Using Video in the Classroom.
Techniques of Presentation
Video:Active listening & watching techniques for children
Before showing the film
- Elicit the children's knowledge of the subject or theme.
- Show the title and / or the first images and ask the children to imagine what is going to happen.
- Raise a finger.
- Touch or show a picture or an object.
- Make a gesture.
- Do an action.
- Say the word or phrase.
- See a person, animal, object or action.
- Hear a given word, phrase or structure.
- Something new.
- The name of something.
- Something the same as something else (a previous story, a picture, etc.)
- Another way of saying something known. Ex: Goodbye / Bye bye.
- Something said by a given character.
- A specific piece of information.
- At the same time as one or more of the characters (on 2nd or later viewing).
- To the characters (warn them, tell them what to do, etc.)
- Describe what's happening.
- Say what's already happened.
- Imagine what's going to happen next.
- Imagine a dialogue.
- Watch a person's mouth and guess what they're saying.
- Guess who's speaking.
- What's happening? where? when?
- Those that can see describe what they see to the others.
- Those that can't see ask questions.
- The children share information to work out what's happening.
- The children work out what happened in the correct order.
- The children put pictures, objects, written words or sentences in the chronological order of the film.
- The children draw scenes from the film in chronological order with a few "speech bubbles."
- In small groups the children act out the film with or without dialogue.
- Children, individually or in small groups, mime something from the film. The others guess what it is.
- Write on the board: What? Where? Who? How many? etc. The children ask each other questions about the film.
- Teacher/child recounts the film with deliberate mistakes, the other children correct them.
- Teacher/child assumes the identity of a character, the children ask questions to discover who it is.
Centre de linguistique appliquée, Université de Franche-Comté, 1996 - 2004