Teaching and Assessing of The Macro Skills-Zjas
Teaching and Assessing of The Macro Skills-Zjas
Teaching and Assessing of The Macro Skills-Zjas
Speaking as a Macro-skill
Speaking English is the main goal of many adult learners. It's a matter of quantity vs. quality, and
neither approach is wrong. However, if the aim of speaking is communication and that does not require
perfect English, then it makes sense to encourage quantity in your classroom. Students will need some
preparation before the speaking task. This includes introducing the topic and providing a model of the
speech they are to produce.
• imitating (repeating)
• interactive conversation
• oral presentation
1. CONTENT As much as possible, the content should be practical and usable in real-life situations.
Avoid too much new vocabulary or grammar, and focus on speaking with the language the students have.
2. CORRECTING ERROR – the teacher should be able change the error so that it will be right, true,
and proper
What to do:
3. QUANTITY VS QUALITY
What to do:
Show interest.
5. TEACHER INTERVENTION
If a speaking activity loses steam, you may need to jump into a role-play, ask more discussion questions,
clarify your instruction, or stop an activity that is too difficult or boring.
What is a task?
“An activity which required learners to arrive at an outcome from given information through some
process of thought, and which allowed teachers to control and regulate that process, was regarded as a
'task'.” -Prabhat /IY87:21)
Pre-task Phase
The purpose of the pre-task phase is to prepare students to perform the task in ways that will promote
acquisition.
Post-task Phase
Advantages of TBL:
1. Task based learning is useful for moving the focus of the learning process from the teacher to the
student.
2. It gives the students a different way of understanding language as a tool instead of as a specific goal.
3. It can bring teaching from abstract knowledge to real world application.
Phase Examples
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
A. Pre-task • The teacher will ask the students what comes to their minds if they heard about the
“traditional way of teaching” and “21st century teaching”;
B. During task • After having the introduction of the topic, the class will be divided into two groups;
• Each group will prepare a role play portraying how traditional teachers teach and also how the 21st
century teacher teach;
• Someone from each group is assigned to explain about their role play;
C. Post-task • After the task, the teacher will ask a representative from each group to share what he
learned from the other group’s role playing and vice versa;
Discussions
After a content-based lesson, a discussion can be held for various reasons. The students may aim to
arrive at a conclusion, share ideas about an event, or find solutions in their discussion groups. Before the
discussion, it is essential that the purpose of the discussion activity is set by a teacher. In this way, the
discussion points are relevant to this purpose, so that students do not spend their time chatting each other
about irrelevant things. It is a speech or piece of writing that gives information, ideas, and opinions about
certain topic.
Role Play
Other way of getting students to speak is role playing. Students pretend that they are in various social
contexts and have a variety of social roles. In role-play activities, the teacher gives information to the
learners such as who they are and what they think or feel. Thus, the teacher can tell the student that “You
are David, you go to the doctor and tell him what happened last night, and …” (Harmer, 1984)
Simulation
Something that is made to look, feel or behave like something else especially so that it can be studied or
used to train people.
Simulations help students apply their skills to "real life" situations by providing an environment to
manipulate variables, examine relationships, and make decisions. This type of assignment is generally
used after initial instruction as part of application, review, or remediation.
Simulations can be used to prepare students for a field trip or real experiment. For example, a frog
dissection simulation can be used to prepare students for the face-to-face lab situation.
Brainstorming
A group problem-solving technique that involves the spontaneous contribution of ideas from all the
members of the group. Depending on the context, either individual or group brainstorming is effective
and learners generate ideas quickly and freely. The good characteristics of brainstorming is that the
students are not criticized for their ideas, so students will be open to sharing new ideas
Storytelling
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
Students can briefly summarize a tale or story they heard from somebody, beforehand, or they may create
their own stories to tell their classmates. Storytelling fosters creative thinking. It also helps students to
express ideas in the format of beginning, development, and ending, including the characters and setting a
story has t have. Students can also tell riddles or jokes. For instance, at the very beginning of each class
session, the teacher may call a few students to tell short riddles or jokes as an opening, in this way, not
only will the teacher address students’ speaking ability, but also get the attention of the class
Interviews
Students can conduct interviews on selected topics with various people. It is a good idea that the teacher
provides a rubric to students so that they know what type of questions they can ask or what path to follow,
but students should prepare their own interview questions. Conducting interviews with people gives
students a chance to practice their speaking ability not only in class but also outside and helps them
becoming socialized. After interviews, each student can present his or her study to the class. Moreover,
students can interview each other and “introduce” his or her partner to the class. It is also a meeting at
which information is obtained.
Speaking becomes important because speaking is a skill that can make people easily understand to what
things explained.
A. Fluency -points out that speaking ability is described as the ability to report acts or situation, in
precise words, or the ability to converse or to express a sequence of ideas fluently.
Speaking situations
IMITATIVE. The students just imitate how to say in correct intonation not meaningful
interaction.
INTENSIVE. The students practice some phonological/grammatical aspect of language.
RESPONSIVE. The student should have question or command for their teacher.
TRANSACTIONAL. The students will try to speak to get the purpose of getting information. -.
INTERPERSONAL. The students will get the purpose of maintaining social relationship to get
the fact and information.
EXTENSIVE. The students will try to perform oral monologues such as report, summary or
short speak.
3. Grammar - Grammar is the system of rules governing the conventional arrangement and relationship
of words in a sentence.
4. Vocabulary - three usual things used by speakers in what they are being said:
When people speaking, they are involving high proportion of words and expressions that express their
attitude (stance) to what is being said.
Speakers usually employ words and expressions that express positive and negative appraisal because a
lot of speech has an interpersonal function, and by identifying what people like and dislike, they are able
to express solidarity.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
A speech also usually employs deictic language, i.e. words and expressions that point to the place,
time, and participants in the intermediate or a more distant context.
6. Appropriateness - The term of appropriateness is related to some variables. When people are
communicating they have to see what effects to achieve the communicative purpose. Those variables are:
Setting Participants Gender Channel Topic
7. Complexity -It is wrong that written language is highly organized, structured, and complex while
spoken is disorganized, fragmentary, and simple. The spoken language is complex in a different way. The
complexity of written language is static and dense, while spoken is dynamic and intricate.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
An estimated 122 million youth globally are illiterate, of which young women represent 60.7% ..
67.4 million children are out of school … deficient or non-existent basic education is the root cause of
illiteracy’. (UNESCO)
Imagine what your life would be like if you didn‘t know how to read. Approximately only 80%
of the world‘s population is reported to be able to read (Grabe & Stoller, 2002).
Reading is a fundamental skill for learners, not just for learning but for life (Traves 1994) with
reading being defined as ―…the ability to draw meaning from the printed page and interpret this
information appropriately‖ (Grabe & Stoller, 2002, p. 9).
L1 literacy leads to L2 literacy development awareness. Reading itself builds on oral language
levels and key factors that influence (L2) reading skill development include the ability to comprehend and
use both listening and speaking skills because you need to:
Hear a word before you can say it Say a word before you can read it Read a word before
you can write it (Linse 2005)
Especially if the children‘s own language has a different alphabet it is important that they become
familiar with the shapes of letters and can begin manipulating them. The following holistic (they require
using the body and space rather than pencil and paper) activities help to give children a strong imprint of
the shape of letters in their mind‘s eye.
Body letters
Ask children to make themselves into the shape of given letters ‗make yourself an ‗s‘ etc‘. Children
contort their bodies into what they think the letter looks like.You can model this easily by showing them
an ‗x‘ by standing with your feet apart and your arms in the air and wide apart. Or you can show a ‗T‘ by
standing with your feet together and your arms stretched out to the sides. Or ask children to make a letter
and the whole class has to try to recognize what the letter is.
Tracing letters
Ask students to shut their eyes and with your finger trace a letter on their hand or back. They must tell
you what this is. They can play the game in pairs. There may be giggles from the ticklish in the class, but
the activity requires them to ‗see‘ the letter in their mind‘s eye and it‘s great fun, too.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
Air writing Before writing letters on paper, get all the students to stand up and you stand at the front of
the class with your back to them. Using your writing hand draw a big letter in the air saying its sound at
the same time. Get the students to copy you, moving their arms to form the letter in the air. Letter
sculptures Give out plasticine (soft modelling clay) to all the children (half-cooked spaghetti works too,
but is messier). Ask the children to make certain letters (or words). They have to concentrate on the shape
of the letter and its proportions.
Young learners love stories, and reading with young learners typically involves including a wide
range of activities along with the reading itself. We read the images, read the text aloud, retell the story
with our own words, and carry out a series of playful activities based on the text. However, a beautiful
picture book isn‘t enough, language teachers need extra materials to support their reading programmes
and make them successful.
illustraions,
a picture dictionary,
Follow these six strategies and we guarantee that you will have a fun and successful young reading
programme:
Use Young Readers BIG BOOKS: they are specially devised for shared reading. Make sure that your
students have copies of the small editions too. This way they can reread the text alone or with their family
or friends.
Why do it?
How to do it?
Choose a reader.
Activate background knowledge and vocabulary.
Make predictions. Read the text to your group.
Reread the text, inviting your students to join in the reading if they feel like it.
Whether you are reading with one student or a group, take this simple and easy advice: slow down. Give
enough time to your students to choose a book (offer 2 or 3 titles you have selected), give them enough
time to study the book before you start reading, and give them enough time to observe the images.
Why do it?
Around the age of 5 or 6 young children are already familiar with picture books, and they have
developed strategies to understand stories that are read to them. Storytelling gains more
importance than ever before.
When you are reading aloud to children, your can give your full attention to them.
It revises vocabulary and introduces new words, phrases your students might not even know in
their first language.
You can introduce simple reading techniques to very young children: book layout, page layout,
speech bubbles, and they can identify letters and words.
When you are reading aloud, children learn to interpret images.
How to do it?
During the second or third reading of the story, let your students finish sentences.
Look back: from time to time, stop to ask questions about the story. “What happened to the kite
before?‘, or “Do you remember this girl?‘.
Anticipation: children love anticipating the plot. It makes them feel comfortable and reassures
them that their knowledge of the world is correct.
Prediction: Ask them what they think will happen to the characters.
Tap into their experiences: ask them if they have seen or heard about the things you are reading
about.
3 MOVE AND ACT -Reading is often a solitary and stationary act. When you decide to use stories with
young learners, remember that they might not feel comfortable sitting in one spot for 30 minutes.
Why do it?
Young learners enjoy learning through movement: they love pointing at and touching things,
acting and dancing.
Reading in the classroom should not become a monotonous action that makes your students
sleepy. We have bedtime stories for that.
How to do it?
Point out objects and people while you are reading and ask your students to do the same.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
When there‘s action, imitate the characters in the book. Use some scenes or the whole reader
for role plays.
Why do it?
Flashcards are every language learner‘s indispensable vocabulary assistants. Most of the young learners
in your groups can‘t read or write yet. Use the picture or use the illustrations, but most importantly, use
the flashcards
How to do it?
If you do creative projects and games after reading a story, you can make sure that your students have
immediate, contextualised vocabulary practise. They can also play a game and make the book more
memorable.
Why do it?
Creative projects activate manual and visual skills, and let your students rely on their own
creativity.
6 CHANT
We have talked about the power of images and acting. Songs, chants and raps are equally valuable for
your reading class.
Why do it?
Children love rhymes, and they become familiar with them at a very early age (23). They repeat
and imitate your words without really questioning what you‘re saying. This quality helps them
develop unharmed pronunciation at an early age.
If you top word repetition activities with chants, you can practise intonation and sentence
structure with your young learners in a natural way.
How to do it?
Comprehension is the only reason for reading. Without comprehension, reading is a frustrating, pointless
exercise in word calling. It is no exaggeration to say that how well students develop the ability to
comprehend what they read has a profound effect on their entire lives. A major goal of teaching reading
comprehension, therefore, is to help students develop the knowledge, skills, and experiences they must
have if they are to become competent and enthusiastic readers.
For many years, teaching reading comprehension was based on a concept of reading as the application of
a set of isolated skills such as identifying words, finding main ideas, identifying cause and effect
relationships, comparing and contrasting, and sequencing. Teaching reading comprehension was viewed
as a mastery of these skills. Comprehension instruction followed what the study called mentioning,
practicing, and assessing procedure where teachers mentioned a specific skill that students were to apply,
had students practice the skill by completing workbook pages, then assessed them to find out if they could
use the skill correctly. Instruction did little to help students learn how or when to use the skills, nor was
ever established that this particular set of skills enabled comprehension.
Research indicates that we build comprehension through the teaching of comprehension strategies and
environments that support an understanding of text. It is important for educators and parents to teach
children active strategies and skills to help them become active, purposeful readers. Teaching reading
comprehension is an active process of constructing meaning, not skill application. The act of constructing
meaning is:
Interactive – It involves not just the reader, but the text and the context in which reading takes
place.
Strategic – Readers have purposes for their reading and use a variety of strategies as they
construct meaning.
Adaptable – Readers change the strategies they use
Although "metacognition" and "schema" aren't comprehension strategies, they are very important for
teaching reading comprehension strategies. Simply put, metacognition
means to think about your thinking : Text + Thinking = Real Reading . When you read text and think at
the same time you are ―real reading‖…or being metacognitive! When you read, sometimes you activate
your schema or you build upon it.
1. Make connections
Connecting what your pupil already knows while he reads sharpens his focus and deepens understanding.
Show the pupil how to make connections by sharing your own connections as you read aloud. Maybe the
book mentions places you‘ve been on vacation. Talk about your memories of those places. Invite your
pupil to have a turn. Remind your pupil that good readers make all kinds of connections as they read.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
Simply encourage your pupil to make personal connections to the content of the book he/she is reading.
You could even jot the connections on sticky notes in colorful magic markers and stick them in the book,
or make a cute chart of the connections.
Children make personal connections with the text by using their schema. There are three main types of
connections we can make during reading:
Text-to-Self: Refers to connections made between the text and the reader's personal experience.
Text -to-Text: Refers to connections made between a text being read to a text that was previously
read.
Text -to-World: Refers to connections made between a text being read and something that occurs
in the world.
2. Infer -Making inferences is similar to the text-to-world connection strategy. In order for children to
adequately understand, they must be able to make inferences, yet this is a difficult concept even for some
adults to grasp! Gradually work with children on drawing conclusions based on what information they
know. Likewise, show them how to make educated guesses, and to look for hints to back up their
reasoning. You could make lists and pictures together to help this strategy along. As always, model
inferring for your pupil in an explicit way, so that he/she can see how you derive conclusions.
3. Predictions
An uncomplicated strategy to foster comprehension is to simply ask your pupil to make frequent
predictions. Most parents and teachers make the mistake of only asking children to make predictions at
the beginning of a book. Instead, ask pupils to make predictions at the onset of a book, as well as at
strategic points throughout the book. This stimulates their thinking in a number of ways. At the end of
the book, discuss with pupils whether or not they liked the ending. Would they have ended it differently?
If so, how?
4. Visualize
This strategy involves the ability of readers to make mental images of a text as a way to understand
processes or events they encounter during reading. This ability can be an indication that a reader
understands the text. Some research suggests that readers who visualize as they read are better able to
recall what they have read than those who do not visualize.
Creating visual images brings the text alive. These ―mind movies‖ make the story more memorable. You
can help your pupil do this by reading aloud and describing the pictures you‘re seeing in your own
imagination. Use all five senses and emotions. Invite your pupil to share his ―mind movies.‖ Notice how
they‘re different from yours. You might even ask your pupil to draw what‘s in his imagination.
5. Questions
This strategy involves readers asking themselves questions throughout the reading of text. The ability of
readers to ask themselves relevant questions as they read is especially valuable in helping them to
integrate information, identify main ideas, and summarize information. Asking the right questions allows
good readers to focus on the most important information in a text.
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
6. Determine importance
Determining what‘s important is central to reading. Determining importance has to do with knowing why
you‘re reading and then making decisions about what information or ideas are most critical to
understanding the overall meaning of the piece.
7. Synthesize
Synthesizing is the process of ordering, recalling, retelling, and recreating into a coherent whole the
information with which our minds are bombarded every day. Synthesizing is closely linked to evaluating.
Basically, as we identify what‘s important, we interweave our thoughts to form a comprehensive
perspective to make the whole greater than just the sum of the parts.
Four categories of written performance that capture the range of written production are considered here .
Each category resembles the categories defined for the other three skills, but these categories, as always,
reflect the uniqueness of the skill area.
1. IMITATIVE :
To produce written language, the learner must attain skills in the fundamental, basic tasks of writing
letters, words, punctuation, and very brief sentences. This category includes the ability to spell correctly
and to perceive phoneme-grapheme correspondences in the English spelling system . It is a level at which
learners are trying to master the mechanics of writing .At this stage, form is the primary if not exclusive
focus, while context and meaning are of secondary concern.
2. INTENSIVE ( Controlled ):
Beyond the fundamentals of imitative writing are skills in producing appropriate vocabulary within a
context ,collocations and idioms and correct grammatical features up to the length of a sentence. Meaning
and context are of some importance in determining correctness and appropriateness, but most assessment
tasks are more concerned with a focus on form, and are rather strictly controlled by the test design .
3. RESPONSIVE .
Here, assessment tasks require learners to perform at a limited discourse level, connecting sentences into
a paragraph and creating a logically connected sentence of two or three paragraphs. Tasks respond to
pedagogical directives, lists of criteria, outlines and other guidelines. Genres of writing include brief
narratives and descriptions, short reports, lab reports, summaries , brief responses to reading, and
interpretations of charts or graphs. Under specified conditions, the writer begins to exercise some freedom
of choice among alternative forms of expression of ideas . The writer has mastered the fundamentals of
sentence –level grammar and is more focused on the discourse conventions that will achieve the
objectives in a written text
4. Extensive :
Writing implies successful management of all the processes and strategies of writing for all purposes, up
to the length of an essay . Learners focus on achieving a purpose, organizing and developing ideas
logically, using details to support or illustrate ideas, demonstrating syntactic and lexical variety, and in
many cases, engaging in the process of multiple drafts to achieve a final product.
MICRO AND MACROSKILLS OF WRITING
A- Micro skills
1. Produce graphemes and orthographic patterns of English .
2. Produce writing at an efficient rate of speed to suit the purpose .
3. Produce an acceptable grammatical systems (e.g.,tense , agreement , pluralization, patterns, and rules.
4. Use an acceptable core of words and use appropriate word order patterns .
5.Express a particular meaning in different grammatical forms.
6. Use cohesive devices in written discourse .
B- Macro Skills
7. Use the rhetorical forms and conventions of written discourse .
8. Appropriately accomplish the communicative functions of written tasks according to form and
purpose .
9. Convey links and connections between events, and communicate such relations as main idea,
supporting idea, new information, given information, generalization, and exemplification .
10. Distinguish between literal and implied meanings when writing .
11. Correctly convey culturally specific references in the context of written text
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
12. Develop and use a battery of writing strategies, such as accurately assessing the audience's
interpretation, using prewriting devices, writing with fluency in the first drafts, using paraphrases and
synonyms, soliciting peer and instructor feedback, and using feedback for revising and editing .
PRACTICAL PART IN DEVELOPING MICRO&MACRO SKILLS IN A
COMPETENCE_BASED CURRICULUM
- Designing assessment tasks : ( IMMITATIVE WRITING )
A limited variety of types of tasks are commonly used to assess a person's ability to produce written
letters and symbols . A few of the more common types are described here :
1. copying : There is nothing innovative or modern about direction a test-taker to copy letters or words.
The test-taker will see something like the following :-
Handwriting letters, words, and punctuation marks.
The test-taker reads : Copy the following words in the spaces given :
Ex: bit bet bat but Oh! Bin din gin Hello,John.
___ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ _________
2. Listening cloze selection tasks
These tasks combine dictation with a written script that has a relatively frequent deletion ratio . The test
sheet provides a list of missing words from which the test-taker must select .The purpose at this stage is
not to test spelling but to give practice in writing to increase the difficulty.
The test-takers hear : Write the missing word in each blank . Below the story is a list of words to choose
from .
Have you ever visited San Francisco ? It is a very nice city . It is cool in the summer and warm in the
winter. I like the cable cars and bridges .
Test –Takers see :
Have __________ever visited San Francisco ? It ________ a very nice _______. It is __________in
__________summer and ___________in winter . I _____________the cable cars __________bridges .
3. Picture-cued tasks
Familiar pictures are displayed with the objectives of focusing on familiar words whose spelling may be
unpredictable . Items are chosen according to the objectives of the assessment, but this format is an
opportunity to present some challenging words and word pairs: boot/book, read/reed, bit/bite ,etc.
4. Form completion task
Filling in a simple form ( e.g., registration , application , etc. ) that asks for name , address , phone
number , and other data .assuming , of course , that prior classroom instruction has focused on filling of
such forms .
5. Converting numbers and abbreviations to words .
Some tests have a section on which numbers are written- for example, hours of the day , dates , or
schedules and test-takers are directed to write out the numbers . This task can serve as a reasonably
reliable method to stimulate handwritten English . It lacks authenticity , however , in that people rarely
write out such numbers ( except in writing checks ) .If you plan to use such a method , be sure to specify
exactly what the criterion is .Converting abbreviation to words is more authentic . we actually have
occasions to write out days of the week. Months , telephone
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
picture on the wall over couch . Test-takers are asked to describe the picture using four of the following
prepositions ; on, over, under, next to, around. As long as the prepositions are used appropriately, the
criterion is considered to be met
3. Picture sequencing description .
A sequence of three to six pictures depicting a story line can provide a suitable stimulus for written
production. The pictures must be simple and unambiguous .
4. Vocabulary Assessment Tasks :
READ ( 2000 ) suggested several types of items for assessment of basic knowledge of the meaning of a
word, collocational possibilities,and derived morphological forms. His example centered on the word
interpret, as follows :
Test-takers read :
1. Write two sentences, A and B. In each sentence, use the two words given.
A. interpret, experiment ____________________________________
B. interpret, language ______________________________________
2. Write three words that can fit in the blank .
i.____________________
ii. __________________
iii. ___________________
3. Write the correct ending for the word in each of the following sentences :-
- Someone who interprets is an interpret________.
- Something that can interpreted is interpret_______.
- Someone who interprets gives an interpret________.
Vocabulary assessment is clearly form-focused in the above tasks, but the procedures are creatively
linked by means of the target word, its collocations, and its morphological variants. At the responsive and
extensive levels, where learners are called upon to create coherent paragraphs, performance obviously
becomes more authentic, and lexical choice is one of several possible components of evaluation of
extensive writing
Ordering Tasks
Re-ordering scrambled words to form meaningful sentence
DESIGNING ASSESSMENT TASKS : ( RESPONSIVE&EXTENSIVE
-Paraphrasing .
One of the difficult concepts for learners to grasp. The purpose here is to ensure that learners understands
the content and be able to interpret it in their own words.
- Guided Questions and answers:
The teacher here poses a series of questions that essentially serve as an outline of the emergent written
text. The following kind of questions might be posed to stimulate a sequence of sentences .
Guided writing stimuli :
1. Where did this story take place ? [ Setting ]
2. who were the people in the story ? [ characters]
3. What happened first ? then ? [ sequence of events ]
4. Why did ____________do __________? [ reasons ]
5. What did __________think about ____________ ? [ opinion ]
6. What happened at the end ? [ climax ]
7. What is the moral of this story ? [ evaluation ]
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
A Lesson Plan is a guide which helps execute a mission that is to be accomplished in the classroom with
the children.
I. Objectives It is the specific statement of the learners’ behavior or outcomes that are expected to be
exhibited by the students after completing a unit of instruction.
Audience (Who?)
Observable Behavior (What?)
Special Conditions (How?)
Stating Criterion Level (How much?)
Example: At the end of the lesson the students will be able to:
Remember, Define, Identify, List , Name, Recall, Relate , Repeat , Understand, Describe, Discuss,
Explain, Express, Interpret, Report, Review, Select, Translate , Apply, Practice, Interpret, Practice,
Relate
Receiving, Accept, Attend ,Develop, Recognize ,Responding, Complete, Comply, Cooperate, Discuss,
Examine,Obey, Respond ,Valuing, Accept, Defend, Devote, Pursue, Seek ,Organization, Codify,
Discriminate Display, Order ,Organize, Systemize, Weigh ,Characterization ,Internalize, Verify.
Grinds, Handle ,Heats, Manipulates ,Measures, Mends ,Mixes ,Operate ,Organizes, Perform(skillfully)
,Reach Relax ,Shorten, Sketches, Stretch, Write
III . Content
INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS
Picture narrating
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
III. Routinary Activities Ensure the smooth transitions throughout the day. Before establishing
specific procedures or routines it is necessary to have a discussion with the students about their
importance. This process can nurture a sense of ownership and community in your classroom. Prayer,
greetings, classroom management, attendance
IV. Priming Activity Priming helps prepare students for an upcoming activity or event with which
they may have difficulty. Priming can occur at home or in the classroom and is most effective if it is built
into the child’s routine. 4A’s of Lesson Plan
IV. Activity – This will bring understanding to what the learners already know and clarity to what
learners should learn further. At this early stage, the student should already have a retrospect of what they
will be learning through the activity that will be presented.
V. Abstraction – The teacher on this part will now focus entirely on the lesson being presented and
ask more lead questions to lead the students in reinforcing what they know and should know more. The
student here starts to feel more the importance of the lesson to her and see the necessity of it to his/her
life.
VI. Application – The word itself describes the stage as bringing the student to a more practical way
of using HOW are they going to use what they have learned and thinking of new ways on how it can be
improve further. VII. Assignment Tasks requiring student engagement and a final tangible product that
enables you to assess what your students know and don’t know.
I. OBJECTIVES
II. CONTENT
INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
Picture narrating
“Good Morning”
I. ACTIVITY
In relation to the video you have watched, what do you I think our lesson will be all about Picture
think our lesson will be all about today? Narrating.
You are right, good! You may now take your seat.
Exactly! So, for your activity I will divide you into two
groups, as you can see I have 8 pictures in my hands, each Picture Narrating is an activity that is
group will receive 4 pictures, what you are going to do is to based on several sequential pictures points
arrange it in order on what you think is the start of the story
until end, you must provide a creative narration of it
containing the elements of the story beginning, rising
action, climax, falling action, and a good ending of course.
You have three minutes to talk with your group mates on
how you will going to narrate these pictures creatively. The
Teaching and assessing of the Macro skills- zjas
II. ABSTRACTION
III. APPLICATION
IV. ASSIGNMENT