second_year_speech_skills.pdf |
Key
Bold words are critically important words or structures in the lesson
Italic words are suggestions made by me
(Parenthetical) words are stage-directions or clarification of speaker
Matt Shannon |
This PDF contains all elements relevant to the second-semester lessons of the second year of ECAD 3. You'll find the iconography of Opening-Body-Ending and Active Listening supporting ordering language, introductory forms, optional summary forms, and natural use of Japanese within the context of communication.
Key Bold words are critically important words or structures in the lesson Italic words are suggestions made by me (Parenthetical) words are stage-directions or clarification of speaker
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The ECAD 3.0 Curriculum provides us with a new version of Build a Town to use in our classrooms. This video quickly reviews both the new game pieces and first-stage debate mechanic, as well as a look at the map and how it might best me used. As said in the video, it's a great activity, but one that can get away from you without planning and attention.
Keep your most-needed materials at hand, and keep them looking good. Eliminate time wasted by missing pencils, chalk, or other common items, make it easy to recover lost-and-found erasers and the like, and keep that classroom looking good!
A little extra for overhead camera + paper presentation users: some simple animation. After drawing one simple image to to the right (or left) of your paper, trace over all of it that is not being changed for the animation. There you have it, a two-frame animation.
Idea from Brad Semans. http://bradsemans.com Here's a technique to enable your student presentations - easy, pretty much free, and flexible. Using an overhead camera, some scrap paper, and a monitor, you can help your students improve their presentation ability with as little friction as possible.
Track your students progress, provide support exactly where it's needed, and provide specific praise - that's what you'll be better able to do following this advice. Provide one marker for each voice, and you'll go quite far. Pair up with No Missing Markers for excellent resource management.
Never lose your markers again, and never spend more than a few seconds not-losing them. Do the colors match? If not, you know exactly who to talk to.
Work Menus allow you to help students choose the work they feel appropriate. Whether it is something easier for students just starting out, or going straight for the challenges, this visual organizer does what it claims. In this video, we review a two-factor work menu, one factor a scale for difficulty, and the other factor being a range of categories in which proficiency must be demonstrated.
Wrinkle-Free Glue sticks allow for extremely thin, long-lasting bonds. This makes them appropriate for laminate applications, as well as any time where your materials need to look their absolute best. Take a look at this funny-smelling glue.
With laminated paper and a suitable eraser, you've got a whiteboard that will work in a pinch. With melamine foam, it'll work a lot longer than a pinch.
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Ready To UseMaterials used in presentations and classes in Saitama and beyond. Archives
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