sábado, 27 de enero de 2018

Key Skills Activity: “Between Verses and Imagination. Time to Fly”




Dear colleagues!

I was tempted by both the sense of initiative and entrepreneurship and culture awareness key skills, so the present activity is related to them, as well as to the linguistic one. The activity is designed for the last two years of High School and it consists of a poetry contest called “Between Verses and Imagination. Time to Fly”. The event will commemorate the World Book Day, the 23rd of April. It will be held in the high school conference hall and chaired by the centre’s English teachers and some professionals in literature invited as special guests.

For this purpose, students have to present their own productions amongst various options, such as Haiku, Flash Fiction (prose poetry) or a free poem (they should choose amongst lyric, dramatic and satirical poetry). The topics will be “seasons” for Haikus and “love” for the rest. This activity will last three days, during which we are going to do different exercises in order to prepare their “masterpieces” as best as possible. Here you are a notion of the activities programme:

Day 1
  •     Main characteristics of each type of literary production: students will be organised in small groups and they will read some information (at the end of this blog entry) given by the teacher about Haikus, Flash Fiction and poetry in general. Thus, there will be Haiku groups, Flash Fiction groups and poetry groups, and each one will have to give details to the other group by answering the following questions:


Haikus
What is a Haiku poem?
How many lines does it have?
How many syllables does a Haiku have on the whole?
How many syllables does each line have?
What does a “cutting point” actually refers to?
How can a reference to one of the four seasons be achieved apart from using the actual name of each of the seasons? Give an example.

Flash Fiction
What is a Flash Fiction or Micro-Story?
How many Flash Fiction varieties exist?
What these varieties of Flash Fiction depend on?
How many words do Flash Fictions have at least? And at most?
What are the main requirements or characteristics to write a good Flash Fiction? Mention at least four.

Free poem
What does poetry mean?
Can you please mention the main characteristics of lyric, dramatic and satirical genres?
Which one would you choose for our Poetry Contest and why?

They will have over 30-40 minutes to read all the information and answer the questions above. This part of the activity is made to give them some (theoretical) idea about what they are going to put into practice. It is not a theory lesson, but a way for them to interact, practice oral skills and learn the main details about every type of literary production.

  •       After our first approach to the poetry world, we will do a competition in groups. As nature, personality adjectives and feelings may be quite adequate for both love and seasons topics, this part of the activity will consist of learning/reviewing vocabulary and definitions related to these three fields. To that end, we will compete in a vocabulary jam or a Kahoot test. In both cases, students will be organised in groups and speed in providing answers will be at stake. They normally love this kind of competition, so I think it would be a wonderful way of practicing related-vocabulary.


Here you are a brief example of some of the vocabulary:

Nature (environment, animals, colours, etc.)
Sun, hill, mountain, sunset, dawn, horizon, storm, lightning, clouds, sky, rain, grass, bird, light, grey, blue, ocean, sea, moon, moonlight, river, lake, path, crystal, night, day, summer, autumn, winter, spring, fall, water, transparency, clarity, sea waves, spring (manantial), flower, butterfly, tree, leave, branch, tornado, shore, sand, air, universe.

Personality adjectives
Provocative, sensible, sensitive, confident, friendly, generous, practical, tolerant.

Feelings
Exhausted, lost, tired, excited, thrilled, astonished, embarrassed, proud, disgusted, determined, guilty, abandoned, accepted.

Other vocabulary
Mirror, hair, hands, lips, eyes, look, gaze, life, existence, dead, smile, sparkle, veins, being, living, touch, feel, echo, to fly, to stay, to stare, to gaze, to understand, to comprehend, to analyse, turmoil, misunderstanding, embrace, whisper, fingers, heart, heartbeat, pulsation, breathing, arms, skin, wrinkles, time, tears, boat, words.

This picture can also provide them some more vocabulary about feelings and personality:




This competition game should not last more than 15-20 minutes. Like that, we would have one lesson done (60 minutes).

They will also have to read at home the following information about figures of speech, since we are going to work on that the following session.

Day 2
  •      Synonyms competition: they will be given, in groups of 5, a copy with a word list full of synonyms regarding the vocabulary seen in the previous session. One person of each group will go up to the blackboard (one at a time) and will be given a word by the teacher. Right away, the other group components will start looking for synonyms and telling their partner as much of them as possible; it will be timed. The group getting the exercise done within the shortest time wins.


A possible synonyms list would be as follows:

Sparkle: glow, brightness, glitter, twinkle
To look: gaze, glow, glance
To observe: remark, notice, consider, study
Existence: being, living
To whisper: murmur, rustle
Embrace: hug, cuddle, clinch
Horizon: skyline, offing
Sunset: sundown, downfall, dusk, twilight
Dawn: sunrise, daybreak

Some of them are not complete synonyms, so after the exercise they will be asked about the main differences and they will be given some examples in context. This activity is intended to give them some lexical variety to be able to rhyme their verses as much as possible.
Estimated time: 15-20 minutes

  •         Figures of speech identification: after having read the information given in the previous lesson, they will have to match each definition with its designation. For that purpose, they will be given two cards (one designation and one definition). Every student will go up to the blackboard, read his/her definition and ask “Who is it”. The student who think that may have the figure of speech concerned, has to say: It’s me. I am ‘X’ (and the name of the figure). I consider this part very effective and enriching for them to be flexible in their writings and to put all the tools at their disposal.

Estimated time: 30 minutes

  •          Brainstorming: 10 minutes to think in some figures of speech that might suit a poem. The whole group will exchange about that and the teacher will write on the board their proposals.


Day 3
Production: we will use the whole lesson to create and prepare their productions. It will be developed at the computer room, as they might need to look for specific data, music, videos, images and all the material needed to enrich their writings. The teacher will be always there for them, to resolve any doubts that might arise.
In my view, this activity will not also let them practice the language itself, but the oral understanding and talking, as well as their abilities to turn ideas into action, to create and to take risks. Finally, they will appreciate (or at least start to) and be aware of the poetry in different parts of the world and they will acquire some knowledge about this type of literary compositions.

Haikus

Flash Fiction

Poetry

2 comentarios:

  1. A very interesting and complete task as this really goes beyond the scope of a simple activity. I think that it would take you more than just three sessions, bear in mind that in most schools sessions are 50, not 60 minutes long. I would really plan this for a couple of weeks, perhaps working along with the literarture teacher, so that they can be doing a similar task in the L1. It is well explained, though complex in its organization. I thinki it can work very well if a lot of care is taken in the preparation.
    Be careful with the use of the term "exercises". Nothing you have shown here could come under that descrioption, they are all activities which make up a larger task. An another little point, don't use "centre" when you are refering to a school, it's not so common.

    ResponderEliminar
  2. Thank you, Luz. I know that finally I prepared a complicated activity, as it takes more than three sessions and there's a lot of things to get well tied. As Ana told us in one of our lessons, it is better, at first, to keep things simple; it's just that my enthusiasm sometimes runs faster than me... something to pay attention to.

    ResponderEliminar