My edition: Boardbook, Hamish Hamilton, London, 1996
Main Target Vocabulary: animals, colours, same/ different
Main Target Vocabulary: animals, colours, same/ different
Session One
·
Ice-breaker: Sit in a circle and greet each
child individually by name.
·
Read Brown
Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see? book with different voices and sound
effects for each animal. Check out the author reading it himself on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdHCYgO9zh8
I
expressed surprised at the blue horse and the purple cat (isn’t that strange?!)
and we laughed, but otherwise read it straight through so as not to lose the
children’s attention. I tried to get my listeners to join in with the last page
when the children list all the animals they see looking at them. They are non-natives
with little to no exposure to English, so they joined in in Catalan: I read, “A
yellow…?” with rising intonation and paused for them to fill in the animal,
which they did in Catalan, I repeated the target word in English, and onto the
next animal. For me, the most important thing is that the children enjoy the
story and follow as much of it as they can, so if they’re participating, even
in their own language, that’s great! A round of applause and “Bravo!” ends each
activity.
·
Next, I showed the children photocopied pictures
of each animal fromthe book (I found some here: http://www.dltk-teach.com/books/brownbear/index.htm), some the same colour as in the book, some
a different colour. “Look, a brown bear. A yellow duck. A green bird??? Is that
the same as in the book? Or is it a different colour?” And we checked it in the
book: “ No, it’s different! The bird in the book’s RED!” etc.
·
Then I handed out animal pictures for the
children to colour in themselves, a few colours in each of three or four pots
set around the space.
The
first time I did this session, the children enjoyed it but it lasted just a
couple of minutes as they just scribbled in the animals quickly and wanted to
move on. The second time (different group of children and within term time
rather than in the holidays. Wonder if that had anything to do with it…?) they
took their time to colour as nicely and as multi-colouredly as possible, and
even wanted another animal to colour. It took me some time to get the keener
ones to tidy up and move on to the next activity. In fact, one little boy sat
and finished his bird colouring until we were well into the next activity. So
this time there was enough time for me to move around to each child, get to
know them a bit and reinforce vocabulary with comments like, “Hey, I love your
orange dog!” Or, “Wow, you’re colouring your horse black!”
The first time I did this activity I was interested to know if
the children would colour their animals the same as they are in the book, but
not at all! They were constrained neither by the colours in the book, nor by
real life. The older children did the most beautiful multicoloured designs,
while the younger ones tended to stick to one or at most two colours.
·
Next we played “Guess the animal” in which I
acted out an animal from the story for the children to guess. Then some of the
children had a turn acting out for the others to guess.
The
first time I did the story-telling sessions, I didn’t do this game until the 3rd
session, but this time I tried it in the first, and was amazed at how ready
some of the children, even the little ones, were to have a turn at acting, and
at how effective they were in transmitting their chosen animal to us! Although
I must say that it was mostly the adults that were doing the guessing while the
children were acting; the others tended to get a bit distracted. The children,
obviously, didn’t limit their animals to those in Brown Bear, and one little
girl was keen to have our guesses translated into her language to make sure
we’d got the right animal!
·
I put A4 pieces of coloured card on the floor around
the space, and as I called out a colour, the children had to run to that
coloured card and stand on it. There were no winners or losers, just a running
around game, but we could see that some children were keen to be the first to
each colour, whereas one little girl would only run to the card holding onto my
or her mum’s hand. The children also had a turn at calling out a colour for
their groupmates to run to.
·
We sat down again in a circle and sang the
Rainbow Song (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRTdq0VsLGQ)
·
Ending: We stretched our legs out in front of
us, toes into the middle of the circle, and I said goodbye and thank you to
each of the children by name, wiggling my toes as I did so as if it were my
toes that were talking to them.



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