ESL Lesson comparison (Poland vs. China)
I wanted to share my thoughts on two ESL lessons, one from
Poland and the other one from China.
The aims and objectives from both lessons will be
juxtaposed below.
Poland – ESL
Kindergarten class from Knurów
Topic: Fruits and
numbers (1-7)
Aims:
-
Students will be able to name basic fruits
(apple, pear, banana)
-
Students will be able to identify fruits
orally and aurally
Objectives:
-
Student will be able to distinguish fruits
by their color
-
Students will be able to count the number
of fruits
China – ESL
Kindergarten class
Topic: Fruits and
prepositions (in and on)
Aims:
-
Students will be able to name basic fruits
(apple, pear, orange, banana)
-
Students will be able to identify fruits
orally and aurally
Objectives:
-
Students will be able to identify fruit’s
colors
-
Students will be able to use the fruit
with the proper preposition (in/ on)
-
Students will be able to use the correct
article form with the corresponding fruit (a/on)
What was your preferred lesson?
In
my opinion, both lessons went well, but my favorite would have to be the lesson
from China. I was particularly drawn to his lesson due to the positive energy
from the teacher and his creative activities. I appreciated that the teacher
used only the target language and not students’ L1 in the lesson. On the other
hand, I do have to take into consideration the amount of time he teaches on a
daily basis. If he was to teach four or five classes in a day, I don’t know how
he would have enough energy to keep up with all his students.
Which teacher managed
to achieve the aims/objectives better? Why?
Both
lessons had students sitting in a circle, they asked individual students to
complete a task, there was a lot of repetition and drilling in the lesson. They
had numerous activities and both used the magical box to guess the fruit
inside. By the end of the lesson, students were able to identify the fruits and
count/use a preposition. Thus, I think that both teachers achieved their teaching
goals.
The differences between the two lessons were very slight. The tone of the lessons was different, as the ESL teacher from China had more enthusiasm and energy, whereas, the ESL teacher from Poland displayed a more relaxed atmosphere. The activities chosen by the teachers were also a bit different. The Polish lesson was a standard lesson, as the teacher incorporated a song with fruits and numbers, while the Chinese lesson continued with an experiment to show the meaning of basic prepositions. It was very creative to conduct an experiment with the fruits to see whether or not they would sink or float. I especially liked this activity; it was extremely interactive and out of the box. I was curious myself if the banana would sink or not.
If
you would like to share your thoughts about the lessons, do not hesitate!
Sara

hello, Sara!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your reflections on the 2 lessons. What you said about the Chinese teacher's level of energy resonates with me - honestly, i cannot imagine teaching in that way day in and day out! While watching his lesson, I quietly envied the Chinese teacher for being so energetic and full of life, he was a real inspiration!
Hi Sara,
ReplyDeleteI was into the experiment activity as well. It provides an opportunity to attract children and include subject+language collaboration which is included in CLIL method. I totally agree that perhaps after few lessons conducted in the style of China teacher I would be exhausted, however, I would be definitely way much more tired with the polish teacher style as it is boring to my mind :)
Thank you for your reflection on these lessons, I love your blog!