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Grammar
Practice Activ
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See eigenenGrammar Practice Activities
Second EditionCambridge Handbooks for Language Teachers
This series, now with over 4o titles, offers practical ideas, techniques
and activities for the teaching of English and other languages providing,
inspiration for both teachers and trainers.
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Personalizing Language Leaming
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HEATHER MCKAY aad ABIGAIL TOM
‘Teach Business English
SYLYIE DONNA
Teaching English Spelling
Apeecioal guide
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Using Folktales
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Learner English (Second Edition)
Ateacter’sguideta interferonce and atherproblenis
editedby MICHABL SWAN ond BERNARD SMITE
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Designing sequentes of workfer the language lessroom
Tessa WOODWARD
Teaching Large Multilevel Classes
NATALIE MESS
Using the Board in the Language Classroom
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Writing Simpie Poems
Patton Posty or Language Acquisition
VICK L, HOLMES ond MARGARET R. MOULTON
Laughing Matters
Humour inthe larguags classroom
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wilted by SETH LINDSTROMBERG
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BEN GOLDSTEINGrammar Practice
Activities
SECOND EDITION
A practical guide for teachers
Penny Ur
Consultant and editor: Michael Swan
BRIDGE
UNIVERSITY PRESSCAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY PRESS
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© Cambridge University Press 2009
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in advance from a publisher. Cectaia parts of this book are designed to be
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Only those pages which carry the wording © Cambridge University Press 2009
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Reprinted 2016
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A cattalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing ix Publication data
Ur, Penny.
Grammar practice activities : 2 practical guide for teachers / Penny Ur ; consuitant and editor: Michael
Swan, ~ 2nd ed.
p-cm.~ (Cambridge handbooks for language teachers)
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-521-73232-41 (pbb. with cd-rom)
1. English language-Sttidy and teaching-Foreign speakers, 2, English language-Grammar-Problems,
exercises, etc. I. Swan, Michael, I. Title, Il Series,
PB1128.A2U73 2009
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Cambrilige University Press has no responsibility for the persistence o accuracy
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and does not guarantee that aay content on such websites is, or will remain,
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thereafter, =
ebenContents
Thanks and acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1: Background theory and guidelines
Grammar
What is grammar?
The grammar practised in this book
‘The place of grammar in language teaching
Practice
Validity
Quantity
Success-orientation
Heterogeneity
Tnterest
Summary
Activities
Features of activity design
Practical tips
Part 2: Activities
Adjectives
ree ADJECTIVE BEFORE THE NOUN
tia Guessing adjectives
1.1.2 Inserting adjectives
143 The same tastes
1.4 Adjective poem
12 COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES
1.24 Adjectives on the Internet
1.2.2 Brainstorming comparisons
1.2.3 Bigger, better, fastex!
27
27
wy
27
28
29
31
32
32
33Grammar Practice Activities
vi
1.2.4 Circle comparisons
4.2.5 Preferences
1.2.6 Which is heavier?
13 ADJECTIVES AFTER BE OR OTHER
COPULAR VERBS
13.4 Guessing by description
1.3.2 Not what it seems
Adverbs
2 MANNER ADVERBS
zat Howean you do it?
22 Miming adverbs
2.2 FREQUENCY ADVERBS
2.2.1 Frequency surveys
2.2.2 What do youdo when...?
Conditionals
3a Finishing conditional sentences
3.2 Chains of events :
3.3 Superstitions
3.4 Justifying actions
3-5 Looking back
3.6 Iwish...
Future tenses
4a FUTURE WITH GOING TO
gat Mickey’s diary
412 Finding a time to meet
41.3 Future ofa picture
41.4 Mime continuation
4.2 FUTURE WITH WILL
4.21 Future of an object
4.2.2. How will the story end?
4.2.3 Horoscopes
4.2.4 The world tomorrow
4.3 THE FUTURE PERFECT TENSE
434 Bysixo’clock
BEE
59
59
59
62
63
67
68
68
69
7O
72
yeContents
Imperatives 73
54 Please! 73
5.2 Directions 74
5.3. Recipes 76
3-4 Dosanddon'ts 77
5-5 Symbols 78
5.6 Suggestions 80
Indirect speech 81
64 INDIRECT STATEMENTS AND QUESTIONS 81
6.14 Can you remember what they said? 8&1
64.2 Reporting interviews 82
64.3 Correspondence 83
6.1.4 People used to believe ... 84
6.1.5 Need toknow 85
6.2 INDIRECT COMMANDS 86
6.241 They toldme 86
6.2.2 What's she telling him? 87
Interrogatives ‘ ou
7A “YES/NO? QUESTIONS gn
Feb Guessing, a
7.4.2. Common denominator 93
74.3 Questionnaires 95
7.4.4 Don’t say yes orno 97
7.2 ‘WH QUESTIONS 99
7.24 Findsomeone with the answer : 99
7.2.2 Quizzes 103
7.2.3 Your own comprehension questions 105
7.2.4 Paired cloze 106
7.3 ALL TYPES OF QUESTIONS 109
7.34 Dialogues 109
7.3.2 Wrangling m
7.3.3 Beattheclock ut
97.3.4 Answer witha question uz
7.3.5 Fillingin forms 3,
7.3.6 Preparing interviews 6
73-7 Lengsubjects uy
viiGrammar Practice Activities
8 — Is/are and there is/there are u8
81 Describing pictures 118
8.2 Picture dictation at
8.3. Finda twin picture pe
8.4 Reverse guessing (1) 125
8.5 Isitinmy bag? 126
9 Modals 127
9.1 Guessing by abilities 127
9.2 Uses of an object 128
9.3 Desertisland equipment 129
9.4 Games and their rules 13h
9.5 Rulesand recommendations 132,
9.6 Duties and privileges 133
9.7 Modal symbols 134
9.8 Dilemmas 136
9.9 Being polite 138
go Deductions 139
gu Evidence 4 140
912 Thenand now : 142
10 Negatives 143
104 Erasing picture dictations 143
10.2 What’s the difference? 144
10.3 Picture differences 147
10.4 Questionnaires with negative answers 152,
10.5 Don’tsayno 154
10.6 Negative hints 155
10.7 Discrepancies 155
11 Nouns, articles and determiners 157
aa NOUNS WITH A/ AN! THE/ ZERO ARTICLE 157
Wt What’s that? Where is it? 157
u2 Expanding headlines 158
u.1.3 Occupations 160
ut4 Proverbs 162
viii12
13
Contents
2 SINGULAR AND PLURAL, COUNTABLE AND
UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS; A/AN/SOME/ANY 164,
Remembering pairs 164
Piling up stores 166
Shopping 167
Finding investment partners a7
uj. BOTH... AND..., NEITHER... NOR... 173
1.3.4 Association dominoes 173
1.3.2 Similarities 197
4 MUCH, MANY, A LITTLE, A FEW, NO 180
How much patience? 180
Healthy living: 181
WS NOUN MODIFIERS 182,
usa A business school 182
Numbers 184
CARDINAL NUMBERS . 184
Telephone numbers : 5 184
Address book , 186
Number dictation 186
Numbers that are important to me 187
12.2 ORDINAL NUMBERS 188
12.2.1 Significant dates 188
12.2.2 Getting in order 189
Passives 190
1B Passives on the Internet 190
13.2 Whatis done-and who by? 19!
13.3 Describing changes 192
3.4 Writing it up 196
13.5 What's being done? 196
13.6 Election campaign 197
13.7 Itcanbe done 197
15.8 By men, by women, or by both 198Grammar Practice Activities
14
15
Past tenses
14 PAST SIMPLE
ig4a Recall and share
.2 Listening to stories
.3 Piling up events
.4 Chain story
.5 Pictures into story
.6 Putting stories in order
.7 Cooperative story
14.8 Changes in your life
14..9 — Story behind a photo
gato Alibi
14..u Interrupt me!
14.2 PAST PROGRESSIVE
14.2.1 What were you doing?
14.2.2 Are youa good witness?
14.2.3 When it happened
14.2.4 Begina story
14.3. PRESENT PERFECT :
14.3.1 Findsomeone who ...
14.3.2. What has happened?
14.3.3 Oh!
14.3.4 Accounting for moods
14.3.5 Things have changed since then
14.3.6 The right experience for the job
14.3.7 have lived here for...
14.3.8 What have they been doing?
14.4 PAST PERFECT
14.44 Past diary
14.4.2 Changes: before and after
14.4.3 True or false?
Possessives
Asal Statues
15.2 Whois lying?
15.3. Family tree
15.4 Whose isit?
“15.5¢ Distributing goods
199
199
199
200
200
201
203
207
209
20
233
233
234
235
237
23817
18
Prepositions
161 Where were you?
16.2 Onthe table
16.3 Inonat
16.4 Guessing locations
16.5 Describe and arrange
16.6 Where would youlike to live?
16.7 Preposition poem
16.8 Who'sshe talking to?
Present tenses
ya PRESENT SIMPLE
izaa Detectives
17.1.2 Possessions
17.1.3 Animal habits
171.4 Opinion questionnaires
174.5 Routines
17.6 Guessing occupations
17.7 What Ido and don’t do
17.8 Something special
17.1.9 What do you feel about it?
iyaito Things in common
1yaat Changing proverbs
1uaz Is it true?
17.443 Recall the plot
i7aag Theme music
V7.2 PRESENT PROGRESSIVE
17.21 Heis running too!
17.2.2, What's going on?
17.2.3 Guessing mimes
17.2.4 Silhouettes
17.2.5 Temporary and permanent
Pronouns
18.4 Reverse guessing (2)
18.2 ‘It’s automatic!
18.3 Whoare they?
18.4 Yourselves or each other?
Contents
240
240
241
243
244
245
247
248
249
253
253
254
255
256
258
259
261
262
262
264
266
270
273
276
277
277
278
281
283Grammar Practice Activities
19
20
21
xii
Relative clauses
19.4 Likes and dislikes
19.2 Relative quizzes
19.3 Write your own test
19.4 Extending astory
19.5 Things Twant to complain about
Short answers and tag questions
20.1
20.4
20.402
20.1.3
20.2
20.24
SHORT ANSWERS
Answering guesses
They do!
Written enquiries
TAG QUESTIONS
It’s true, isn’t it?
20.2.2, Nice day, isn’t it?
Verb structures
za *TO? INFINITIVES
aad Whattodo
21.2 Purposes
21.4.3 Professional help
212 ‘-ING’ FORMS OF THE VERB
2124 Tastes
212.2 Surveys
21.2.3 Howcould you do it?
21.3 VERB OBJECTS
21.34 CanThelp?
21.3.2 Work it out
References and further reading
Index
284
284
285
288
289
291
312
3S
313
BAS.
aT
39Thanks and acknowledgements
Heartfelt thanks to Michael Swan for punctilious editing and lots of good
ideas.
1.1.4 Adjective poem and 16.7 Preposition poem are based on the ideas of
Vicki L. Holmes and Margaret R. Moulton, Writing Simple Poems: Pattern
Poetry for Language Acquisition, (2001), Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press 2008 reproduced with permission.
1.2.5 Preferences is an activity [learnt from Mario Rinvolucti.
7.2.4 Paired Cloze makes use of material from Practice Your Unseens 3 by
Jack Baum and Michael Toben. © 1994 Fric Cohen Books Led.
Finally, my particular gratitude to my in-house editors, Claire Cole and
Alyson Maskell for their punctilious editing, professional approach and
unending patience, They suggested substantial improvements and
eliminated a large number of slips and inconsistencies. Any remaining
mistakes are my own responsibility.introduction
I decided.to write the first edition of this book because I needed it; and as
soon as I began to discuss the idea with other teachers, it became clear that
many of them felt the same need as I did, and for similar reasons. We all felt
that grammar practice was essentially a useful thing to do, but we were
dissatisfied with the kinds of exercises we found in our textbooks: mainly
conventional form-focused gapfills, sentence completions and matching,
“What we need,’ a group of teachers told me, ‘isa book that will gather
together the most useful of the game-like or communicative grammar-
practice procedures that are in the books we know, plus any more you can
think of or find, laid out systematically so that we can look up, say, ‘Present
perfect’ on Monday morning and find a few good ideas to choose from.’
So that was what! did.
The response was warm and gratifying: the book became one of the best-
selling titles in the Cambridge Handbooks for Language Teachers series, and
is still selling well today, It is without doubt my dwn favourite of the books 1
have written.
This second edition differs from the first in the following ways:
© Part 1 (general guidelines) is rather shorter and Part 2 (the activities
themselves) longer.
* Anumber of activities have been added and a few of the less successful
ones in the original edition deleted.
* Subject matter has been updated, as have the illustrations.
«Brief headings have been added to the beginning of each activity to
indicate its main teaching point, the age and level for which it is intended,
and any necessary materials or preparations.
* Useful tips on language or teaching strategies have been added.
* ACD-ROM accompanies the book, providing PDEs of all the
photocopiable material in colour from the book and the artwork.
The symbol @) indicates that the material which follows it can be found
on the CD-ROM,
Part 1 of the book is divided into three sections, corresponding to the three
words in the title of the book. Grammar provides a brief general
introduction to the teaching of grammar; Practice explains the basicGrammar Practice Activities
principles of effective practice in language teaching in general and grammar
teaching in particular; Activities lists the main features of the activities in this |
book, and some practical hints to help you (the teacher) do them successfully =
inclass.
Part 2 consists of the grammar-practice activities themselves, designed ~
according to the principles outlined in Part 1. The activities are grouped into
sections according to grammatical category, and these are ordered
alphabetically; so you should be able to find any section you want simply by
leafing through the book. If, however, you use different terminology from
mine, you will probably find your term in the index at the end of the book.
Names of specific activities (Questionnaires, Association dominoes, etc.) are
also included in the index, in bold print. Where activities are mentioned
elsewhere in the text, they ace referred to by their section number and name,
not by page number (7.1.3 Questionnaires, 11.3.1 Association dominoes,
ete.).PART1 Background theory and
guidelines
Grammar
Whatis grammar?
Grammar may be roughly defined as the way a language manipulates and
combines words (or bits of words) so as to express certain kinds of meaning,
some of which cannot be conveyed adequately by vocabulary alone. These
include the way ideas are grouped and related, and the purposes of
utterances (statement, question, request, etc.}, Grammar may'also serve to
express time relations, singular/plural distinctions and many other aspects of
meaning. There are rules which govern how words have to be manipulated
and organized so as to express these meanings: a competent speaker of the
language will be able to apply these rules so as to convey his or her chosen
meanings effectively and acceptably.
The grammar practised in this book
‘The grammar on which this book is based is that which is described in most
modern grammar books (see References and further reading), p. 317 and
which is likely to be known and accepted by most readers. As fat as possible,
Ihave tried to avoid language features which are specifically associated with
one English variety (British, American, Australian, Indian, etc.}, but rather
use those forms which are likely to be used internationally by both native
and non-native speakers.
Nobody (including native speakers) always uses perfectly correct
grammar: the teaching aim of this book is, therefore, not to achieve
perfection, but to assist learners to master the most important grammatical
usages that will enable them to convey meanings effectively and acceptably.
From the point of view of sheer length, moreover, it has not been possible to
provide a comprehensive coverage of English grammatical structures; theGrammar Practice Activities
activities focus only on the main items needed for written and spoken
communication, and I apologize in advance if you find some points missing
that you would have liked to have been included. |
The place of grammar in language teaching
There is no doubt that some kind of implicit knowledge of grammar is
necessary for the mastery of a language at anything beyond a very basic level:
youcannot use words effectively unless you know how they should be put
together in acceptable sentence or phrase structures. This does not necessarily
mean that you have to be able to articulate the rules: native speakers of any
language express themselves in their own language (L1) correctly, but can
rarely explain what the rules are that govern such expression.
But people learning the grammar of an additional language through a
formal course of study probably do not do so the same way as they learnt
their first language. ‘There has been some discussion in recent years of how
such learning can be most effectively brought about. Some questions
discussed in the literature have been:
¢ Can grammar be acquired only through exposure to plenty of
comprehensible input (listening/reading}? Can it be learnt only through
communicative activities involving all four skills (listening/reading/
writing/speaking}?
* Should grammar be taught only ‘reactively’ (in response to errors or
learner uncertainty), or should it be taught ‘proactively’, based ona
grammatical syllabus?
* Do learners need to learn grammar rules explicitly - that is, understand
and be able to explain why certain forms are correct and others not?
* Are focused grammar practice exercises necessary?
‘This is not the place to explore in depth the pros and cons of possible
answers to these different questions. The approach which forms the basis for
this book, based on my interpretation of the research literature and
professional experience, is summarized by the bulleted points below, Note,
howeyer, thar these points are generalizations which may not hold true for
alllearners in all learning situations: like many practical principles in
education they are useful as bases for planning our teaching as long as we
remember that there may be exceptions.
Ibelieye, then, that in most situations ..,
... itis helpful to teach grammar systematically, based on a grammatical
syllabus; .Grammar
... itis helpful to have an explicit rule available for a grammar point
being learnt, provided this is simple enough to be grasped by the learner;
... learners will benefit from focused practice applying this rule in
grammar exercises and activities’;
e ...‘mechanical” exercises such as gap fill and sentence completion aze
useful in learning grammar;
¢ ,.. more important, however, are activities which provide opportunities
for learners to create or understand meanings using the target grammar
points
+... learning of grammar is enhanced further by occasional ‘reactive’
teaching of grammatical forms during communicative activities
{correction of mistakes, for example, or ‘noticing’ by teacher or learner of
an interesting form used ina text or activity).
Grammar may furnish the basis for a set of classroom procedures during,
which it becomes temporarily the main learning objective. But the key word
hercis ‘temporarily’. The learning of grammar should be seen in the long
term as one of the means of acquiring a thorough mastery of the language as
a whole, not as an end in itself. Thus, although there may be times at which
we ask our students to learn a certain structure through exercises that
concentrate on virtually meaningless manipulations of language, we should
in principle invest more time and energy in activities that use it meaningfully,
culminating in generally communicative tasks where the emphasis is on
successful communication, and any learning of grammar takes place only as
incidental to this main objective.
Note that although I have for convenience presented this model of
grammar teaching as if it were a chronological sequence (first learning
the rule, then mechanical practice, then meaningful practice, then
communication) —it doesn’t necessarily work like that in the classroom. We
may well, for example, discover in the course of a communicative activity
that some learners have a problem with a specific grammatical point, and at
that point decide to take some time out to practise it, Or we may do some
grammatical activities and elicit the rule as a result rather than as a
preliminary. There are lots of ways of sequencing, though perhaps the
traditional sequence implied above is still the most common.
‘The bottom line here is that I strongly believe in the value of practice as a
component of grammar teaching in the teaching of English as an
international language in formal courses of study,
+ The distinction between ‘exercise’ and ‘activity’ is dealt with in Activities, p. un.Practice
“Practice may be defined as any kind of engagement with the
language on the part of the learner, usually under teacher supervision, whose
primary objective is to consolidate learning, During practice the material is
absorbed into long-term memory and the learner enabled to understand and
produce it with gradually lessening teacher support. A practice procedure
may involve reception (exposure to comprehensible spoken or written input)
or production (speaking or writing).
Although it is over-optimistic to claim that ‘practice makes perfect’,
effective practice is likely to make a substantial contribution towards
mastery of grammatical forms.
But what makes practice effective? There is, of course, no one
generalization that will answer this question, but some of the key features
that contribute to successful practice are the following.
Validity
By validity 1 mean that the procedure should in fact practise what it says it
practises, and not something else. Supposing our aim is to practise the
Present perfect, and an item cuns as follows:
‘Two years ago we left the country and came to live in the city. Weare still
living in the city today. So we in the city for two years.
Either have lived or have been living would be acceptable here: but the point
is that in order to fill in the missing verb, the learner has to read and
understand two lines of text, with another two verb forms in them, and the
time and thought which are actually invested in the target item itself is
relatively small. The validity, therefore, of the practice provided by such
exercise items is low. For examples of more valid practice procedures
focusing on the same teaching point, see 14.3.2 What has happened? and
14.3.3 Ob!, where pictures or one-word cues give rise to a large number of
responses using the target structure.
You may say: why does this matter? Surely reading and understanding the
surrounding text is also useful? Yes: but the point is that if a lot of time is
spent on reading and understanding surrounding text ~ or on puzzling out
problems, or translating, or discussing, or any other activity that does not
6
om
eatsPractice
directly practise the target item — then the quantity of target-item practice is
correspondingly low.
Quantity
The aim of a practice activity is to provide opportunities to engage with the
target structure: if the number of times the learner does in fact have such
opportunities is small, then the practice is correspondingly less effective in
achieving its main aim.
Evenifitis valid, a brief activity that provides very little such quantity of
practice will not give learners much opportunity to consolidate their learning.
The function of such low-quantity exercises is likely to be mainly in providing
the teacher with information about how well the learners have mastered the
target item, butnot in actually consolidating learning. In other words, the
procedure will probably function as an informal test rather than as practice.
Success-orientation
Another important feature of effective practice is that learners’ responses
should be right, rather than that they should be'wrong and needing to be
corrected. So the activity should be designed to elicit acceptable and
successful responses.
This is not to say that there is no place for mistakes and error correction.
But using correct grammar in speech is like any other skill: it involves the
swift and effortless production of acceptable and appropriate performance
that can be achieved only if the skill has been ‘automatized’ to such an extent
that the learner can perform it without thinking. Such ‘automatization’ is
achieved largely through practice. Thus practice essentially means
performing the target behaviour (in this case, using the grammatical feature)
successfully again and again: at first, with some thought and application of
conscious memorized instructions, but later more and more swiftly and
smoothly until the original instruction or rule, as a conscious articulated
statement, may even be forgotten. Doing something wrong and being
corrected will help raise awareness of what is correct; but it will not help
automatization of the skill. Or to put it another way: correcting a learner 50
times may help him or her become more aware of a problem, but it will not
improve actual performance. It is only when the learner starts getting it right
on his or her own, and does so repeatedly, that he or she is on the way to real
mastery,Grammar Practice Activities
‘Teachers may provide for success-orientation by various means:
© by designing or selecting the activity so that it is reasonably easy: it elicits
responses that you know the learners can deal with successfully;
* by providing for pre-learning: review the target grammar point before
doing the activity, so that the material is fresh in learners’ memories;
e by helping the learners get it right as they are doing it: simply give extra
wait-time before requiring responses, for example, or give a hint or some
sort of supportive ‘scaffolding’.
Besides imimediate effectiveness in consolidating learning, the principle of
success-orientation has significant general pedagogical implications. A
student whose performance is consistently successful will develop a
positive self-image as a language learner, whereas one who frequently fails
may be discouraged and demotivated. It should also be noted that tension
and anxiety are fairly high if learners feel there is a possibility of ‘failure’
(that is, if they are in a sense being tested), and are correspondingly lowered
if they are confident of success. Thus, success-orientation contributes
significantly to a positive classroom climate of relaxation, confidence and
motivation.
On the other hand, the fact that there is no risk of failure in producing
acceptable language lessens the challenge of the activity for some
participants, so we have to find other ways of making it interesting (see
Interest, pp. 9~10).
Heterogeneity
A heterogeneous exercise, as Lam using the term here, is one which may be
done at various different levels. Because all classes are more or less
heterogeneous, a homogeneous exercise cannot possibly provide effective
practice for all the students: it will be too difficult for the weaker ones,
and/or lacking in quantity and challenge for the stronger. Iris, however,
possible—and desirable —to design practice tasks that can be interpreted and
performed at different levels, so that some students will be able to do more
than others in terms of both quality and quantity.
Anexample of a homogencous exercise is one based on multiple-choice
questions; for example:
1) Jenny isa baby, so she goto school.
a doesn’t c don't
b isn’t d aren’tPractice
Such an item can only be done by students above a certain level of
proficiency: a learner who has not mastered the rules about when you use do
or is with negative verbs in the present will probably get it wrong, or may not
even doit at all, On the other band, a learner who is well on the way to
mastering the rule and can use it to create all sorts of meaningful statements
has no opportunity to do so, but is limited to the rather boring sentence
provided and cannot practise at a level appropriate to him/her.
But supposing we say:
2} Jenny isa baby, so she doesn’t go to school. What else doesn’t she do?
. we have thus not only provided for pre-learning and success-orientation
by supplying a model of the kind of sentence we are looking for, we are also
opening possibilities for the learners to respond with sentences at all sorts of
levels. One might say at a simple level: ‘Jenny doesn’t read books’, while
another might use more advanced language: ‘Jenny doesn’t use a credit card’.
‘To put it another way: heterogeneous items like 2) above are typically
open-ended: they ave intended to elicit a wide range of different, equally
acceptable, responses. Closed-ended ones, on the other hand, like 1) above,
which have only one right answer, are inherently homogeneous: they provide
appropriate practice for only a limited numbeg of the members of the class.
"The use of heterogeneous, open-ended exercises, incidentally, not only
ensures that a higher proportion of the class get learning value out of the
practices it also, like success-orientation, has a positive effect on learner
attitude and motivation. Responses at many different levels can be ‘right’,
hence these exercises provide an opportunity for the teacher to give slower or
less confident students the approval and encouragement they need. They are
also likely to be more interesting.
Interest
‘An otherwise well-designed practice procedure may fail to produce
successful learning simply because it is boring: interest is an essential feature
of successful practice, not just an optional improvement. Learners who are
bored find it difficult to concentrate, their attention wanders, and they may
spend much of the lesson time thinking of things other than the learning task
in hand; even if they are apparently engaged with the exercise, the quality of
the effort and attention given to learning drops appreciably. Moreover,
because boredom, particularly in younger classes, often produces unruly
behaviour, more valuable learning time may be wasted on coping withGrammar Practice Activities
discipline problems. If, however, the class is interested in what it is doing, its
members will not only learn more efficiently, they are also likely to enjoy the
process and to want to continue.
For some practical ideas on increasing the interest of classroom activities,
see pp. 13-19 in the next chapter.
Summary
Effective practice procedures, then, are usually characterized by the features
of validity, quantity, success-orientation, heterogeneity and interest. Any one
particular exercise may of course display one or more of these features to a
lesser degree and still be effective in gaining specific objectives: but if too
many of them are absent, the activity may provide very little learning value.
Let us take, for example, an exercise which consists of five sentences with
either have or bas missing, and which requites individual students to fill in
the missing item.
There is in such an exercise relatively little quantity of practice and no
particular success-orientation; the exercise is homogeneous and lacking in
interest. You may, by doing such an exercise with a class, find out which of its
members know the difference between have and has (hence it might function
quite well as an assessment procedure), but you will have done little to help
those whose knowledge is still a little shaky and who simply need practice. In
contrast, you might first tell the students about some interesting or unusual
possessions of your own (‘I have ...), then invite them to describe some of
their own to each other, and finally challenge them to remember what
possessions another student has. This activity is obviously more interesting
and more heterogeneous; it is also likely to be success-oriented and valid, as
well as providing for quantity of practice (sce 17.1.2 Possessions).
Unfortunately, exercises like the gapfill described above are extremely
common in the classroom and grammar textbooks ~ probably because they
are easy to design and administer — and teachers and textbook authors are
often unaware that they are testing more than teaching.
So far we have looked at topics connected with the place of grammar in
language teaching, and how it may, or should, be taught; and we have
considered some aspects of grammar practice. It now remains to turn to the
third word in the title of this book and see how some of the theoretical ideas
dealt with up to now can be applied in the design and presentation of
classroom activities.
ToActivities
Practice procedures are usually called exercises or activities. The
term exercise normally refers to the conventional textbook procedure
involving a numbered list of items which the learner has to respond to
correctly: by answering questions, for example, by matching corresponding
items or by filling gaps. These focus very much on correct forms, and the
meaning is secondary: sometimes such exercises may be done correctly
without any understanding of meaning at all. Activity on the other hand, as
the word is used in this book, refers to a procedure where the learner is
activated in some kind of task that induces him or her to engage with the
target language items in a meaningful way. Activities may also be based on
lists of items, or they may not, but the responses are typically open-ended (no
one right answer) and often personalized. The distinction between the two is
one of general orientation rather than a mutually exclusive dichotomy, and
some procedures may be classified as either. As I have indicated previously,
there is room for both in the teaching of grammar.
The main section of this chapter consists of descriptions of some
characteristic features of the activities in this book. In a shorter following
section I shall provide some practical tips about how to use them in the
classroom.
Features of activity design
The task
Atask is anything the learners are asked to do that produces a clear outcome.
In principle, a task may be overtly language-based (“Give me some examples
of “yes/no” questions’); but I am using it here to refer to activity that is
essentially concerned with making or receiving meanings: so ‘yes/no?
questions, for example, would be produced in a task in order to find out or
guess something, rather than just as samples of language forms (see, for
example, 7.1.1 Guessing). The function of the task is simply to activate the
learners in such a way as to get them to engage with the material to be
practised in an interesting and challenging way.
Note that the word ‘activate’ or the phrase ‘active language use’ usually
implies the actual production of instances of the structure on the pact of the
IrGrammar Practice Activities
learners themselves; but not always. In many cases learners are rather
perceiving, discriminating, understanding or interpreting: processes which
also involve a high degree of mental activity.
‘The two essential characteristics of a good language-practice task are:
clear objectives, accompanied by the necessity for active language use (as
defined above).
Objectives
The main task objective is clear and simple, and involves some kind of
challenge. Some examples: to solve a problem, to guess something, to get
someone to do something, to create some kind of. pleasing composition, to
brainstorm ideas, to get to know one another. Note that such an objective
does not have to be ‘authentic’ in terms of replicating a possible real-life
situation or event. It is enough that it is interesting or fun in itself, and
produces learner activity in language use.
Underlying this main objective is the pedagogical one of providing for
useful grammar practice: a guessing game produces question forms, getting
someone to do something involves the imperative, and so on. In the most
successful grammar activities the two kinds of objectives are combined: the
non-linguistic one being the main motivating focus, whilé both teacher and
students are aware of the ‘secondary’, linguistic one (see Language tips
throughout}. The amount of attention paid to each aspect varies: if students
get involved in discussing personal feelings while describing past
experiences, it obviously will be inappropriate to ask them to concentrate on
using the past tense correctly; but if the objective is to produce ot edit
something for publication, correct usage will be stressed.
In any case, the objective has to be a reasonably simple one that can be
defined in a few words, so that students are clear in their minds what they are
doing and why. It is very much easier to define an objective if thereis a
concrete result to be achieved: a list to be written out, a solution to be
found and displayed, a story to be narrated, a picture to be drawn or
marked. In such cases, it is often more effective to explain the objective in
terms of the end product (‘Find and write down some solutions to this
problem ...’) than in terms of the process (‘Think about some ways you
might solve this ...’}.
Active language use
The learners are able to attain the objective only by an exertion of effort in
some kind of active language use; though this, as noted above, may involve
the so-called ‘passive’ skills of listening and reading, And this active
2
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anes orActivities
language use provides for repeated exposure to or production of the target
grammar point (see Quantity, p. 7).
So we need to make sure that the activity is in fact based mainly on
using language, and does not waste too much time on mime, colouring,
artistic creation or silent brain-racking. This may sound obvious, but it
is surprising how many otherwise excellent classroom activities fail to
teach much because of such components. It is tempting to think that if
students (particularly children) are happily absorbed in doing a task in a
language lesson, they are therefore learning the language — but this is not
always true. They may, of course, be achieving other equally (or more)
important educational objectives, for the sake of which we may opt,
temporarily, to forgo the language-learning focus. But normally we want
to make sure students are spending their time in profitable language
learning.
Sometimes certain rules are introduced that limit how the task objectives
are to be achieved, in order to make sure that maximum language use in fact
takes place. Take, for example, the objective of finding ten differences
between two similar pictures. If you ask learners to do this as a team when
they can all see both pictures, they may just circle the differences on their
pictures without talking at all. If, however, you limit them with the ‘rule’ that
they may not point to or touch the pictures, then they have to describe them
in speech (10.3 Picture differences, Variation 1). Such rules have the added
bonus that they often make the activity more challenging and interesting (see
the next section below).
If we design our task in such a way that it has clear linguistic and non-
linguistic objectives, and obliges learners to engage repeatedly
with the structure that is being learnt in the process of achieving them,
then we have the basis for a good grammar practice activity. But it
is only the basis. The students may still not do it very well if they find it
boring.
Interest
Learners may, as already noted, be motivated to participate in a learning
exercise by extrinsic factors that have nothing to do with the nature of the
activity itself - they may very much need to know the language in order to
pass an exam, for example, or want to perform well in order to win
approval, Activity design, however, aims to create intrinsic motivation: the
desire to participate and learn because of interest-arousing features within
the activity itself,
13Grammar Practice Activities
Topic
The (non-linguistic) topic of the activity is usually the first thing that comes
to mind when teachers think of factors that arouse interest. However, Ihave
found that this is in practice probably the least important of the features
listed here! A boring topic can easily be made interesting by a challenging
task; an interesting topic can equally easily be ‘killed’ by a tedious one. The
topic is important in only a minority of the activities in this book; and a lot of
the tasks can be adapted to use a wide range of different topics (see, for
example, 1.1.4 Adjective poem or 4.2.2 How will the story end?).
It is also not true that topics have to be relevant to the students’ situations,
or provide new information, ot be stimulating or exciting: there is no single
guideline for the selection of subjects that will arouse learner interest. A
more reliable piece of advice is to use different kinds of topic at different
times, to make sure that there is a varied ‘diet’ of subject matter. Here isa
selection of some of the kinds of topic used in this book:
* Factual information on topics of general interest: history, geography,
psychology, politics, science, etc.
Controversial subjects of local or general interest
Personal viewpoints, experiences, feelings, tastes
Fiction: novels, short stories, anecdotes, folk tales
Amusing or pleasing ideas as expressed in poetry, proverbs, quotations
Entertainment: films, plays, television programmes
© Personalities: locally known people, famous celebrities, imaginary
characters
However, you will find a lot of the activities use none of these: they are based
on boring subjects like telephone numbers (12.1.1 Telephone numbers) or
familiar objects (11.2.3 Shopping): and they arouse and maintain interest
through a combination of two or more of the following task-design features.
Visual focus
Itis very much easier to concentrate on thinking about something if you can
see it, or at least see some depicted or symbolic representation of it. Sight is
an extremely powerful and demanding sense: if we do not provide our
students with something to look at, they will seek and find it elsewhere, in
objects that have nothing to do with the learning task and that may distract
them. An exercise that uses both aural and visual cues is likely, therefore, to
be more interesting than one that is only aural-based.
Awritren text may provide sufficient visual focus in itself; but
accompanying graphic material often improves comprehension and
4Activities
performance. It can help to elucidate difficult content, add meaning to a very
short of boring text, or be used to compare and contrast (“The text says she’s
dancing, but in the picture she’s sitting down.’).
Visual material usually takes the form of pictures; but it may of course be a
representation of information in some kind of other graphic form: diagrams,
symbols, icons, tables, and so on. We ourselves are often an excellent visual
aid when using our own facial expression and physical movement to
illustrate a topic; so are our students and the classroom environment.
‘These days we have a variety of different technical means to show visual
materials besides the traditional black- or whiteboard: the computer screen
sometimes projected through a data projector; the interactive whiteboard;
the OHP. But in most classrooms paper is still the most convenient and user-
friendly for activities based on group, pair or individual work.
Open-endedness
Atask that is open-ended allows for a number of different, equally valid,
learner responses, and is therefore conducive to the production of varied and
original ideas.
Even if the basic structural framework of the response is prescribed in
advance, learners’ motivation to participate rises significantly if they are
allowed to choose the actual ‘content’ words to use: the contributions,
written or spoken, become less predictable and more interesting. For
example, supposing you want to practise adverbs of frequency: one
technique is to supply a sentence such as He has coffee for breakfast, and
then ask students to insert the adverb always. The result is boring because it
is predictable and of uninteresting content. But if you supply a human
subject (even a fairly obvious one like people, for example), and ask the
students to suggest things that people always (or never, or sometimes, or
whatever) do, then you will get a variety of responses, many of them
interesting or funny. You will also, incidentally, get substantial quantity of
practice, as defined earlier. True, this also means that participants have to
find their own vocabulary: but if the range of possibilities is wide enough,
then usually even less advanced students can find something to say; and you
can always supply the occasional new word as needed.
It is not, howeyer, true to say that all closed-ended tasks are boring. When
you want to practise certain points of grammar that the learners still have
difficulty in producing on their own, there is a place for activities based on
very controlled responses; and these can be made more interesting by
varying intonation, facial expression and gesture, by the use of visuals, ot by
15