a picture paints a thousand words edit

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A picture paints a thousand words… Using video in your language teaching (an updated version of an earlier presentation) T.MacKinnon January 2014

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A revised version of a presentation made back in 2009. So much has changed in video since then. I have removed the video clips to make this easier to share.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A picture paints a thousand words edit

A picture paints a thousand words…

Using video in your language teaching

(an updated version of an earlier presentation)

T.MacKinnon January 2014

Page 2: A picture paints a thousand words edit

Tutors say of using video:

• “Video is more fun & therefore more motivating than just listening & reading.”

• “It demonstrates real situations.”• “It exposes the learner to a wide range of

accents.”• “Film can demonstrate new and unexpected

cultural or social issues.”• “Video clips offer much more than just listening

practice.”

• Source: BBC Get Talking workshops

Page 3: A picture paints a thousand words edit

video can be used for listening…

video can get people talking…students can get creative with

video…

Page 4: A picture paints a thousand words edit

Video can provide…• A launch pad for conversation• A stimulus for brain-storming vocabulary• A dialogue prompt• Inspiration for a writing activity• Encouragement to read• Practice with strategies to improve listening

skills• A window to explore cultural and social issues

Page 5: A picture paints a thousand words edit

Pre-listening/watching:

• Matching vocabulary with English expressions

• Matching new vocabulary with definitions in target language

• Categorising new vocab or expressions

• Predicting what will happen/be said/used

• Watch with no sound & put descriptions of images in right order

Page 6: A picture paints a thousand words edit

and more…

• Watch with no sound & describe what you see

• Watch with no sound & brainstorm nouns, adjectives, verbs etc

• Answer true/false questions then watch to confirm or correct

• Draw up word families of key vocab

Page 7: A picture paints a thousand words edit

During…

• Tick off vocabulary/expressions as you hear them

• Pause to talk about a particular scene

• Fill in a listening grid with key information

• Identify who said what

• Answer true/false or multiple choice questions

• Fill in gaps in a transcript

Page 8: A picture paints a thousand words edit

After watching…

• Discuss the Who? When? Where? What? How? Consequences? of the clip

• From a list, tick the things seen

• Fill in blanks in a résumé of the clip

• Answer specific questions about what was seen or heard

Page 9: A picture paints a thousand words edit

The techie bit• Video files are large and processor hungry• Format details vary, management can be

complex• Commercial video may have DRM, copyright

restrictions.• Useful free software: For editing and conversion - Freemake For playback - VLC For collection - Myth TV, Miro For sharing – vimeo, youtube