skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Teacher Dude's Grill and BBQ Too
Teaching, journalism, photography and the like.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Using video to improve student's interview performance
Here is Dimitris's and Bill's FCE interview. As you can see, neither of them particularly enjoyed the experience but it is a great learning activity. I'll let them know how they did in more detail next lesson. However, I wanted the rest of the class to comment on their performance on
their blog
using the ideas and suggestions from the handout below.
PART ONE
1 Be friendly, be polite. This is a chance to show the examiners how well you can speak English, not a fight to the death.
2 Learn some words that may come up, e.g. the name of the subject you are studying or the job you want to do in the future.
3
DO NOT
learn a little speech by heart. It sounds unnatural and you'll get even more nervous than you need to be trying to remember it.
4 Keep eye contact with the examiner. That means looking him or her in the eye rather than staring at your shoes or some point on the wall behind them.
5 Remember there are no wrong answers here, only well- expressed and badly expressed ones.
6
DO NOT
give short, monosyllabic answers, nor tell them the story of your life.
PART TWO
1 Remember that the question you'll be asked about the photos will have three parts, answer all of them.
2 If you don't understand the question ask the examiner to repeat it. You'll not lose marks for this. However, you will lose marks for answering the wrong question.
3
DO NOT
stop speaking till the examiner tells you your time is up.
4 Pay attention to what the other person says as you will be asked a similar question to theirs when they finish.
PART THREE
1 Make sure you understand the question before you start speaking. If necessary, ask the examiner to repeat it.
2 Move your chair so that you are facing the other person. Remember what we said about eye-contact.
3 Start with a question, not a monologue.
4 Listen to what the other person says, comment on it, ask them questions.
5 Disagree with the other person whatever they say. It's always easier to have something to say if we disagree.
6 Give the other person chance to speak. You'll lose marks if you monopolise the conversation.
7
DO NOT
stop speaking until the examiner tells you that your time is up.
PART FOUR
1 Remember the questions asked in this part are always connected with the topic in part three.
2 Give full answers, not just short, monosyllabic ones
3 Comment on what the other person says, use their name.
4 There are no wrong answers, only badly-expressed ones.
Here are the questions from the interview. I asked the students to pay particular attention to those in Part 2 and 3.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
About Me
teacher dude
I'm a teacher, originally from England, now living in Northern Greece. I also blog, photograph and tweet about the current economic and refugee crisis.
View my complete profile
Blogs I read
Cool Cat Teacher Blog
Apple Intelligence and Its Impact on the Classroom
2 days ago
currybetdotnet
Come and watch m-orchestra at the Manchester Folk Horror Festival!
4 days ago
Theodora's blog
#8weeksofsummer Prompt 7/8: What training would you, or other educators, need to feel comfortable using AI in your instruction?
5 months ago
edu.blogs.com
Ewan's latest writing on Medium
6 years ago
Clandestine English
The Greek part of the Balkan route: Pressure & Resistance
7 years ago
A Don's Life by Mary Beard
Grenfell Tower and the Fire of Rome
7 years ago
toomanytribbles
the hitch
10 years ago
Rice, beans & pastichio.........
Pinky
11 years ago
My Big Fat Greek Life
THIS BLOG HAS MOVED
12 years ago
Mel's Diner
52nd Thessaloniki International Film Festival
13 years ago
This Is Not My Country
3arabawy
Blog Archive
►
2009
(195)
►
April
(35)
►
March
(61)
►
February
(61)
►
January
(38)
►
2008
(572)
►
December
(86)
►
November
(54)
►
October
(51)
►
September
(39)
►
August
(48)
►
July
(47)
►
June
(45)
►
May
(36)
►
April
(39)
►
March
(48)
►
February
(36)
►
January
(43)
▼
2007
(685)
►
December
(41)
►
November
(70)
►
October
(54)
►
September
(59)
►
August
(83)
►
July
(73)
►
June
(82)
►
May
(48)
►
April
(49)
►
March
(42)
▼
February
(44)
Digital photoessay
Lydia's blog
Seven days, seven photos - the Flickr group.
Seven days, seven photos
More photos
Pale Blue Dot
Today's photo
Teaching EFL/ESL using headlines
Using the internet to teach young learners English
Student protests - Greek style.
Pics de jour
YouTube
Clean Monday
A chill out list
Preparing for the CPE interview
Seven days - seven photos
Carnaveli
Science fiction to science fact - a case study
In the centre
Teacher Dude goes public
Mosaic Maker
Using pictures to revise vocabulary
Using video to improve student's interview perform...
Taken on a whim whilst returning home from a priv...
Testing times
Teaching English through football (soccer)
Street scene
Thessaloniki for newbies
Practising what you preach
farewell, la contessa.
A postcard from the nineteenth century
A day in the life
By the way, the 19th century is over
Snap
Speed Crash Perish
Change ?
Scenes from a cafe
Mad Max ala Ellinika
Seven days, seven pictures - A project
Looking over the horizon
Tunes that won't leave you in peace
FCE interview tips
Teaching young learners using Flickr
Teaching with Chatterbox
►
January
(40)
►
2006
(516)
►
December
(54)
►
November
(66)
►
October
(58)
►
September
(51)
►
August
(36)
►
July
(25)
►
June
(52)
►
May
(60)
►
April
(44)
►
March
(33)
►
February
(24)
►
January
(13)
►
2005
(48)
►
December
(13)
►
November
(10)
►
October
(22)
►
September
(3)
No comments:
Post a Comment