Students will...
Students will...
Learning involves all senses and awareness of what surrounds us. We need to be in the present, and not in many places at the same time. Phones can interrupt a mindful learning moment. Before starting the lesson, invite students to put their phones completely away (ideally inside their backpacks), explain that doing so is part of today’s lesson, and challenge them to keep from checking their phones during the whole class time.
Ask students what makes learning a language difficult. Have the students work with partners to discuss problems that they may have. After, discuss as a class. Possible answers may include:
As we clear our minds, we make room to expand our knowledge. Additionally, mindfulness will allow us to focus on what we are learning right now.
Review the following vocabulary words, their pronunciation, and their definition:
Have the students watch the following video.
Eduardo Briceño: How to get better at the things you care about | TED
Help them understand that the key to improving is focusing on one task at a time.
Focus on grammar principle.
Have students watch the following video and write down only the words that are in simple past tense.
After watching the video, ask students what words they were able to hear, and whether they can understand what the scene of the movie was about. Would they be able to summarize what happened?
*Probably not, as their main purpose and focus was listening for words in past tense.
Ask the students to tell a partner how well they were able to focus on finding those words, and what was distracting to them.
Help students understand that in order to improve with pronunciation, they need to focus on one aspect.
Explain that today, students will focus on the pronunciation of -ed. Review the pronunciation with students. This website has a helpful explanation.
After reviewing the pronunciation of ed, have students read the following paragraph out loud:
“When I got home, the kitchen was a mess. At our house, we have agreed to clean up after ourselves, so I asked around to find out who had cooked last. That person turned out to be my son. While he washed the dishes, I sat at the kitchen table and talked to him about his school work. Last year, he tested into an advanced program, and I wanted to see how he was doing. He seemed happy with it. He started telling me about his classes and what he learned that day.”
Ask students whether they were able to stay focused on the past tense -ed or if they were distracted by other things.
You may also change the pronunciation principle to focus on depending on what your class is working on at the moment of the lesson.
Ask students to set a goal for their own mindful learning. Invite students to choose one aspect that they would like to improve. It might be one pronunciation skill, one listening skill, or memorizing vocabulary (help students make a specific goal). As part of this goal, invite students to set a time and a place to remove distractions and stay focused for 15 minutes practicing the skill they chose to work on.
Tuesday:
Have students share their homework experience with mindfully focused language learning with a partner. Praise students when they talk about coping with distractions, staying focused, etc.
Wednesday:
Ask students to discuss what the following quote means to them. Highlight any comments related to focusing one’s attention.
“The mind is just like a muscle - the more you exercise it, the stronger it gets and the more it can expand.” - Idowu Koyenikan
Thursday:
Have students answer the following questions in small groups.
This content is provided to you freely by Ensign College.
Access it online or download it at https://ensign.edtechbooks.org/PositivePsychologyintheClassroom/mindful_learning_intermediate_high.