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Showing posts with label English as an additional language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English as an additional language. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Creative Bag of Tricks #6.1 - Short forms

A supportive structure helps learners to enjoy writing cinquains.


Short poetry forms are particularly appealing to learners because of their length, use of repetition and easy to follow structures. In this post, we look at cinquains.



Cinquains


Traditionally, cinquains are one stanza poems of a specified number of lines, syllables and stresses. 

This version has been adapted so that instead of syllables and stresses, the number and classification of words in each line is specified. 

Here is a suggested structure for a cinquain poem. However, the rules can be tweaked to suit your learners! (Click image to enlarge)




Friday, 10 October 2014

Mother Tongue Other Tongue at King's Park primary school



Primary 7 pupils at King's Park primary school, Glasgow, have kicked off their activities for the Mother Tongue Other Tongue competition with an afternoon of Scottish Book Trust Live Literature  poetry workshops. The aims of the afternoon were to build confidence, to stimulate enjoyment in reading and writing poetry and to support learners in finding and developing their own poetic voices in whichever languages they speak.



"See me, ah ken when tae tell folk tae back aff!"
In "See Me", a workshop led by poets Jill Bennet and Elizabeth Cordiner, learners were encouraged to use their knowledge of Scots to write poems about the kinds of things that drive their hopes, fears and desires. They then had the opportunity to consider, and thus extend, their understanding of poetic features such as rhythm and word choice by integrating their work successfully into a whole class poem.

Learners writing "See Me" poems about what makes them tick



Taking notes in "Windows"
In Ken Cockburn's workshop, learners were encouraged to use familiar phrases from their mother tongue languages to take part in an oral game in which they created a rhythmic, whole-class spoken poem. The poet then gave a reading of the German poem, Das Fenster (The Window) by Sarah Kirsch, in German and in English, leading to a discussion about cognates and false friends. Taking the theme of windows as a basis for their own poems, learners started by making notes about the kinds of objects and activities they might observe from a window. Using a template, they began to write their own poems comparing and contrasting life observed through several different windows.

We were very grateful to the eager volunteers from each group who read their work aloud to a captive audience of their classmates, teachers and poets. Feedback from learners in both workshops was very positive. On the whole, they enjoyed having the opportunity to read, write and talk about poetry and languages. 

The class is treated to a poetry reading


Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Supporting the "Mother Tongue" commentary


Some guidelines to ensure Mother Tongue commentaries are the best they can be!


  • Encourage learners to write at a length that allows them to develop their thoughts, feelings and ideas. 

  • Use of scribes, translators and other supporters is permitted as long as the ideas expressed are the learner's own.

  • Steer learners away from providing solely literal interpretations of their chosen poems. Where appropriate, encourage them to comment on the creative aspects, language, wider themes or social/cultural/political impact of the poem.

  • Learners should consider the appeal of their commentaries on an emotional or imaginative level. Those commentaries which elaborate on the personal experiences, feelings or attitudes that have influenced their choice are more likely to engage the reader than those which offer very general statements about its broad appeal.

  • Commentaries must be submitted in English.

  • Click here to read some Mother Tongue commentaries from MTOT North West.

Thursday, 25 September 2014

English as an Additional Language and MTOT

Two EAL teachers in Glasgow City Council have developed an exciting programme of Mother Tongue Other Tongue poetry activities for their learners.

Kirsten Barret and Claire Stevenson have created a group plan for the Mother Tongue Other Tongue competition, mapping a variety of creative writing activities against Curriculum for Excellence experiences and outcomes in Literacy and English, and Health and Well-being: 



MTOT Group Plan developed by K Barret and Claire Stevenson


Follow Kirsten and Claire on Twitter to see more! #MTOT