Adapting Kagan structures for Japanese secondary school English classes
Part 1: The three-step interview
by Lee Thomas and Kayvon Havaei-Ahary
Most Japanese secondary schools have had difficulty implementing the communicative methods of English instruction endorsed by MEXT. This presentation offered an overview of the literature which has explored these difficulties, and responded to calls from some of the local JALT community to explore cooperative learning as a potential means to meet the MEXT guidelines. It argued that Kagan structures offer a base for teachers to draw upon in designing group work activities that engage students in extended periods of uninterrupted interaction, by providing a social structure which develops the social skills required for effective communication. There were video and practical demonstrations of three separate activities which have been built around a single Kagan structure (the three-step interview) for varying purposes and levels, and the presenters reflected upon the effectiveness of the activities within the PIES framework. Their aim was to encourage other secondary school teachers to develop activities around the PIES framework and share them within a community. This is a step towards developing a context-appropriate communicative methodology, and providing MEXT with the teacher resources necessary to successfully reform English education nationwide.
Lee Thomas and Kayvon Havaei-Ahary are the creative force behind TEFLpies: a community for those who are interested in the application of cooperative learning principles to the teaching of English as a foreign language, and who wish to spread the use of these principles in classrooms across Japan, as a solution to the ongoing difficulties with reforming English education, with the aim of making it more communicative. Check them out at http://teflpies.com
Venue:
Ichi-go-kan 3F, Room 133
460-1 Kamisadorimachi, Maebashi-shi
Gunma-ken 371-0816, Japan
Time:
October 15th, 2017
2 to 4:30PM
Attendance:
Members, students, and 1st-timers: FREE
One-day Members: ¥1,000