Have you ever wondered how to use movies in your ESL classes,
without just sitting your students down in front of the screen,
hitting 'Play' and sitting back to watch?
Here are a few ideas to get you started, using very short movie
extracts to present and practise new language and develop
communicative skills.
1 No picture
Choose a short extract (2 or 3 minutes) with plenty of sound
effects. Play it with the screen covered or turned away from the
students, and ask them to write down what they hear. If two of
the sound effects are birds singing and a baby crying, you could
use the extract to present or practice any of these language
points (and I'm sure you can think of more):
Some birds are singing / A baby is crying
Some birds were singing / A baby was crying
It must / might / can't be birds singing or It must / might /
can't have been birds singing
I heard some birds singing / I heard a baby crying
After playing the extract, have students compare what they heard
in pairs, and then elicit the language from them. Remember to
show the extract with both picture and sound at the end of the
activity to satisfy the students' curiosity!
2 No sound
Here's the opposite idea. Show a short extract (again, 2 or 3
minutes is enough) with a lot going on, or where the characters
convey a lot of emotion in their expressions, but play it with
the volume off. Students can then do one of the activities below
without having to worry about understanding dialogue:
Describe what happened using narrative tenses
Describe the scene
Anticipate dialogue or reactions
Arrange a cut up dialogue which you have given them.
Finally, play the extract again with sound. Having done one of
these tasks, your students will be able to fit what they hear
into a context much more effectively than if they had viewed the
extract initially with picture and sound.
3 Jigsaw viewing
You may have done jigsaw reading activities in your class, where
students have half the information, and share what they have
read with another student to recreate the whole story. You can
also do this with short video sequences in a number of ways:
Half the class watches with no picture, then the other half with
no sound (you'll have to take half the students out of the class
in each case). In pairs they then question each other to
recreate the scene.
Half the class have picture and sound, the other half just have
sound. You can do this by sitting students in two rows, back to
back, so that only one row can see the screen. The half who only
had sound then question the other half.
One student listens with headphones, while all the others view
without sound. The student with headphones questions the others
to recreate the scene.
4 Viewing on rewind
Choose a short sequence with a lot of action. For example, a
woman enters an apartment, picks up the telephone, listens,
looks terrified, runs out of her apartment and down the stairs,
and runs off down the street. Movies are, of course, a great
source for this sort of material. Play the scene backwards to
the students (DVD gives more flexibility than video with the
speed of playback) then have them reconstruct the story in
chronological order, using narrative tenses, or future tenses,
or whatever you want the linguistic focus to be. Finally, play
the sequence normally so students can compare it with their
version.
5 Pause / Freeze Frame
If you use pictures in your classroom for introducing new
vocabulary, or for describing people and scenes, you can add a
new dimension to this with the pause/freeze frame button of your
video or DVD player. Hit pause when a character has an
interesting expression on his or her face, is about to react to
something or answer a question, or when there is a lot of
colourful new vocabulary on the screen. Have students describe
the character/scene, or anticipate what the character will say
or do next. Release the pause button to allow students to
compare their ideas with what actually happens.
Video is a motivating and effective way to bring variety to your
ESL classes. Using short, sharp sequences with a clear
linguistic focus, your students will go away from your class
with much more than if you sit them down in front of the screen
and hit 'play'.
About Author :
Keith Taylor is the founder of eslbase.com and the TEFL blog,
providing free resources, information and advice for TEFL
teachers, as well as the latest job opportunities and a
directory of TEFL courses worldwide.
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