In the
classroom, oral communication seems to be the most favorite type of
communication between the students; anybody who has sat in front of a class of
thirty screaming kids during an indoor lunch period can attest to this. It is
the first way that we learn to communicate our ideas and feelings clearly as
young children and it is the easiest way, for most of us, to communicate to one
another as adults. However, there seems to be more emphasis put on the strands
of teaching reading and writing then there is on listening and oral
communication. I find this a little strange as it can be argued that our
reading and writing skills are based on, and go hand in hand with our ability
to speak and listen. That is why this week we were responsible for exploring a resource
that dealt with teaching effective oral communication in the classroom.
The resource
that I chose to explore can be found on edugains.com at http://www.edugains.ca/resourcesLIT/AdolescentLiteracy/AL_Resources/TalkingtoLearnALERT_8X11.pdf
and is titled, “Make room for talking to learn”. The article makes a great
point that although there is almost always talking in the classroom, this talking
is not always effective to learning. Talking in the classroom must be
facilitated in a way that not only promotes learning and deep thinking, but
most importantly, it must be accountable; what matters is what students are talking
about and how they are talking. This article gives a numerous amount of useful
tips for promoting and facilitating talking for learning in the class,
including an anticipation guide that can be used to frame the conversation and
encourage students to think deeply on a topic and take a stance. By using the
prompts and tips in this article you can create a lesson plan for a discussion
that hits on multiple expectations in the OLC Oral Communication strand; Students will:
1. Listen in order to understand and respond appropriately in a variety
of situations for a variety of purposes;
2. Use speaking skills and strategies appropriately to communicate with
different audiences for a variety of purposes;
3. Reflect on and identify their strengths as listeners and speakers,
areas for improvement, and the strategies they found most helpful in oral
communication situations.
LESSON PLAN
I would start this lesson by picking a
controversial topic that I know my class would be interested in. It is
important to pick a topic that the students feel differently about so as to
have supporters and people against the idea, this will ensure that both sides
of the topic are covered and will ensure for a healthy conversational debate.
The article gives a great example that I think is very relevant to student’s
lives today. The topic they give is one that I would actually use because I
think that it would create a good discussion in the class: “Do you think that
handheld electronic devices improve our quality of life.” I would pose this
question on the anticipation guide with questions such as “Some benefits of
handheld electronic devices are”, “Some drawbacks of handheld electronic
devices are”, “ Do you think handheld devices improve our quality of life?
Explain your answer.” After giving the students some time to think about the
questions and jot some thoughts down, I would open the floor to the
conversation. I might start the conversation off by playing devils advocate and
picking the side of the topic that I know most of the students would not pick. I
would also include a question or two such as, “In 20 years how will we be using
handheld devices? What are some positives and negative implications of this?”
This type of question forces the kids to think deeply about the prompt and to
form a stronger opinion. Hopefully these prompts and the anticipation guide
would help to start a healthy debate in the classroom in which students can
work on their listening and Oral communication skills.
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| SparkCBC. 2010. Microphone. [Online Image] http://bit.ly/1PNLZ2J |
I think that this activity would be best suited for grade sevens and eights as it requires some deep critical thinking as well as upper grade level listening and oral communication skills. In addition, the younger kids may not be able to defend their opinions as well and the conversation may loose its academic value and just become a screaming match. This can be a great lesson to encourage effective academic oral communication in the classroom and also hits on a number of expectations in the OLC Oral communication strand as stated above.

