Bir grup çalışmasını sizin için çalıştırmanın 5 yolu

ÃÛÌÒapp Languages
Kağıt ve defterlerle bir masada çalışan bir grup insanın tepeden çekilmiÅŸ görüntüsü

Bir grupta çalışmanın, ertelemeyi azaltmaktan ve kendinize olan güveninizi artırmaktan yeni bakış açıları kazanmaya ve daha hızlı öğrenmeye kadar birçok faydası vardır. Birçok İngilizce dil öğrencisi bir grupta çalışmaktan hoşlanır ve birçok İngilizce dil öğretmeni bunu tavsiye eder. İşte bir grup halinde çalışmayı kendiniz veya öğrencileriniz için nasıl çalıştıracağınız...

1. Etkili bir grup oluÅŸturun

Arkadaşlarınızla vakit geçirmeyi sevseniz bile, çalışma ortaklarını arkadaşlığa dayandırmayın. Bunun yerine, sınıfta uyanık kalan, not alan, soru soran ve öğretmenin sorularına yanıt veren kişileri arayın ve grubu çok büyük yapmayın. Bir çalışma grubu için ideal bir büyüklük üç veya dört öğrencidir.

Her hafta aynı gün ve saatte buluşmaya çalışmak harika bir fikirdir çünkü çalışma oturumuna bir sınıf gibi davranmak, bir programa uymanıza ve herkesin katılmasını sağlamanıza yardımcı olur.

Son olarak, çalışma grubu oturumlarını, materyalleri yaymak için yer olan, dikkat dağıtıcı olmayan bir yerde düzenleyin. Bu, gelecek zamanı incelemek yerine en son filmler veya şarkılar hakkında konuşmamanızı sağlamaya yardımcı olacaktır!

2. Konulara karar verin ve hedefler belirleyin

Çalışma grubunuzdan önce, tartışmak istediğiniz konuları düşünün - sonra bir tanesinde anlaşın. Bu, uzaklaşmadan o konuya konsantre olmanıza yardımcı olacaktır. Konunuza karar verdikten sonra, her seansta ne elde etmek istediğinizi de düşünün - ancak bir seans için çok fazla materyal almayın.

Örneğin, dil hakkında daha fazla bilgi edinmek için İngilizce yazılmış bir roman kullanıyorsanız, kitabın tamamını tartışmaya çalışmak yerine, birkaç karakter gibi bir yönünü düşünün.

3. Etkili Hazırlamak

Çalışma grubunuza katılmadan önce, tartışacağınız konu hakkında daha fazla okuyarak veya araştırarak hazırlanın.

Ayrıca, anladığınızdan emin olmadığınız her şeyin bir listesini yapın, böylece diğer öğrencilerle tartışabilirsiniz. Hepinizin daha ayrıntılı olarak açıklamanız gereken farklı şeyler olacağından emin olabilirsiniz, böylece birbirinizin anlamasına yardımcı olabilirsiniz. Bu da bizi şuna götürüyor...

4. İyi iletişim kurarak birbirinizden öğrenin

Açıkça iletişim kurun – birinizin bir şeyi anlamaması veya daha fazla açıklamaya ihtiyaç duyması önemli değil. Ve akranlarınızdan geri bildirim istemekten çekinmeyin: "Çok mu konuşuyorum?" veya "Bakış açınızı doğru sundum mu?". Genellikle, anladığınız diğer materyalleri öğretmenin ve materyali sizden daha iyi anlayan başkalarından öğrenmenin en iyisi olduğu söylenir.

Çalışma oturumunuz, grup olarak çözemeyeceğiniz anlaşmazlık veya kafa karışıklığı noktalarını ortaya çıkarırsa, bunu not edin ve öğretmeninize sorun.

5. EÄŸlenceli hale getirin

Listenin sonuncusu, ama çok önemli: Çalışmayı ilginç tutarak elinizden geldiğince eğlenceli hale getirmeye çalışın. Hepinizin okumaktan gerçekten zevk aldığınız konular hakkında romanlar seçin. Birlikte İngilizcekonuşan bir film izlemeye gidin ve çalışma grubunuzda tartışın. Veya konuyu nasıl seçtiğinizi görmek için birlikte (çevrimiçi veya yüz yüze) bir test deneyin.

ÃÛÌÒapp'dan daha fazla blog

  • College students sitting together working on a project

    Five ways to apply startup thinking in your classroom

    By Nicole Kyriacou
    Okuma zamanı: 3 minutes

    Startups are generally considered to be new, technology-focused companies that are less than five years old. For the most part, they aim to disrupt industry with innovations, grow in terms of users and revenues and provide value to customers and shareholders.

    It may not appear that startups have much in common with English Language Teaching (ELT), but there is, in fact, plenty to learn from startups and the way they work.

    By understanding how startups think and looking at their best attributes, we can bring more creativity to our classrooms. Not only can we find new ways for our students to learn, collaborate and grow together, but we can also help our students develop much-needed leadership and critical thinking skills.

    What is startup thinking?

    At its core, startup thinking is about problem-solving and growth. User-focused and data-driven, startup teams theorize, research, plan and test their products on new markets. Their strength is in their agility, being able to "pivot" quickly: change products, services and technology based on feedback from their customers.

    They also operate on a number of key principles, all of which can be applied in the classroom:

    1. Be entrepreneurial

    Startups are entrepreneurial by definition. Their staff work in teams, but also have no problem going it alone, finding solutions and taking responsibility for new projects and initiatives. These are all excellent traits to encourage in the classroom as they will not only help your learners in an educational context, but in their professional lives too.

    By learning to be accountable to themselves, measuring their own progress and seeing their achievements, autonomous learners develop self-confidence and progress faster as a result.

    It’s therefore important to encourage students to take responsibility for their own learning. Rather than being solely reliant on their teacher, autonomous learners seek out ways to practice and improve their language skills in ways that appeal to them.

    To do this, brainstorm strategies with your students to help them find ways to use English outside the classroom. They could, for example, keep a journal in English, watch English language films and take notes, read short stories or news articles, or even set their technology and social media language settings to English.

    2. Collaborate and learn from each other

    Startups have a common goal: to establish a business model and achieve a product-market fit. This goal focuses people’s attention and develops rapport among team members. As an additional benefit of working together, startuppers learn their own strengths and weaknesses and begin to collaborate with team members with complementary skills.

    By learning about your students’ interests, objectives and needs, you can find inspiration to design relevant class projects. These give your students a common goal and the chance to collaborate effectively. What’s more, project work is rich in language learning opportunities and makes students accountable to one another. This in turn increases motivation and provides a genuine context for language learning.

    3. Reward effort

    Startups are not afraid to get things wrong. In fact, all entrepreneurs embrace mistakes, as they are part of coming to the right solution. As Thomas Edison once said "I have not failed 10,000 times – I’ve successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work." ÌýSome startups go as far as to reward and celebrate failure – saying that it’s a sign that a person is trying to succeed.

    Encourage students to see mistakes as learning opportunities. Creating a safe space in the classroom where everyone is treated with respect and mistakes are viewed as natural learning experiences. This will help your students learn the language at their own pace, without fear of ridicule.

    4. Foster a growth mindset

    Startups are famous for focusing on growth and believing in improving their products. They see both negative and positive feedback as opportunities to grow. By always seeking to optimize their products and services, they improve the user experience and earn loyalty.

    Similarly, it’s key to foster a growth mindset in your learners. ÌýA growth mindset perceives intelligence and ability as attributes to be developed, whereas a fixed mindset sees intelligence and ability as innate and unchanging.

    Students with a growth mindset will therefore believe they can improve, be more motivated and see more progress as a result.

    5. Mentor and support

    Startup founders mentor and support their team members when they face challenges, when they need to grow and when they are not reaching their potential. This increases the value of the workforce and enables them to be more productive.

    Teachers are often already naturals at this. We know how important it is to offer support to our students, especially when they are feeling frustrated or disappointed with their progress. With our encouragement and support, our students can achieve things they never thought possible. So perhaps, in this final point, startup leaders could learn a thing or two from us.

  • A teacher stood in front of her class with her students raising their hands

    What is rapid prototyping and how can it apply to the ELT classroom?

    By Nicole Kyriacou
    Okuma zamanı: 5 minutes

    Tom Chi is an internet veteran with quite a resumé. His roles have been many and varied – from astrophysical researcher to Fortune 500 consultant and corporate executive, developing new hardware and software products and services.

    He worked on Microsoft Outlook when it was in its infancy, was a major influence in taking Yahoo Search from 0 to 90 million users and is now Head of Product Experience at Google X – Alphabet’s secretive division focused on creating technological innovations for the future. It has produced the self-driving car and Google Glass, and its Project Loon aims to provide internet to every square inch of the earth.

    At Google X, Tom was in a unique position – always having to think five, ten or even more years ahead in order to conceptualize and build the technology of the future. As you might imagine, this is far from an easy task; not only do the ideas have to be original, but they have to meet people’s future needs – something that is not easy to predict.

    So, how does Tom and the others at Google X deliver their vision for the future using today's materials and technology?

    That’s where Rapid Prototyping comes in. It’s a concept that allows teams to experiment, learn and adjust prototypes quickly and cheaply, so that projects (and products) get off the ground. Failure is seen as a starting block and an inevitable part of the learning process. Following his workshop, we are going to look further at rapid prototyping and how it can relate to the ELT classroom.