Tag Archives: motivation

Positive Feedback Comments

If the student senses that you care, they will start to care as well. If the teacher does not care about the welfare of the students, why should they care about the teacher and the subject.

To learn the skill of giving constructive feedback took me a long time. But I did get better in doing that – by trial and error method. Quite a lot of principles to remember!

Feedback comments to encourage your students

The expressions below can be softened by adding ‘I think …’ ‘I have got a feeling that …’ ‘I am very pleased that …’ ‘It seems to me that … to them.

‘I think …’  You participate enthusiastically in discussion.
‘I’ve got a feeling that …’ You are superior in dividing work in your group.  
‘I am very pleased that …’   You listen to and follow directions well.
‘It seems to me that …’  You express ideas clearly and logically.

You will find 55 sample comments below that you can use in giving positive feedback to your students, those in senior high school or over 16 years of age. You will, however, notice that in practice you will use less than 10 phrases in the development discussion because you need to lure the students to say many of the ideas themselves.

SOCIAL SKILLS – feedback comments

 ‘I think …’  ‘I have got a feeling that …’   ‘I am very pleased that …’   ‘It seems to me that … USE THESE PHRASES TO SOFTEN THE MESSAGE

1 The other students seem to admire you for your calmness.
2 You have demonstrated great organizational skills.
3 You enjoy dramatization and encourage the others well.
4 I love to watch you working in groups and get the others back on track.
5 You have a great sense of humour and you lighten up the atmosphere.
6 The others say you are the one who encourages others most.
7 Your classmates like to be around you.
8 You are often the thoughtful leader in the group discussions.
9 You have developed more positive ways to interact with others.
10 The way you cooperate with others in group work is exemplary.
11 I admire your willingness to take responsibilities and follow them through.
12 What you are particularly good at is dividing work in your group.
13 You follow my directions well and advise the others if they do not get what I mean.
14 The way you treat the shy ones is superior to anyone else in class.
15 It is you the classmates turn to if they have a problem in English.
Modify the phrases for your own purposes and to encourage those who are not very good in English.

STUDY SKILLS  – feedback comments 

1 You have started to do your homework well and it shows in class too.
2 The others have noticed how you concentrate on learning much better this year.
3 Despite your hobbies you seem to manage your time well.
4 The strategy you follow in essay writing works beautifully now.
5 I’m so pleased that you seem to rely on yourself now.
6 You solved the problem with multiple choice questions and your open-ended answers are superb.
7 You probably realize yourself how much your vocabulary has expanded in just a few months. The tips seem to work well.
8 You are gaining academic skills, such as using effective learning strategies.
9 The way you pronounce English is music to my ears, just like native speakers. Recording your own speech on the phone was a great idea.
10 You are consistent in using English all through the lessons.
11 I’ve noticed how you help the others to find information quickly in the internet.
12 You have become so good at expressing your opinins that I suggest you will take part in our next school debate.
13 Reading newspapers and magazines in the internet has improved your reading skills tremendously.
14 I’m glad you don’t worry about grammatical mistakes any more and still you make fewer and fewer of them these days.
15 You seem to have found your own style of learning English better. And you even give hints to others.
Study skills, learning to learn well, requires a lot of time and patience.

ATTITUDE and MOTIVATION –  comments

1 You have realized that you are an auditive learner and youtube seems to serve you well.
2 The others have noticed how you take more and more pride in the way you make progress.
3 You have understood how important the learning tips I’ve given to the class are. The sky is the limit now.
4 Lately you have show enthusiasm for learning English.
5 You asked me how to improve your pronunciation, I gave you some advice and gosh how beautiful you sound now.
6 I’m glad you pulled up your sock when I returned your essay last month. The one this week nearly blew me away. Marvellous!
7 You really seem to enjoy speaking English and you are very active in class these days.
8 It’s great you like to challenge yourself in class and not do the easy assignment.
9 You have the guts to keep on asking relevant questions. I’m happy to answer them and the others benefit from them too.
10 You give constructive feedback to the others and me too.
‘The teacher is fair and on my side’ – a message that makes a big difference in the students’ minds.

ENGLISH PROFICIENCY – feedback comments 

1 You have shown noticeable improvement in speaking and pronunciation.
2 You comprehend reading tasks quickly and can explain the content in your own words.
3 You seem to make steady progress in learning active vocabulary and it is shown in both writing and speaking.
4 You have learnt to use more complicated grammatical structures with few mistakes.
5 Your essays have a clear logical structure and the points are soaring.
6 The presentations you give in front of the class are enjoyable to listen to.
7 When you have set your goals you do not give up no matter what.
8 You are able to analyse the listening tasks in detail and even challenge the formulation of some questions.
9 Your knowledge of the English-speaking world is amazing.
10 You seem to be able to think in English without any hesitation just like native speakers.
11 Thanks to reading English novels your passive vocabulary is admirable.
12 Your ability to argue for your case both is speech and writing is most convincing.
13 You have really made use of all the strategies we have been studying to learn English more efficiently.
14 The lesson on auditive, kinesthetic and visual learners seems to have openend your eyes to what sort of learner you are.
15 Your fluency in speaking leaves nothing to be desired. And your pronunciation is music to anyone’s ears.
Language skill is the most delicate skill to give feedback on. Low-achievers in particular need encouragement even for minor improvement.

What we teachers say to our students, has a much more profound meaning to our students than we can ever imagine.

Getting students to design vocab tasks, Points 1 – 10

Activate your students to design vocab tasks at home or at school. You will be amazed how enthusiastic and creative the students get in doing so.

We teachers need to give space for the creativity of our students. letting the students design exercises for others is an excellent opportunity for that. Let me move on to give practical tips what you can do in class to get the students more involved in learning new words.

Of course we need to check the tasks before they are published not to embarrass the designer. Of course there will be a lot of variation in the quality of the tasks and of course there will be mistakes in the tasks.

Nevertheless, the benefits are undeniable. All we teachers need to do is to check the tasks, maybe suggest some improvements and above all find a way how the answers can be checked: the task designer provides the correct answers or the pair or group does not even need one.

The whole point in this is that the students will learn at least the words they are working on. Besides, they become more curious and motivated to solve problems designed by others than doing workbook exercise.

“Good for you but I do not have time for any of this”, I hear you thinking. That is exactly what I thought before I started teaching my students how to design vocab tasks. It takes some time at first but in the long run it is rewarding.

Besides, who says I can’t skip chapters in our textbook and exercises in the workbook. No-one. I know best what my students need and appreciate doing.

Practical vocab task hints for the students and the teacher

  1. Link the new word with a picture or photo. At the beginning of the year decide on the vocab themes of the year (fruit, housing, traffic etc.) Give each pair a topic for which they find 10 – 15 pictures in the internet, get them on one page and write the words at the bottom of the page. Then they send the file to you to be used later with a certain chapter.
  2. Link the new word to your mother tongue. Using mother tongue in exercises is perfectly ok if the class cannot cope tasks in English only . Still, teachers should maximize the use of English in lessons.
  3. Write the unknown words of the chapter on a paper and make up a mindmap or a story. The mindmap may consist of key words of the chapter or anything else as long as it makes the student think hard. The story may be oral only and done in group by each one taking turns sentence by sentence. The leader of the group helps the slower ones patiently. There will be a lot of laughter, believe me!
  4. Associate the new word with another (funny) word, story or setting. Explain to your pair how the association works for you. My sample associations/images: ‘Rainbow trout’ a fish has rainbow colours on its back when it surfaces from water. ‘Roundabout’ it is round and may be found in the middle of nowhere in Britain. The reasons for the associations are very interesting to listen to and visualize. You will be surprised!
  5. Record a word list on your phone ( word in mother tongue – 1 sec pause – word in English. Listen to the list many times. My wife’s favourite way to learn and remember words. She used to listen to the recording while cycling to evening classes. Excellent for auditive learners.
  6. Make word lists on paper (mother tongue – English), cover up the other side and say the words aloud or write them down before checking. Many textbooks have these lists ready-made. I myself used this method and mumbled the words at the same time.
  7. Make or have a look at a word list (mother tongue – English). Then make an exam for yourself or others. The students are very surprised when you suggest this kind of exam. They think it is too easy which is not the case. They seldom get full points but they learn many words when writing the exam. My grading: one letter wrong >> half a point, two letters wrong >> zero points.
  8. Say or write a sentence where you use the new word. Words learnt in isolation is not ideal and that is why I use this technique before we even listen to the chapters.
  9. Tell a story where you use the new words. (Humour is the best medicine!) This is one of my students’ favourites since they always come up with fascinating stories in a couple of minutes. Every now and then we record the stories, I get them on Whatsapp and then later on we listen to them. For example, 30 students, 1 min / group, 8 groups >> 10 – 12 min
  10. Make two-sided word cards and use them in a self-made game. This one requires an article of its own. I often combine it with cultural knowledge on the English -speaking words.
Colour photos are excellent sources for vocabulary learning and story telling because they stir imagination in a positive manner. This photo is from Central Park, New York City. I finally visited the city in 2016 having talked about it for 40 years. I actually thought I would not like the city but I was wrong. I’m looking forward to another visit.

N.B. Look at Points 11 – 22 in my next article.

THE INDUCTIVE AND DEDUCTIVE METHOD in teaching grammar

Look at the photo above. Which one is better for learning? The teacher telling the secret of the mystery car OR the students studying the car and finding it out themselves?

The answer is at the very end of this article. Think carefully because it will reveal your attitude towards teaching grammar as well.

I know. Having studied English for many years at the university you are not supposed to lecture and shine with your knowledge in front of your class (= the deductive method). Let’s have a look at our options.

Why the inductive method? Because it forces the students to think hard. The more they crack their brains, the better they learn.

Earlier on we defined the two most common methods in teaching grammar:

“Most teachers know the term ’inductive method’ of teaching grammar, which means the formulation of the rules on the basis on examples. It is contrasted with the ’deductive method’ which means the teacher explaining the rules in detail and then letting the students practise and apply the rules. This is the easy way out in teaching grammar. The teacher thinks ’I taught you the rules and it is up to you to learn them. We need to move on.’ “

I will start by discussing ‘the inductive method’. In my opinion it is the one we can and should use in teaching nearly all grammatical points. The inductive method activates the students’ brains much better than the ‘deductive one’.

The advantages of using the inductive method

  • First of all, students remember the rule better if they themselves have worked it out from the sample sentences given to them.
  • Secondly, students become very motivated to solve the problem; it is a minor detective operation.
  • Thirdly, every student is given time to try to figure out the rule if the process is slow, and proceeds step by step.
  • The teacher can exercise his/her expertise in the matter by presenting the relevant questions when the rule is being formulated.
  • In most cases the process can be carried out in English but in some classes it may be better to use the mother tongue to make sure everyone understands the rule.

How does the process advance in using the inductive method?

For the method to be effective it is advisable to more or less follow the steps given below and allow differentiation in the exercise types at Stage 5 if necessary.

Stage 1: Pre-task 1 Play a board game where the students throw a dice (or roll a pencil with 1-6 dots on it) and can move onwards if they remember the 3 forms of about 20 verbs, regular and irregular ones. N.B. Always make sure the foundation for the next task is solid: Some irregular verbs must be mastered for Stage 2.

Stage 2: Pre-task 2 Have a ‘Find someone who …’ task in order to make the students use the structure to be learnt many times. The structure to be learnt is The 2nd conditional.

What would you have done, if the school had been closed today?

ActionName if ‘YES’
I would have gone swimming.
I and my friend would have played computer games.Peter
Me and my dad would have eaten lunch together.Jill
I would have written our home essay.
I would have slept a couple of hours more at home.Shirley

Stage 3: Look at the examples below and work out the rule for the main clause and for the if-clause.

The main clauseThe if-clause
I would have gone downtownif the boss had given me the task.
My mum would have taken dad’s carif it had been in the garage,
What do these two clauses have in common? (= KEY QUESTION!!)
(would have + verb)
How would you translate the clauses? ‘olisin mennyt’ ‘olisi ottanut’
What do these two if-clause have in common? (the pluperfect tense)
How would you translate the clauses? ‘olisi antanut’ ‘olisi ollut’

Stage 4: Let’s formulate the rule for the 2nd conditional

The road to the formulation of the rule is clear if the students spot which pattern the sample clauses have in common.

The main clauseThe if-clause
would have + 3rd form of the verbthe pluperfect tense = had + 3rd form of the verb
‘olisi tehnyt’‘olisi tehnyt’

Now the Finnish students would notice that the Finnish language does not make any difference between the main and if-clauses and for them that is the point to bear in mind. In addition to the rules, of course. In other languages the situation may be different. In any case, comparison with the mother tongue is often very useful.

Stage 5: The if-clause can be in front of or after the main clause but do not reveal it to the students. Let them fall into the ‘trap’ when they do the first exercises and they will remember the application of the rule better.

Practice session; just like we have learnt before there should be 3 kinds of tasks for the sake of differentiation. The students will do i), ii) or iii) or all of them. See the samples below as a reminder!

i) A mechanical task (a gap filling exercise, isolated sentences with no context)

I don’t understand why you said nothing. I ___________________________ (tell) him the truth, if he __________________________ (ask) me anything about it.

Why did they not let us know they were not coming? If they _____________________ (call) us, we _________________________ (leave) the party immediately.

ii) Semi-communicative exercise (a realistic context but no freedom to write creatively and use the 2nd conditional forms)

There was a robbery at a local grocery store last week and three students are discussing what they would have done if they had been in the shop at that time.

Malcolm: I ______________________________ (hide) behind the shelves and if it _____________________________ (be) possible, I _________________________(call) the police quietly.

Anne: If I __________________________ (see) the robber, I _______________________ (write down) what they looked like and how they spoke.

Cary: I ______________________________ (try) to be quiet and I ______________________________ (take) photos from my hiding place. It _____________________________ (be) very dangerous, if the robber _______________________ (see) me doing it.

iii) A real communicative task (a realistic situation/context and freedom to be creative about the content)

There was a boat accident on a lake near your school yesterday and you are talking about it with your class mates. Write at least four things you would have done if you had been there and had seen what was going on. Include at least two if-clauses in your story.

How does the process advance in the deductive method?

The decuctive method is very easy to use but in my opinion should not be used too much since the students do not need to crack their brains very much when the teacher is explaining the rules.

There are, however, a couple of cases when the use of the deductive method is justifiable:

  • The rules might be too complicated for the students to work out. (For example, changing ‘direct speech’ into ‘indirect speech’ includes far too many little details to be taken into account.
  • Working out the rules might take far too much time.
  • The class is not accustomed or able to formulate the rules, not even when it is done in the mother tongue.

If we look at the stages above, in the worst case a teacher in favour of the deductive method might skip Stages 1 – 3 altogether, explain the rules at Stage 4 and offer mere mechanical exercises in Stage 5.

All in all, hopefully you have now a better idea how modern CLT teachers deal with grammar and treat it as an essential part of foreign language learning.

The ‘car’ is not a real car at all but a piece of art in New York made mostly of recycled tyres.

READING STRATEGIES, an example how to teach them

Quite often if we do not understand a text, it is the writer’s fault, not ours. Still there are strategies how we can become good readers and learn to understand much more than we ever thought was possible.

  • The teaching of learning strategies is one of the latest innovations in CLT philosophy and an essential part of increasing the students’ motivation.
  • The use of the word ‘strategy’ implies that there are ways and techniques that will make us better readers; approaches that should be taught and can be learnt in a short period of time.
  • Discuss the strategies presented in these articles with your students at some point, in advance or afterwards. They will see that you really care!
  • Practise the strategies little by little and let the students pick up the ones that work for them. Many of the ideas will enhance writing as well.

Sample text on how you can teach reading strategies 1 – 6 below

The text below is in Finnish, a languge you probably do not know. But don’t panic! I’m sure you can handle the text.

I want teachers and students to have an experience on how powerful a tool reading strategies can be even if you do not master the language at all.

An example on how you can teach some reading strategies even if the task seems impossible

Instructions to the students

  1. Look at the photo, headline and the layout of the text to give you clues what the text in Finnish is about. Don’t use phones or other sources of information!
  2. Underline words that resemble words in your mother tongue or some other language and try to guess what they mean.
  3. Make two assumptions what you think the text is about.
  4. Make two questions you think the text might give an answer to.
  5. Use common sense, general knowledge, logic and guessing to figure out what the hard sentences are about.
  6. Read the text on your own first and then discuss it with your pair or in your group.
  7. If needed your teacher will solve the mystery for you. See how close you can get!

N.B. Teachers! Don’t cheat. Try the exercise out yourself first and after that let your students apply the first 5 tips/strategies above. They will internalize them without teaching, first reading alone and even more in groups afterwards.

You are wrong if you think you are not able to understand written Finnish! Tackle the text now!

Salalah, hedelmäparatiisi

Tämä valokuva on otettu Salalahissa, joka on noin 900 kilometriä Omanin pääkaupungista Muscatista etelään. Banaanit, mangot ja vesimeloonit alueen päätuotteita.

Hedelmät poimitaan hieman raakoina ja siksi ne ovat myytäessä vihreitä. Muualla Omanissa kasvaa melkeinpä ainoastaan taatelipalmuja. Mutta jos vuokraatte auton, varokaa kameleita, koska niitä voi olla jopa moottoriteillä.

Instructions to the teacher

  • When the students have studied the text on their own, let them discuss it in pairs or groups. This is the moment they will learn most, explaining others about their strategies.
  • Start going through the text with the whole class using points 1 – 5. First, look at the photo: What can we learn from it? Some students have never ‘analysed’ a photo before! It is a skill of its own.
  • Then look at the title: What does it probably mean?
  • Students assumptions, guesses about the content?
  • Which questions might be answered in the text?
  • The importance of background knowledge and common sense and logic?
  • Take turns and get the answers from many pairs/groups. Most likely you will get most of the answers from the students.

The suggested answers with the text both in Finnish and in English can be found below under the photos.

Salalah, fruit paradise / Salalah, hedelmäparatiisi

  • The key to solving the meaning of the title is to connect ‘paratiisi‘ with ‘paradise’. The photo should imply that ‘hedelmä’ means ‘fruit’.

This photo was taken in Salalah, which is about 900 kilometres south of Muscat, the capital of Oman. Bananas, mangos and watermelons are the main products of the region. / Tämä valokuva on otettu Salalahissa, joka on noin 900 kilometriä Omanin pääkaupungista Muscatista etelään. Banaanit, mangot ja vesimeloonit alueen päätuotteita.

  • Green words are nearly the same in Finnish and English, loan words, and they reveal the topic, ‘fruit’.
  • Common sense and logic: Oman is a country, Muscat is probably the capital. Salalah must be a fruit production area 900 kilometres from Muscat. Which direction? It does not really matter. To the south, but you can know it only if you know the map of Oman.

Fruits are picked a little raw and therefore they are green when they are sold. Elsewhere in Oman date palm trees are just about the only trees growing. But if you hire a car, mind the camels because you might see them even on motorways. / Hedelmät poimitaan hieman raakoina ja siksi ne ovat myytäessä vihreitä. Muualla Omanissa kasvaa melkeinpä ainoastaan taatelipalmuja. Mutta jos vuokraatte auton, varokaa kameleita, koska niitä voi olla jopa moottoriteillä.

  • Green words are nearly the same in Finnish and English, loan words, and they reveal how the text goes on.
  • The 1st sentence of the 2nd paragraph really tests the readers ability to guess what the sentence may mean. The title >>‘ hedelmät’ =’ fruit’.
  • What happens to fruit before they are eaten? They are picked up ‘raakana’=’raw’ when they are ‘vihreä’ = green like in the photo. This is general knowledge: fruit ripen up on their way to the shops.
  • Omanissa taatelipalmuja’ = ‘In Oman date palm trees’ is the essence of the sentence. Not the full meaning but close enough.
  • If you go abroad, you probably do not take your car with you but you hire it. So ‘vuokraatte auton’ = hire an ‘automobile’/’auto’/’car’
  • If camels are mentioned with motorways, it must mean they are the ones causing accidents on motorways. Not deer or elks, like in Finland.

The complexity of the reading process above in our heads is astonishing. But listening to others explaining how they processed the text is one of the keys in becoming a better reader.

N.B. It is quite amazing how much you can actually understand Finnish just cracking your brains a little and using various strategies. I bet Paragraph 1 was a piece of cake for you and you even guessed the meanings of the new words. The last sentence too.

If your students can crack this Finnish puzzle at least partially, they will not give up very easily if they come a cross a problem in an English text.

The next article is about how to use the same strategies in solving a reading comprehension test in English.