Students will...
Students will...
Start by asking the following question and making a list on the board. Students can shout out answers or come up to the board to write them. Encourage students to use more advanced vocabulary and not just “sadness” and “happiness” .
Ask the following questions. Give time for students to answer these questions in small groups, and encourage students to give specific examples. Model answers if necessary.
Explain that in this lesson, students will learn about strong emotions that we experience when learning a language.
Speaking prompt: Give students one minute to think and prepare and one minute each to speak about this with a partner.
Think about a time when you were very angry.
OR
Think about a time when you were very sad.
Share with the class. If relevant, point out any experiences that were related to learning a language. Then explain that learning a language can be a very emotional experience.
Watch the following video titled “How Mindfulness Helps to Manage Emotions”. (the video is linked to the images on slides 5 and 6)
How Mindfulness Helps to Manage Emotions
Handling Strong Emotion Cloze Activity
Give each student a copy of the emotion wheel or have one available for them to refer to.
In the same groups of 3, have students play a game by explaining their words from activity 2. Students may not say the word they are describing, but can describe it using circumlocution and giving examples. Other team members can look at the wheel, but they cannot look up the definition of the word.
After all groups have guessed their words, have students go around and explain their words one more time. Students should take notes about new words they learn as they listen to their group members.
Explain that students will now use this vocabulary to describe their emotions.
Have students create 5 “I feel… when…” sentences with a partner (they should speak these, not write them). Encourage students to write 3 sentences about their emotions learning a new language and 2 sentences describing their everyday emotions. Model adding an explanation to the sentence using “when” or “because”.
Ex. “I feel frustrated when I forget words in English”, “I feel excited because I have fun weekend plans”, or “I feel insecure when other students do better on tests than me.”
After students finish creating sentences with their partners, ask a few students to share. Then discuss the following question as a class:
Why is it important to describe our emotions?
Have students look at the five “I feel… when…” sentences they wrote. Explain that they will now make a plan to deal with emotions in the future using ‘When I feel… I will…’. Model an example of what their plan could look like.
Give students time to make a plan for 3 emotions. Then have them share (if they are comfortable) with a partner.
Explain that students will track their plan this week by recording their emotions and what they did. A follow up on this assignment will occur on Thursday.
The following handout has two charts per page and so you will only need to print out enough sheets for half the number of students in your class.
Watch the following video (stop at 3:00).
STOP being afraid of emotions: 3 STEPS ON HOW NOT TO BE AFRAID OF FEELINGS
Wednesday:
Identifying and labeling emotions interactive video
Emotions Emoji - English ESL video lesson
Thursday:
Discuss the plan you made for homework on Monday with a partner.
This content is provided to you freely by Ensign College.
Access it online or download it at https://ensign.edtechbooks.org/PositivePsychologyintheClassroom/handling_strong_emotions_intermediate_high.