Storytelling in ELT is often seen as the
preserve of the young learner teacher. Tell a story with lots of repetition,
noises, and action is considered far too childish for teen and adult learners.
But stories are in our soul, we grew up with them, remember them fondly and can
learn a lot from them, so maybe stories can be part of language lessons for
older students.
Why storytelling?
The benefits of grading reading are well
documented. Students reading for pleasure at their own level not only improve
their reading skill but also their grammar and vocabulary level. But why is so little said about
Graded Listening. When we do a listening activity in an English lesson there is
always a task to go with it. This listen and answer approach often stresses
students, no wonder then that listening is often considered by students to be
the ‘hardest’ skill to master. We rarely ask students to just listen for
pleasure. We rarely say don’t worry about it; there won’t be a ‘test’ at the
end. But could that be beneficial for students? Could it help them to improve
their listening skills and their grammar and vocabulary like grading reading
does?
Case Study
I’ve been telling stories with students
for about three years but at the end of 2018, I spent three months teaching
young adults in Japan and decided to do a little experiment. At least
once a week I told them a story. Sometimes I did nothing with it, just told it
at the beginning or the end of the lesson and moved on. Sometimes we briefly
discussed the story and then moved on. Sometimes I built a lesson around the
story. I told the story using actions, pictures and sounds if needed to help
with the meaning but still in an adult way. The students enjoyed the stories,
and they produced some really excellent work based on them. When I asked them
at the end of the course if they could remember the stories, they listed them
and took pleasure in retelling them to each other.
Here is some of the feedback that I’ve
been receiving from students:
§ ‘Thanks to the
storytelling lessons, I got skills for listening, imagination and retelling.’
§ ‘This definitely
helped our listening skills…. we could communicate with each other and try to
express our thoughts, ideas, and so on.’
§ ‘Those stories let me
imagine the view, place, person and a lot of other stuff.’
§ ‘I learnt many
expressions, including what I’ve never used to express myself.’
§ ‘It’s motivating to
listen eagerly.’
§ Some activities gave
me a power of understanding.’
One student even asked me if I could
help her to become a storyteller like me!
Activities
The first activity I did after each
story was simply to ask students to retell the story to each other. This helped
them fill the gaps in each other’s knowledge, developed their understanding of
the story, and gave them a chance to ask me questions. Because I had a few
artistic students in my class, I encouraged them to draw the story at this
stage. Here are three other activities that I will look at in my Webinar.
Newspapers
Ask the students to make a newspaper
article for their story. Show them a narrative newspaper story, ask about the
features, how the story is told in the newspaper, who is being interviewed etc.
Then ask the students to work in small groups to create a newspaper front page
based on the story.
Prequel or Sequel?
Ask
them to write a prequel or sequel to the story. Talk about films like Star Wars
or Harry Potter. How did the story move on? Then, ask the students to think
about the story and how the characters would develop in 5, 10, or 15 years’
time. Put them in small groups and ask them to write their new versions of the
story.
Twitter
Get
them to write a twitter feed for each of the characters. This is a bit more
complicated to set up, but it worked like a charm. First you need to break the
story down into factual components. Then, ask them to think how each character
would respond to the event and how they would update their twitter feed. Ask
them to write the Tweets and then put them in order to create a Twitter version
of the story.
The last lesson
In
my last lesson with the students, I asked them to tell me a story from Japan. I
put the students into groups and gave them time to plan and then asked them to
tell me the story. Their renditions were fun, enthusiastic and brought a tear
to my eye.
I
genuinely believe that listening for pleasure has a place in language learning
and storytelling can give students a chance to listen to something that is
enjoyable and understandable, and this takes the pressure off listening.
https://oupeltglobalblog.com/2019/02/15/storytelling-gareth-davies/?fbclid=IwAR2-g6c8T8Mp7E4nGP5G4G-nKd7F64GolGO_YlbXoJPIcZfOEHzrtFcCJPY
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