The Warm-up

 Purpose

  • To ease students into speaking/hearing French (probably for the first time in over 24 hours)
  • To maximize student participation from the beginning of the class period.
  • To reduce possible anxiety about speaking a foreign language.

 Guidelines

  • Plan 3-5 minute warm-up activities.
  • Recycle themes/structures/vocabulary from previous class periods.
  • While planning your lesson, write down the questions you will ask in your warm up. Then be prepared to depart from your plan according to student responses.
  • Personalize when appropriate.
  • Make sure all students get a chance to speak.
  • React naturally to what students say.
  • Encourage other students to react to the student speaking.
  • React naturally if a student's utterance is not clear.

 Sample Warm-Ups

Teacher guided question and answer:
Teacher asks questions based on recently studied vocabulary/grammar, following the guidelines above. (See Barnett handout for detailed Q/A script)

Student lead question and answer:
Teacher writes questions on bits of paper, numbers them, and hands them out. Teacher asks, "Who has number one?” and instructs student to read his/her question and to call on someone to answer. Teacher inserts follow-up questions, involves other students, encourages reactions. Teacher asks for question number two before the first one gets stale.

Visually-cued narrative:
Use a post card, a fine-art print, a calendar-sized picture, realia,, etc., to launch a whole-group, spontaneous biography or narrative.

Elaboration exercise:
Teacher tells students to imagine they are at a cafeteria, at a party, or in any social situation where small talk is required. Teacher hands out a series of very simple questions or statements, such as "Hi," "I like your dress. Are you from Charlottesville?" Teacher models the first Q/A with a student, showing how rude a one-word answer would be. Students are instructed to ask their questions and to make as much polite conversation as possible. [NB: This will work best in a small class, but may be incorporated as small group work in larger classes at a different point in the lesson.]

Brainstorming:
Teacher asks students what they would say/do in a given situation and maps answers on the board. EXAMPLE: What happens when you go to the doctor's office with a cold? (T elicits steps from phoning, to waiting and reading magazines, to receiving doctor's advice.) What happens when you go to a friend or family member with a cold? (T checks off answers that are the same, notes new ones on a separate list). This may lead into a review of health vocabulary, etc.

Chapter openers:
Each chapter of your textbook opens with a large photograph or a piece of realia. Organize a brainstorming/discussion session around the chapter opener.

Copyright 1998 by Cheryl Krueger
Department of French
University of Virginia

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