Tips for Using Stories
On the British Council’s site for young learners - LearnEnglish Kids -
there are lots of stories which you can use to motivate your students. These
stories have been specially written for children learning English. They range
from quite simple to quite demanding in terms of the level of difficulty so
choose carefully. The stories are currently divided into four sections:
Short stories: Animated Flash movies for learners aged approx 8-12.
These are suitable for lower level learners and above.
Longer stories: Texts over a number of pages with soundfiles that
users can download and listen to. These are for learners aged approx 8-12 and
are more suitable for learners with higher levels of English.
Stories for little kids: Animated Flash movies for learners aged
approx 7 and under. Language levels vary but the subject matter is more suitable
for younger children. Younger children will need support to use these stories.
Fairy Tales: Animated Flash movies of traditional stories. These are
suitable for all ages, and are appropriate for lower levels and above.
You can find all the story materials at Kids Stories. As a
teacher using a story in the classroom, there are many ways of using and
exploiting the stories to help children understand and add to their enjoyment.
On these pages you will find tips for using and exploiting the stories in the
classroom.
A. Activities to prepare children for reading
1. Using illustrations
It is always a good idea to exploit pictures
to help the child understand and visualise the story. The stories have
illustrations which can be used to introduce the story, elicit vocabulary they
know, introduce difficult words in that story, and generally excite the interest
of the child for the story. This illustration is from the story ‘Carnival
Crime'. Ask learners to look at the picture before reading, and ask questions
such as ‘who are the people?'; ‘what are they wearing?' (and why?); ‘what is the
cat holding?'; ‘what has happened?'; ‘how is the woman feeling?' etc. Learners
will be introduced to vocabulary, will be more able to understand the text, and
will be more engaged in the reading task (was I right? Is it a necklace or a
watch?) Carnival
Crime
2. Pre-teaching vocabulary
Many of the stories on LearnEnglish Kids
are related to a topic. These topics can have ‘specialist' vocabulary which may
cause problems in comprehension. You will usually find links to other related
exercises on thematic vocabulary which can be taught first. For example, you
will find lots of related activities to practise the names of the animals in the
story ‘ABC Zoo' as well as flashcards that you can download to introduce the
animals. ABC
Zoo
3. Introduce the theme
Many of the stories are related to a topic.
It can be a good idea to familiarise learners with the topic before reading, by
trying activities related to the topic on the site, by setting a task to find
out about the topic (this could even be for homework), or by discussion (in your
own language with lower level learners if you like). For example the story
‘Football Crazy' is about a girl playing in a boys football team, breaking down
barriers, adults treating boys and girls differently. This is an important issue
for children. Before reading the story you could ask your learners to name
famous footballers, and once you have a list you could see how many famous
players are women. Then you can ask more questions such as ‘why are there so few
famous female football players?', ‘what about other sports?' etc. Football
Crazy
4. Input cultural background
Many stories assume a knowledge of
cultural norms in the UK, for example, the daily school routine. Children are
usually interested in finding out the differences between their own culture and
the lives of children in the UK. Some stories have more overt cultural
background. In the story ‘Hairy Henry's Holiday', typical sights of London are
mentioned, such as ‘Big Ben', ‘The London Eye' and ‘Madame Tussauds'. You could
use a map or guidebook to London to find out what these are before children read
or listen to the story. Henry
Holiday
B. Activities during reading
1. Use a variety of ways to read
There are many different ways to
approach the story. It is quite likely that younger learners will want to
read/hear/or listen to the story several times, particularly the shorter,
flash-animated ones. This should not be discouraged as it helps learners to
equate oral and written forms which is important for the development of reading
skills. In the classroom it is important to vary the kind of reading.
The teacher could use a data projector for a class to listen to/read a story
as a whole-class activity
The teacher could read the whole or parts of the story to a class with the
text
The learners can read by themselves silently, either on-screen whether at
school or even as homework
Some stories can be read as texts with illustrations and then children can
watch the flash movie version, or this order could be reversed.
2. Sustaining reading
If the story is very long then it is
important to keep the class motivated to read. The teacher could stop at
convenient ‘cliff-hanger' points and ask the class ‘what happens next?' This use
of prediction skills makes the learners want to read on to the end of the story
to find out if their own idea is correct. In a classroom this could be done as a
‘guessing game' if the teacher is controlling the pace of reading. A few of the
stories on LearnEnglish Kids have built-in puzzles to keep the learners
interested - for example in the story ‘Spycat', students have to type in the
destinations from anagrams, and finally solve the coded message. Spycat
3. Total physical response
With very young or active learners the
story can be mimed while the teacher reads or the children listen. A story like
‘The Snowman' could be used for this. The actions of waking up, running into the
garden, building the snowman and the ‘melting' are all easy to mime. Snowman
4. Characters and voices
In stories which have a lot of characters
you could ask students to read the dialogue of the characters. The teacher could
read the dialogue of characters in different voices first. For example the story
‘Alan and the Alien' is fairly long, but could be livened up with acting out the
alien funny voices and nonsense words! You could even create a class project
which involves rewriting this (or another) story as a play which could be
performed - perhaps with costumes. Alien 1
You can download a version of Goldilocks to act out with younger children: Goldilocks
5. Vocabulary help
If a child is reading individually at school or
at home they could also use Cambridge Dictionaries Online to check on the
meanings of unknown words, if the learner is at a high enough level to use this
independently. This is available at dictionary.cambridge.org
For younger learners there are many accompanying worksheets and online
interactive games to practise vocabulary from the stories. In particular the
Fairy Stories section contains material accessible and motivating to all levels.
You can find a wealth of vocabulary materials on Goldilocks, Jack and the
Beanstalk and Little Red Riding Hood: Fairy
Tales
C. Post-reading activities
1. Quick comprehension check
It is always a good idea to do a quick
comprehension check when your learners have finished reading the story, or at
the end of each page of text. This may take the form of a few ‘gist' questions
about the text in oral form, asking children for a response e.g. why is this
person sad, which character did the children like etc. This could be done in
written form. Many stories have worksheets for follow-up work, for example ‘Eric
the Engine' has a follow-up worksheet with a sequencing activity to check
comprehension. Eric
Engine
2. Make a poster/illustrate the story
You can use any story as an
opportunity for some creative drawing and illustration, perhaps with vocabulary
labels in English. For example, in the story ‘Carnival Crime', you could ask a
learner to draw the carnival costumes in the story and label them. As a
follow-up they could design their own carnival costume or a costume for a
festival in their country.
3. Stimulus for writing
Many stories lend themselves to acting as a
stimulus for creative writing, depending on the level of your learners. Younger
learners or learners who have a lower level of English could use one of the
simpler stories as a model for a story of their own. Examples are ‘My Dad'
(learners write about a member of their own family) or ‘Magic Spell' (learners
choose their own ingredients and outcomes). Learners with a higher level of
English could write more complex stories, for example, their own story based in
a haunted house (where did they go? What did they see? What happened?)
Other ideas for follow-up writing are writing a letter to a character in a
story, writing diary entries for a character in a story, or writing extra
dialogues between the characters.
My Dad
Magic
Spell
Haunted
House
4. Role-play/acting out
Interpreting stories as role-play can be as
simple or complicated as you like. It could start with miming basic actions,
then speaking or improvising dialogue. In the classroom the teacher will need to
be organised in advance with moving furniture, providing simple props etc. You
could even use facepaints.
Stories like ‘The Monster Shopping trip' are simple to act out. You could
draw the presents on card: Monster
Shopping Trip.
For the really ambitious class project you could make masks for the
characters. There are downloadable masks available for the characters in the
Goldilocks story available at britishcouncil.org/kids-print-mask-goldilocks.pdf
and for the story of Little Red Riding Hood you can download a set of finger
puppets of the characters to help you act out the story in class. These are
available at British
Council: Read Riding Hood Puppets
Sue Clarke
Link to original
article.
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