Description: This lesson proposal is organized around the theme of school through the use
of four (4) paintings of the late 19th early 20th century and 2 short videos. Students compare schools in the past and present and
reflect on their own experience and feelings towards school. The Visible
Thinking routine used is Circle of
Viewpoints.
Level: Intermediate-Upper intermediate
Learners: Teens and adults
Theme: School
Language: Simple Present, Present Continuous, there is/there are, past forms, used
to, school related vocabulary
Skills: Describing
paintings, speaking, writing, exploring diverse perspectives, watching 2 short videos
Materials: 4 coloured photocopies, worksheet, PowerPoint presentations, 2 short videos
Materials: 4 coloured photocopies, worksheet, PowerPoint presentations, 2 short videos
Step 1
Show visual prompt and brainstorm
various viewpoints about the topic of school. Try using the following questions
if needed:
- How does it look from different points in space and time?
- Who (and what) is affected by it?
- Who is involved?
- Who might care?
Ask each student to choose one of these viewpoints. Give them time to
prepare to speak about the topic from that perspective and to embody the
viewpoint using the script skeleton to structure what they say. Try to move
your students to consider thoughts and feelings of the
character they’ve chosen.
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Step 3
Let students act out their various perspectives. They should speak briefly about their chosen viewpoint using the script
skeleton. There will probably, and hopefully, be a broad and distinct array of
responses, as each student produces a unique viewpoint. If some students opt
for the same character, encourage them to perform differently. For example, if
several students choose the viewpoint of a student, one may be trying to seek
out distinction in school; another student might be disaffected or just want to
make friends; a third one may be a first grader; a fourth one in his last year.
Ask them to raise different questions in order to elaborate their viewpoints. Keep a visible record of their ideas so that a class list of perspectives is created.
Step 4
Once everyone in the circle has spoken, you can lead a discussion by
asking: What new ideas do you have about the topic that you didn’t have
before? and What new questions do you have?
Step 5
Organize students in 4 groups. Give each group a coloured photocopy of a painting and ask them to cooperate and write a short
descriptive text about it. Ask them to reflect on the following issues: students,
teacher, classroom arrangement, objects, era, country, points that cause
puzzlement, title for the painting. Allow 15 minutes for the groups to
complete the activity.
Step 6
Get feedback. Divide the board
in four (4) parts. Show the Power Point Presentation below. Pause at each
painting while one student from each group reads out their joint text. Write in
the equivalent part of the board the relevant information (title, students,
teacher…) making visible the answers of all groups.
School paintings from hrysa
Step 7
Show the PowerPoint below.
Reveal information, make comparisons with students' answers and hold a plenary discussion.
School paintings 2 from hrysa
Step 9
Step 10
Step 8
Discuss with students how these
works of art make them feel.
Step 9
Write the following words on
the board: in the past-school-used to. Ask students to write 5 sentences
reflecting on the previous discussion. After 10 minutes get feedback.
Possible answers:
In the past teachers used to
hold a cane/ In the past there used to be corporal punishment/ In the past they
used to have metal bells/In the past they used to heat classrooms with a
woodstove/In the past they used to write with quills/In the past there used to
be no central heating or air conditioning in schools.
Step 10
Write on the board: one-room
schools. Tell students that they were commonplace in rural (country) and
small town schools in various countries (the USA, Canada, Australia, the UK,
Ireland, Spain, Greece) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Tell
students they are going to watch a short video about country schools in the
1900s in the USA. As they watch they should fill in the blanks in the text
(video: 4:15-5:41).
Step 11
Show the video again and get feedback.
Step 12
Write on the board: Past-Present:
how have schools changed? Tell them that they are going to watch a short
video about Past and Present Schools. They should note down changes.
Possible answers
Blackboard-whiteboard-interactive
board/ Technology assisted learning (computers/ipads/laptops)/ Individual
work-group work / Ways of punishment
Ask students to write a short text about either a good or a bad
school experience of their own.
I hope you find this proposal worth experimenting.
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