TKT Module 1: Presentation Techniques and Introductory Activities - Teacher's Notes
TKT Module 1: Presentation Techniques and Introductory Activities - Teacher's Notes
– Teacher’s Notes
Description
Participants discuss some different presentation techniques and introductory activities, which
are tested in TKT Module 1 Part 3. They consider the advantages of some of these activities
and do a practice task relating to this syllabus area.
Procedure
1. (10 minutes) Check that students know what the presentation stage is by asking:
• What does the teacher do in the presentation stage of a lesson?
(introduces new language)
2. Give out Participant’s worksheet 1. Explain that the clues in the puzzle all describe
different techniques a teacher might use at the presentation stage of the lesson.
Participants work in pairs to complete the puzzle. If they are finding the puzzle
difficult, you can give them the first letters of the words.
3. Check answers together (see key below, but be ready to answer questions in case
some participants are unfamiliar with these terms) . Ask participants:
• What kind of activity was this? (word puzzle, warmer, introductory activity)
Explain that knowledge about introductory activities and of common ways of
presenting language are tested in the syllabus area ‘presentation techniques and
introductory activities’ in TKT Module 1 Part 3.
4. (10 minutes) Put participants into groups of three. They discuss the following
questions in their groups:
a. What reasons are there for doing introductory activities such as
warmers, ice breakers and lead-ins?
b. What introductory activities to start a lesson with do you know?
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1C O N C E P T C H E C K
2D O
3P R E S E N T
I T
L E
L X
4M T
I U 5E
M A L
6E X P L A I N
I C
S I
E T
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Participant’s Worksheet 3
1. D Presentation, practice, production (PPP)
2. E Task-based learning (TBL)
3. G Total Physical Response (TPR)
4. B Guided discovery
5. F Test-teach-test
6. A Grammar-translation method
7. C Lexical approach
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Across
1. To ask questions or use other techniques to check that students have understood a new
structure or item of lexis (two words).
3. To introduce new language, usually by focusing on it formally.
6. To tell students what language means and how it is used.
Down
1. To put new language into a situation that shows what it means.
2. To get students to repeat words or phrases.
4. To use body movements to convey meaning without using words.
5. To ask specially designed questions or give clues to get students to give information or an
opinion.
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1. Students stand in a circle. The teacher throws a ball to a student who then introduces
himself and says his favourite game or activity. He then tosses the ball to another
student who repeats the procedure. Give each student a chance to introduce
him/herself.
2. Divide the class into two teams, choose a category, and ask each team to think of an
object in that category. The teams ask each other yes/no questions. Whichever team
guesses the objects with fewer questions, wins.
3. Students work in groups of three. They brainstorm and make a list of the advantages
and the disadvantages of living in a big city.
4. The first student says something about himself, then changes that to make a
question for another student. For example, "My favourite colour is blue. What's your
favourite colour?" This can be another circle activity, and it works with large groups of
students, too.
5. The teacher starts off by saying: "Yesterday I went to the park." The first student
must include what the teacher said and then add something they did, e.g. "Yesterday
I went to the park and ate some pizza." The second student must include what the
teacher and the first student said and then add something else, e.g. "Yesterday I
went to the park, ate some pizza and went for a swim in the sea."
6. The teacher asks students to say what news stories they have read about recently.
Several students contribute and the teacher encourages students to ask each other
questions about the stories they have read.
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Choose one of the task types (A-K) for each of the activities below (1-11)
1. A way of teaching new language in which the teacher presents the language, gets
students to practise it in exercises or other controlled practice activities and then asks
students to use or produce the same language in a communicative and less controlled
way.
2. A way of teaching in which the teacher gives students meaningful tasks to do. After this
the teacher may ask students to think about the language they have used when doing the
tasks, but the main focus for students is on the task itself.
3. A way of teaching in which the teacher presents language items as instructions and the
students have to do exactly what the teacher tells them, e.g. Open the window! Stand up!
This method is good for beginners when they start to learn a new language, as they have
a silent period and can make fast progress.
4. A way of teaching in which a teacher provides examples of the target language and then
guides the students to work out the language rules for themselves.
5. A way of teaching in which the teacher asks students to do a task to see how well they
know a certain piece of language. The teacher then presents the new language to the
students, then in the final stage asks the students to do another task using the new
language correctly. This way of approaching teaching target language can be helpful if
the teacher thinks the students may already know some of the target language.
6. A way of teaching in which students study grammar and translate words into their own
language. They do not practise communication and there is little focus on speaking. A
teacher presents a grammar rule and vocabulary lists and then students translate a
written text from their own language into the second language.
7. A way of teaching language that focuses on lexical items or chunks such as words, multi-
word units, collocations and fixed expressions rather than grammatical structures.
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For questions 1–6, match the teacher’s actions with the introductory activities and
presentation techniques for different lessons listed A–G.
Mark the correct letter (A–G) on your answer sheet.
There is one extra option you do not need to use.
Introductory activities and presentation techniques
B eliciting language
C doing a warmer
D miming
F explaining
G drilling
Teacher’s actions
1 The teacher asks the students to look at pictures of Paris before they listen to a
recording about tourist attractions there.
2
The teacher asks the students to repeat sentences after her.
3 The teacher checks whether the students understand when the new language is
used.
4 The teacher does a short game with the students to give them energy.
5 The teacher asks the students for examples of different kinds of fruit and writes
them on the board.
6 The teacher does an action which shows the meaning of a new word.
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