Materi Prof Utami W
Materi Prof Utami W
Materi Prof Utami W
LEARNERS INDIVIDUAL
DIFFERENCES
Right brain:
uses logic.
uses feeling.
detail oriented
facts rule
imagination rules
knowing
believing
reality based
fantasy based
acknowledges
safe
appreciates
risktaking
Verbal-linguistic
Logical-mathematical
Visual-spatial
Bodily-kinestetic
Musical
Interpersonal
Intrapersonal
naturalistic
MODELS OF TEACHING
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
SO?
Pendekatan Saintifik
Mengamati
Menanya
Mengumpulkan informasi
Mengasosiasikan
Mengkomunikasikan
Mencipta
BENEFITS OF INTERACTIVE
ACTIVITIES
Closeness
Interaction
Familiarity
Discovered similarity
TEACHING LISTENING
INTERACTION
- to give feedback
- to ask for clarification
- to maintain a topic
TEACHING SPEAKING
Interpersonal (dialogue)
The purpose is more to maintain social relationship than to transmit facts and
information.
Learners can involve some or all of the following factors: a casual register,
colloquial language, emotionally changed language, slang, ellipsis, sarcasm, a
covert agenda.
Example:
Amy : Hi Bob, hows it going?
Bob
: Oh, so-so
TEACHING READING
29
UNIT 3
30
LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE
APPROACH
Reading a story from a book
Reading a class story
Reading familiar nursery rhymes or songs
Reading aloud
Story telling; USSR; Book talks; Buddy
reading; jigsaw reading
UNIT 3
31
READING ALOUD:
It should be done individually or in small
groups.
The reader has the teachers full attention.
The teacher can ask about meaning, what
students think about the book.
It can be used as a means of training and
checking rhythm and pronunciation.
UNIT 3
32
JIGSAW READING
It encourages cooperative learning.
Find a text containing four or five paragraphs of
approximately the same length.
Divide the class into small groups called home groups.
Ask them to leave their home groups to expert
groups.
Tell them to contribute their knowledge of the
paragraph to the home group.
UNIT 3
33
story telling
book talks
Buddy reading
library visit
UNIT 3
34
TEACHING WRITING
Questionnaires
Directions
Labels
Signs
Recipes
Bills
Maps
Manuals
Schedules
Advertisements
Invitations
Directories
Comic strips, cartoon
TEACHING VOCABULARY
TECHNIQUES IN TEACHING
VOCABULARY (SUYANTO, 2007: 48)
TECHNIQUES IN TEACHING
VOCABULARY (SUYANTO, 2007: 48)
HEAD
EYES
EARS
NOSE
MOUT
H
SHOULDER
S
KNEES
TOES
TEACHING GRAMMAR
ISSUES
Should we teach grammar?
Which grammar items do learners need most?
How do we go about teaching grammar items in the
most effective way?
Are they best taught inductively or deductively?
CREATIVE WRITING
Level: all
Time: 10 minutes
In class:
1. 8 12 students sit in a circle.
2. Begin by describing a situation (story).
3. One student from the circle must carry on the story, beginning
with the word fortunately.
4. The next student continues the story with unfortunately.
SITUATION:
THANK YOU