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Re­la­ted ac­tivi­ties as in­ter­lu­des

Most stu­dents of all le­vels need lots of time and ex­pe­ri­ence to gain con­fi­dence in ad­dres­sing the as­sem­bled class or an un­k­nown pu­blic. It helps ha­ving re­gu­lar re­la­ted ac­tivi­ties, which needn't take up the whole les­son. Points of in­for­ma­ti­on are al­ways en­cou­ra­ged. Here, out of many, are just a few sug­ges­ti­ons:

  1. A sim­ple and short bal­loon-type de­ba­te (as in les­son 5), all sit­ting round in a cir­cle (chairs, no ta­bles!), each ha­ving to stand up and make a sim­ple state­ment that can gra­dual­ly get more com­plex. .(e.g. stu­dents could each iden­ti­fy with and pre­sent a co­lour .) Points of in­for­ma­ti­on are en­cou­ra­ged.
  2. A more ad­van­ced bal­loon de­ba­te. As above, but the bal­last to be jet­ti­so­ned is10 things we hold dea­rest: water & bread / love & fri­endship / free­dom of speech / de­mo­cra­cy / free­dom of re­li­gi­on / shel­ter / ...
  3. Each draws a word or phra­se from a hat and has to speak on it for a mi­nu­te. Again, a warm-up, .sit­ting in a cir­cle, no ta­bles, stan­ding up to speak.
  4. A talk show with talk-mas­ter, panel of six to eight stu­dents (each with a ge­ne­ral pro­fi­le al­lo­ca­ted at the out­set). The rest are the au­di­ence and are in­vi­ted and ex­pec­ted to ask ques­ti­ons. (Stu­dents are con­ver­s­ant and at ease with this form of TV en­ter­tain­ment.)
  5. Dis­cus­sion in­vol­ving all the class, split up into two large groups fa­c­ing each other, but not too far apart;. It's im­portant to have some con­tro­ver­si­al topic, for and against, and to have time for pre­pa­ra­ti­on (per­haps ho­me­work plus10 mi­nu­tes of class A time; and to be ef­fec­tive in a large class maybe have more than just two groups.) One stu­dent acts as lea­der of the dis­cus­sion to prompt ques­ti­ons.
  6. Hot chair . One (pres­u­m­a­b­ly self-con­fi­dent ) stu­dent sea­ted in the cent­re of a ring of stu­dents, chairs but no ta­bles, who bom­bard him/her with ques­ti­ons. Al­ter­na­tive­ly, he/she bom­bards the class with ques­ti­ons. He/she is sup­po­sed­ly an ex­pert on some topic.  
  7. Trial scene using Anglo-Ame­ri­can court pro­ce­du­re, i.e. ex­ami­na­ti­on and cross-ex­ami­na­ti­on of wit­nes­ses in court. This takes time (two to three dou­ble les­sons, pos­si­bly more!),e.g. a trial for 9th to 12th year, based on Roald Dahl's The Way Up to Hea­ven, Klett Easy Re­a­der: (a gua­ran­te­ed suc­cess, even if leng­thy.)
  8. Ju­gend de­bat­tiert . A dif­fe­rent for­mat,with a dif­fe­rent rhythm, now the com­mo­nest  de­ba­ting for­mat in Ger­man, but equal­ly sui­ta­ble in Eng­lish. Three spea­kers on each side for or against a mo­ti­on, but spea­king in­di­vi­dual­ly not as teams. One-mi­nu­te state­ments from each, then a lon­ger round-table dis­cus­sion, ar­guing up to 12 mi­nu­tes. Fi­nal­ly, fur­ther one-mi­nu­te state­ments by each. Spea­kers may chan­ge their slant, may even move towards the other side. There's only one in­di­vi­du­al win­ner.

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Ge­sam­tes Do­ku­ment her­un­ter­la­den [.doc][245 KB]