Broken Telephone
Daphne Tan, Singapore
This is a little game I have used to help students with their listening practice and it develops pronunciation awareness. The name of this game is `broken telephone`.
• First the class is divided into a few groups, with about 10 in each group. I hand one person in the group a sentence, which he or she must then memorise and pass on to the next person, by whispering.
• The next person will pass the sentence down the line to the next and so on until it finally gets to the last person in the group. That person in the group will then have to stand up and say what the sentence is.
I find this exercise fun and a break from the normal learning routine. Teachers can construct sentences with words that may sound similar to others, like working (walking), lazy (lady), grass (glass) and so on. It`s really funny hearing the sentence at the end because it is often a mad distortion of the original. The students often have a good time laughing at how ludicrous it all became in the end, and more importantly, realise the value of proper pronunciation.
C for consonant, V for vowel
Alan Stanton, teacher trainer and materials writer
This is an activity to be carried out before introducing phonemic symbols. It is designed to teach students:
• The difference between sounds and letters
• The difference between vowel sounds and consonant sounds
• The difference between one sound and two sounds
Procedure:
1. Choose ten words that students already know. It is important that they are familiar words.
2. Choose four or five other familiar words as examples.
3. Demonstrate on the board that the word `cat`, for example, can be written CVC, Consonant sound, Vowel sound, Consonant sound. This is a very easy example but there are more difficult ones. `Caught` is CVC, `through` is CCV, `breakfast` is CCVCCVCC, `brother` is CCVCV, `hour` is VV, `carrot` is CVCVC.
4. Ask students to do the same with the ten words you have chosen. You can ask them to do this by looking and writing, by looking, listening (to you) and writing, by listening, saying (to each other) and writing - whichever combination seems valuable and necessary.
5. If you are not sure about a word, check the phonemic symbols in a dictionary.
6. Check students` answers and explain any difficulties.
This activity will clarify many points for students. For example, that `br` is two sounds but `th` is one, final `er` is one and `rr` is one. It will show that `h` is sometimes silent and sometimes not and that final `r` is silent. Note that diphthongs count as one vowel sound. This activity is good preparation for learning phonemes because it focuses on sounds and not letters.