lunes, 21 de septiembre de 2015

Classroom Activities: Questionnaire


Today I come with an activity that you can use in the classroom. It should be used at the beginning of the school year, but it works fine anytime with a class you don't know well. The idea is that the children create their own questionnaire, writing the questions themselves, and then move around the class to ask them to at least one child. Pretty simple, nothing new under the sun, but effective and highly motivating.

I did this in sixth grade at the beginning of the school year, but you can do it in any grade you see fit, as long as they have the needed language to create the questions. I already know the class and they know each other well, but we had a new student this year and I thought it would be a good way of giving him a chance to know his peers. We did this activity in groups to account for different levels, so everybody had help while doing this (apart from mine, that is). The steps were more or less as follows:

  • I explained the task (always in English) giving them oral examples of what a question is. I asked questions to some students who were capable of answering, and then tried it again with the ones that have more trouble. This took about 5 minutes. 
  • As a whole groups, we wrote four questions on the blackboard. All of them were questions they had already heard a million times, but it was a good way for them to review. This took also around 5 minutes, maybe a bit more. 
  • I told them to write another six questions in groups. They were supposed to be as original as possible, trying to get new information from their classmates. I walked around the class to help while they worked in groups of 3-4. This can take up to 20 minutes. 
  • Once they had finished, they were told to stand up and choose a person with whom to practice. They had to ask all ten questions to the same person and write down the answer. The goal here was communication, so one-word answers were OK. We did this until the end of the class. Some students got to ask two partners. 
It worked very well, and even the students who rarely speak in class got some speaking practice. It was a good way to review questions, and a good way to get the blood pumping after a long summer. Some of them were pretty creative with their questions, too, and they learned a few grammar points that we hadn't worked on before. All in all, great experience. I encourage you to try it. 

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