.: Using Games to Teach ESL

By:Robert McKenzie

Category:Home / Culture and Society / Language

One of the challenges in teaching English as a second language is to make learning as effortless as possible. By making learning easy and fun, the instructor can ensure that the material imparted is received, understood and retained. Language is all about meaning and context. The best way for students to find meaning and context in what they are learning is if they experience it. Is it possible then to teach the English language by allowing the participants to experience it? Yes it is possible, through games.



According to Lee Su Kim, author of Creative Games for Learning Class, using games in the classroom help students to sustain the effort of learning. More to the point, it fosters interaction. What is language but a means to communicate? Through these fun activities, instructors will be able to promote the practice of English.



Real-learning is when even outside the learning place, the student will still be able to apply the subject matter. Instructors have to understand that the more relaxed the learning environment is, the less anxious the students will be. Hence, the easier the students will be able to assimilate what is being taught.



However, the use of games in ESL instruction requires careful planning, design and execution. Games should not be used as ice breakers or time fillers only. They should be used as part of the instructional design. Games should be seen and used as a motivational tool. Below are a couple of suggested games and their application.



Charades – The class can be divided into mini-groups. The white or black board should accordingly be divided depending on the number of groups there are. Each group should have an assigned person who will draw the given phrase and an assigned person who will shout the answer. The other members will act as coaches. The instructor will show a phrase to the representatives and the first group to guess the answer wins the round. The time allocated for each round should not be too long because this activity should foster information retrieval and information relaying. This activity should best be used as a review for idiomatic expressions.



Guessing game – The instructor will write a word on a piece of paper and tape the piece of paper on the back of a student. The instructor should do the same for all the participants. The students should not know what word is posted on their backs. The instructor should then tell everyone that they can each ask three closed-ended questions (answerable by yes or no) from each of their peers in order to guess what the word is. This game is best used for students who already have a working knowledge of sentence structure. The game can serve as an introduction to question formulations, which essentially reverses word orders.

Digg del.icio.us Blink Stumble Spurl Reddit Netscape Furl

Article keywords: english, esl, efl, english as a second language, english as a foreign language

Article Source: http://www.articles32.com

Robert McKenzie has taught ESL all over the world. Visit his website ESL Games for ESL games and free ESL lessons.





.: New Language Articles

1). Quick, Stress Free Ways to Learn Spanish
Learning Spanish can be fun providing you consider the study options first that match your persona. Get this right and you will increase your chances of success.

2). Becoming a True Polyglot
The following article will try to give you some general tips on how to learn a foreign language with ease and a few ways of easily attaining the status of "polyglot".

3). Learn Mandarin Using Phonetic English
By using English phonics, you can eliminate many of the complications of learning to speak Mandarin.

4). Native Immersion, Or How To Learn Spanish The Easy Way
While there are many approaches to learning a second language, nothing can beat visiting and studying in the country where that language is spoken. Learning Spanish in Spain is by far the most effective and enjoyable way to truly master the language.

5). How To Improve Your Vocabulary
Following are a few methods for expanding your vocabulary with words you will feel comfortable using. Try one or more of these at your convenience. The ones that seem most appealing will probably work best for you.

6). The Different Ways In Which To Learn Spanish
For over three decades, particularly in schools throughout Britain the prevalent language taught has been French, and within the last ten or fifteen years German has become the second most popular language taught.

7). How to Learn German
There are so many books that offer German language courses containing grammar rule explanations, vocabulary exercises, reading comprehension texts, pair work tasks and many other useful materials


.: Top Language Articles

1). Cockney Rhyming Slang
Sir Winston Churchill once observed that Americans and the British are 'a common people divided by a common language' ... Never was that as true as when describing the Cockneys. You've certainly heard their accent, made famous in everything from movies based on Dickens and George Bernard Shaw novels to computer-generated gekkos telling real gekkos how to go forth and sell car insurance.

2). All About French- Speaking Countries
The French Language Roughly around 200 million people around the world speak French. This number includes people who speak French as a native language, as a second language and students of all ages who do not live in a francophone (French-speaking) country but have learned French. In fact French as a foreign language is the second most commonly taught language worldwide after English.

3). Spanish Love: Spanish Poets and Their Spanish Poems
Love and its attendant passions has been the favorite subject of Spanish poetry since the time of the troubadours, medieval poets who earned their keep by singing for the people at the village square or for the nobility during royal gatherings at the palace. Composers in their own right, these court poets sang about courtly love and the bittersweet pain of unattained love for an idealized woman using the jarchas, a form of love song that was actually poetry written in very short stanzas.

4). Reverse Dictionary - Ever asked yourself "Whats the word for..."
I just happened to stumble on a pretty interesting tool today. I was trying to find a word for “People that are behind the times” for my previous blog post. I did a couple of searches in Google without avail and eventually started scouring for a tool that did a reverse lookup on a word. A tool where I would give the definition, and it would give me some words that matched that definition.

5). How To Get Your Kids To Speak Your Language
Note: This experience had to do with preserving Spanish for our kids but the principles are valid for anyone trying to help their kids speak and preserve any language and culture. COUNTRY OF MANY PEOPLES This country,,, (The authors raised their kids in the United States but they believe that their experience can be useful for people in other non-spanish-speaking countries.

6). Using Games to Teach ESL
One of the challenges in teaching English as a second language is to make learning as effortless as possible. By making learning easy and fun, the instructor can ensure that the material imparted is received, understood and retained. Language is all about meaning and context. The best way for students to find meaning and context in what they are learning is if they experience it.

7). No - It Can't be That Easy! You Can Learn a Foreign Language in Your Sleep?
The average human utilizes less than 10% of the brain. What’s happening with the rest? Can it be harnessed while you sleep? The answer is a qualified 'yes'. Sleep learning has been employed with varying degrees of success for many years. It is not a completely passive process, however. You can't plug in headphones, listen to a German CD, and expect to wake up in the morning, fluently speaking German.


Page loaded in 0.175 seconds.