Values for ELT #2 - Work

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Values for ELT Photo: Daily Pleasure / Flickr CC Andrés Ramos To find out the concepts, methodology, style, and sources supporting this series for Values Teaching, check out “Values for ELT: Introduction And Framework” at http://www.slideshare.net/AndrsRamos/values-for-elt-0-intro-framework-30932000 WORK

description

Everyone has their own take on work (love, hate, or everything in between). Why is it important? How can I instill it as part of my English class? What are the benefits for our lives, subject, and across the curriculum? Find some answers and ideas here!!

Transcript of Values for ELT #2 - Work

Page 2: Values for ELT #2 - Work

Are You Tired of…..

… dreams not come true yet?

… unfinished business?

… just longing to get ahead but going very slowly?

Photo: US Library of Congress / Flickr CC

Get up and do something!!

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What Is Work All about?

“Activity that involves physical or mental effort […]

something produced by a writer, painter, musician, or

other artist; the repairing and building of something.”

Macmillan English Dictionary Online

“ Activity in which one exerts strength or faculties

to do or perform something; sustained physical or

mental effort to overcome obstacles and achieve

an objective or result.”

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Photo: Greeblie / Flickr CC

Now, let’s see work for ELT.

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Talk The Talk about Work:

• - What do you do (for a living) ? - I’m a…

• I’m working (on / for)…

• I work (at / for / with)…

• I do (something) every (expressions of frequency)

• (Just) do it!

• I’ve been working on / making an effort /striving to (do something)…

• I’ve endeavored to (doing something)...

• “Let’s get serious about business”

• “I’ll get down to it.”

• I’m committed to getting (something) done…

• (someone) has / possesses a (not so) good / strong / hard work

ethic which enables / encourages (them) to / prevents (them) from…

Ways to assist students in practicing this, next!

Photo: LetThemTalk by Jennifer / Flickr CC

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Walk The Walk towards Work…

Along with children:

• Engage in creative activities by helping students persist,

enjoy the process, and celebrate the finished creation.

• Include indvidual or team work with an achievable degree

of complexity / challenge, while giving step-by-step

instructions and developing problem-solving skills.

Teens can also walk this way by…

Photo: Santiago / Flickr CC

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Photo: Alan Browser / Flickr CC

Along with teens:

• Prompt discussion on effort or work ethic from a reading,

audio file, video, website, anecdote, or prominent case.

Then elicit attitudes towards work among them.

• Help learners relate work to achievement by rewarding the

outcome of a project, community service, or entrepreneurial

effort.

• Considering students’ skills sets, lead them to coach /

assist each other in completing comprehensive tasks.

Adults and professionals can go along!

Walk The Walk towards Work…

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Photo: Mark Interrante / Flickr CC

Along with young adults & adults or professionals:

• Help them devise new ways to be more effective and

efficient in their academic and business lives, experiment with

those ideas, and report the results back to class.

• Compare own individual and societal beliefs about work

to those in other cultures, organizations, or communities,

and draw conclusions with action points.

A few tricks of the trade to make it happen, next!

Walk The Walk towards Work…

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Work + ELT Strategies

of Cognitive Nature

Whole Brain Teaching: Include work-promoting

activities that appeal to both brain hemisferes,

i.e. sequences + awareness of emotions / mood,

or partial facts + 360° perspective.

Mutiple Intelligences: Plan work-fostering

practice that also develops visual-spatial, logical,

mathematical, musical, kinesthetic, etc. skills.

Good for the brain! How about language acquisition?

Photo: Canadian Youth Delegation / Flickr CC

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ESP: Ask students to share perfomance-

enhancing techniques in their disciplines

and integrate them in (out-of) class

language skills practice.

Work + ELT Strategies

of Linguistic Nature

Didactics: Use Scaffolding procedures for

class practice on the value of work to help

students effectively streamline efforts and

achieve results.

No, we’re not leaving IT out. See next!

Photo: Canadian Youth Delegation / Flickr CC

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Mobile Learning: Get students to

create scripts, podcasts, or memes

with standard mobile / tablet apps.

Work + ELT Strategies

of Digital Nature

Blended Learning: Instant-poll students on

attitudes towards work, or use IWB to

collaborate on a work-promoting exercise.

Gamification: Use scheduling apps to plan /

simulate business activity, or city / farm management

apps to play and keep a journal on progress.

Let’s see how all this connects across the curriculum.

Photo: Canadian Youth Delegation / Flickr CC

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Work, The Perfect Match for…

Photo: Eva García Pascual / Flickr CC

• Science: Encourage students during trial & error stages.

• Art: Try more challenging techniques for painting, modeling…

• Math: Perform larger arithmetic operations.

• Physical Education: Set fitness goals and train for them.

• Biology / Physics / Chemistry: More demanding experiments.

• History: Make timelines, summary tables, comparative analyses.

• Literature: Understand and emulate authors’ styles.

• Music: Help students practice more complex works.

• Extracurricular clubs: Organize and engage in outreach.

• Engineering: Achieve efficiency gains for advance deadlines.

• Management: Analyze and balance workloads.

• Pure / Applied Sciences: Conduct more ambitious research.

• Performing Arts: Increase production values.

Last but not least, inspiration!

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Inspiration from Work

“Laziness may appear attractive, but work gives satisfaction.”

Anne Frank

Photo: Reza Vaziri / Flickr CC

“What is success? I think it is a mixture of having a flair for the

thing that you are doing; knowing that it is not enough, that you

have got to have hard work and a certain sense of purpose.”

Margaret Thatcher

“Do you know a hard-working man? He shall be

successful and stand before kings!”

Proverbs 22:29 (TLB)

Our next month’s value: Initiative

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Photo: Claire Lau / Flickr CC

More Values for ELT

What you’re about to see: Cover slides of the

previous and next parts of this series and links thereto.