pedagogical taboos of the year 3000.
- •1. Insert the suitable prepositions (if necessary). Discussing Embarrassing Topics
- •Replace the words in bold type with their synonyms. Discussing Embarrassing Topics
- •3. Fill in the gaps with the suitable expressions : visit and revisit; condemn and feticide; racist, sexist and homophobic; trial and error. Discussing Embarrassing Topics
- •1. Read the text and say which taboos were broken by the teacher.
- •2. Answer the questions.
- •3. Write the analysis of the teacher’s class, dwell upon the contents of pedagogical communication.
- •How different is the child from others?
- •Children’s Problems
- •1. Read the information on children’s fears and answer the questions that follow. Children’s Fears
- •Questions
- •2. Make a scientific report on children’s complexes.
- •Remember which fears you had when a child and how you managed to overcome them. Share this information with your group-mates.
- •1. Insert the suitable prepositions (if necessary). Helping Children Overcome Fears : Be a Role Model, Open and Validate
- •2. Correct the mistakes. Helping Children Overcome Fears : Encourage and Control
- •3. Replace the words in bold type with their synonyms. Helping Children Overcome Fears : Routines, Opportunities, Exercise
- •1. Read the text and say what problems the teacher had to deal with in his class and after it.
- •Describe your actions in the situation mentioned above.
- •Conduct an Oxford debate “Mr. McCourt’s Behaviours are Pedagogically Adequate versus Mr. McCourt’s Behaviours are Not Pedagogically Adequate.”
- •Where do children’s complexes come from?
- •Complex as a Phenomenon
- •Inferiority Complex
- •1. Read the text and say how Oedipus complex manifests itself. Oedipus Complex
- •Skim the text and fill in the gaps with the words which you think may suit.
- •Idiomatic Usage
- •Complete the sentences with the appropriate derivatives of the following words : suit, symbol, refer, contradict, luck, like. Superstitions
- •Translate the text into Russian. Biological Origin
- •2. Read the poem by Keith r. Williams and say what personal catastrophe is described by the child. Punishment Poem (From The Cheat)
- •3. Write an Essay “Children’s Personal Catastrophes : Reasons and Ways Out.”
- •Practicals the culture of pedagogical communication
- •1. Translate the texts into English and make your own endings adhering to the style and contents of the texts. Give a title to each text.
- •2. Read the stories and say what pedagogical wisdoms each story contains.
- •1) A Coffee Quote
- •2) The Shout
- •3. Read the stories and say how they can be used in the class of English for the purpose of educating / developing / bringing up children.
- •1) Love, Wealth and Success
- •2) Wish
- •4. Read the text and answer the questions that follow.
- •Questions
Read the text and prove that the teacher is a man.
I'm a new teacher and learning on the job. I often doubted if I should be there at all. At the end I wondered how I lasted that long.
It is March 1958. I sit at my desk in an empty classroom in McKee Vocational and Technical High School in the Borough of Staten Island, New York City. I toy with the implements of my new calling: five manila folders, one for each class; a clump of crumbling rubber bands; a block of brown wartime composition paper flecked with whatever went into the making of it; a worn blackboard eraser; a stack of white cards that I will insert row by row into slots in this tattered red Delaney book to help me remember the names of one hundred and sixty-odd boys and girls who will sit in rows every day in five different classes. On the cards I'll record their attendance and tardiness and make little marks when boys and girls do bad things. I'm told I should keep a red pen to record the bad things, but the school hasn't supplied one, and now I have to request it on a form or buy one in a shop because the red pen for the bad things is the teacher's most powerful weapon. There are many things I will have to buy in a shop. In Eisenhower's America there is prosperity but it does not trickle down to schools. This morning I have to make decisions. In a minute the bell will ring. They'll swarm in and what will they say if they see me at the desk? Hey, look. He's hiding out. They are experts on teachers. Sitting at the desk means you're scared or lazy. You're using the desk as a barrier. Best thing is to get out there and stand. Face the music. Be a man. Make one mistake your first day and it takes months to recover.
The kids arriving are juniors, sixteen years old, eleven years in school from kindergarten to today. Kids watch, scrutinize, judge. They know body language, tone of voice, demeanor in general. It's not as if they sit around in toilets or cafeterias discussing these things. They just absorb it over eleven years, pass it on to coming generations. Watch out for Miss Boyd, they'll say. Homework, man, homework, and she corrects it. Corrects it. She ain't married so she's got nothing else to do. Always try to get married teachers with kids. They don't have time for sitting around with papers and books. If Miss Boyd got laid regular she wouldn't give so much homework. She sits there at home with her cat listening to classical music, correcting our homework, bothering us. Not like some teachers. They give you a pile of homework, check it off, never even look at it. You could copy a page of the Bible and they'd write at the top, “Very nice.” Not Miss Boyd. She's on to you right off. Excuse me, Charlie. Did you write this yourself? And you have to admit, no, you didn't and now you're up shit creek, man. It's a mistake to arrive early, gives you too much time to think of what you're facing. Where did I get the nerve to think I could handle American teenagers? Ignorance.
(Teacher Man. Frank McCourt.)