Showing posts with label language experience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label language experience. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 November 2017

Weeding the garden

Weeding the school garden and planting seed potatoes is an activity I have been using as a language experience.  It has been good for reinforcing new vocabulary and I have seen some new words such as "trowel" popping up in stories.  I enjoyed David's description: "The potatoes looked like they had crab legs" describing the buds on the potatoes.

Wednesday, 19 July 2017

Writing PD with Leytia

This term we have been having writing PD with Leytia Leota-Preston.  I observed two writing lessons with her (in Shabnam and Sandhya's classes) and she observed one of my lessons.  One of Leytia's key messages has been that language experiences are valuable for engaging writers (especially boys).  One of the language experiences she talked about at our PD session in the holidays was dissecting a hammerhead shark.  When I watched Shabnam's lesson on adding adjectives, I got the idea of using post it notes to collect student voice.
When Leytia came to watch my writing lesson I got the children to taste a small piece of mango.  I got them to go around in a circle and describe the mango.  I then got them to write their description on a post it note and identify which of the senses it belonged to. I added the post it note to a a chart organised into the different senses.
The resulting writing had some great descriptions using a range of adjectives.  

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

Balloons

For our language experience today we blew up and played with balloons.  Unfortunately some of the balloons popped!  This made for great writing material and this is an activity I would like to try with a class again. 



Tuesday, 21 February 2017

Bubbles

I have been wanting to try out some language experience activities with my class and decided to do bubble blowing as an activity to spark descriptive writing.  I bought some small party favour bubble wands and gave out one between two, with the instruction that one was to blow bubbles, and the other could catch or pop them.


I was struck by how engaged the children were in this simple activity and how positive their behaviour was (I have been finding transitions to outdoor activities challenging).  Afterwards we brainstormed adjectives we could use to describe the bubbles and the children wrote stories about the bubbles - I was impressed with their attention to detail when describing them.  This reinforced the effectiveness of using language experience activities and made me excited to plan my next one...making sticky slime.