Overall you did a really excellent job today. Class was fun and everyone was involved. There were several areas of MIPA that you did exceedingly well and there are a few places where I have some pointers. I felt that at the begging of the class you did a good job setting up motivation. Leading them on with the dates as you did was fantastic! Having them come up to the board and fill in the dates worked really well! Then allowing Susan to go up to the board and write the whole thing was a great progression. You really have such a stronger command of the classroom it is excellent! They are all really engaged in the lesson and the way you went over the date was totally student-centered.
Then singing together was really cute! It really was effective for lowering their affective filter. You use a lot of hand motions, which is also really key so keep that up! The review at the begging of class was great for boosting their confidence overall. Then when you moved to “simon dice” game with objects around the room it may have been better to stick with “chair, door, window, pencil, pen, etc…” Black board was a slightly ambiguous first choice. Another suggestion: You often said “Do you know this?” I think you should try to avoid this question at all costs and instead ask them to tell you what they do know. So instead, “what is this called?”
The power point acted as a motivation and information stage. It was exiting and colorful and full of pictures and gave great context for the students.
These people are young vs. old:
“We describe them as young”
“We describe them as old”
It might be more useful to teach simpler versions of the verb to be, such as: He is old, She is old, They are old, I am, You are => then build up to “we describe them as”
By the time you got to the slide with the Clown - “Do you like clowns? Who is your favorite?” you have transitioned to doing just that: She is/He is. It would keep it simpler to have one goal as you are going through the power point to make it interactive. One or two functional chunks you want the students to be responding with.
Really good job writing on the board! They were all repeating the word for suit! They are so much more comfortable speaking in class it is great!
“They are laughing” Here again you have made the switch from “we describe them as” to the verb to be. You overemphasize the F so they can hear the air blowing out which is really great! Keep being loud!
Good example for the word ‘serious’! You really acted it out and its great how animated you are! Keep it up!
What is he doing? What is he wearing? Try to get full sentences out of them.
Fur vs. animal = good distinction
“We describe them as blonde”
The power point went a little long. There was a lot covered… they were getting kind of tired by brunette. It took over 20 minutes! That’s a lot of new information all at once. I try to stick to ten-minute chunks.
Even though their hair is orange we call them red-head = this was just confusing. They look like red heads to me!
When they get quiet you get quiet. Like when asking are they tall or short, that is exactly when you have to get extra loud. You start whispering. Asking the questions at the end was difficult because they only had gone through
“We are not blonde, we are not brunette, we are not red-heads” = this was a good loud statement.
***Having a handout with the Vocab words with pictures would have been great for them to look down on while they were practicing the new words. I’m sure they won’t remember, “suit” tomorrow.
You described “No one” and “neither” on the board. Try to just stick to one! Remember we can only learn “seven” new things at a time!
***It might be a good idea before your lessons to give yourself a limit of new phrases you are allowed to use.
You tended to quiz them right after the long powerpoint and I think they could have used a little extra time to soak in all the new terms and practice them before application, which was describing themselves. Pictionary, flashcards, connect the pictures to the new vocab word sheet... something along those lines!