Главная страница Случайная страница КАТЕГОРИИ: АвтомобилиАстрономияБиологияГеографияДом и садДругие языкиДругоеИнформатикаИсторияКультураЛитератураЛогикаМатематикаМедицинаМеталлургияМеханикаОбразованиеОхрана трудаПедагогикаПолитикаПравоПсихологияРелигияРиторикаСоциологияСпортСтроительствоТехнологияТуризмФизикаФилософияФинансыХимияЧерчениеЭкологияЭкономикаЭлектроника |
Be busy with questionnaire for students
Write down the five things which, in your opinion, make a teacher special. Students think a special teacher: - has caring qualities; - interests/motivates students; - uses a variety of up-to-date materials, topics and methods; - gives all the students equal, fair treatments; - is patient and re-teaches where necessary; - is funny. I think a good teacher… Put the following characteristics in order priority, beginning with the one you think is the most important. - keeps in contract with parents of his or her students and lets them participate in the life of school. - is able to maintain the discipline in order. - lets students share his/her own life with all his/her ups and downs. - works hard to remain up-to-date with his/her subject. - openly admits when he/she has made a mistake or does not know something. - is interested in his/her students’ life, asks them about their homes and tries to help where possible. - makes students work hard and sets high standards. - is friendly and helpful to his/her colleagues. - uses a lot of different materials, equipment and teaching methods and attempts to make his/her lessons interesting. - helps students to become independent and organise their own learning.
2. Study the list of the good language teacher and the bad language teacher and answer the question: what qualities must a teacher have? The good language teacher - is friendly; - explain things; - gives good notes; - knows how to treat someone who sits at a desk for six hours; - lets students do the task by themselves; - uses group work; - does the lesson together with students; - elicits things students know; - talks about her/his life; - talks about problems of school; - talks about others subjects; - plays games; - tells jokes; - doesn’t push weak learners; - asks students’ opinions, there is a dialogue; - is like an actress/actor – pretends a lot; - is forceful, but not strict; - is educated; - knows psychology; - uses movement to make meaning clear; - makes sure everyone understands; - is funny; - is more like a comedian; - reads in a tone that makes meaning clear; - gets close to students; - believes in students, makes them believe in them-selves; - students want her/him to be proud of them; - has a personality of her/his own; - is very experienced; - makes grammar clear; - tries to communicate; - gives advice; - talks about personal problems; - gives students a lot of books to read; - asks students a lot of questions; - does experiments – practical work with students; - talks about the lesson; - knows the subject matter. The bad language teacher - is very strict; - doesn’t let students speak; - gives marks all the time; - is fixed in a chair; - is always above our heads (dominates); - shouts (for no reason); - gives a lot of tests; - forces us to do things; - doesn’t discuss other problems; - stars the lesson immediately; - doesn’t smile; - stares at a student and he/she can’t say a word; - her/his tests are too difficult; - just shows students a grammar rule and they forget it; - shouts when students make mistakes; - is very nervous (bad-tempered); - talks and talks; - speak flat; - keeps a distance from students; - believes the students are all the same; - is like a machine; - is not prepared; - treats kids like objects; - is rigid; - is sarcastic and ironic; - avoids answering questions; - students can’t laugh, can’t speak; - has a blacklist and says “you, you, you”; - has a little book with marks in it; - provides no communication; - makes students feel anxious; - says students are badly prepared. - 3. Using the expressions describe the parent-child relationships:
|