Smith Training October 5, 2008 Osaka Kyobashi

Today I went to the Smith School of English training seminar. I like to go

to these becuase it refreshes me and keeps me current with the other owners

and the direction and goals of our group. Of course Mark Smith had lots to

tell us that was really valuable and interesting, like the state of the

English school industry as a whole in Japan, and the actions we franchisees

should be taking to bring our business to the students who could benefit

most from it. But I found talking to another franchisee also quite

interesting. Chiharu gave me a whole new way of looking at things.

We discussed how she uses the Japan Sea in her lessons. I had heard much of

it before, but somehow it did not click with me, and I could never

understand it or implement it right.

Well, anyway, we talked about how after she does the main lesson, she then

uses the story as a template, and then tells her own story of a weekend

activity. The students then listen and try to answer the questions, (same

set of questions, adapted). The next stage is to ask the students to relate

their weekend activity. After they do, with some skillful questioning, you

can lead them to realize that they can use the story as a template to tell

their own stories.

From there it is just a short hop to the questions, which you or they can

ask (you to them, they to you).

This sets the stage for a more fruitful use of all the smith stories, and

the intermediate set of stories are quite difficult for the students to use.

Other adaptations are to have them insert phrasal verbs or idioms into their

stories.

I am pretty excited about trying this out in my own lessons!

2 Comments

  1. Chiharu
    Posted October 7, 2008 at 2:09 am | Permalink

    Hello Les. It was great talking with you at the meeting. When I first figured out how to encourage students to use Japan Sea and other materials as templates for telling their own stories, I was very excited, too. I learnt this method from Kyobashi teachers when I was teaching there part-time in August. One of the great things about being part of the Smith’s School of English Team is that we can share such great ideas to improve our teaching styles! I am looking forward to our next meeting.

  2. Edward
    Posted October 7, 2008 at 2:26 am | Permalink

    Les and Chiharu,

    I also have found a deep love for The Japan Sea and other similar lessons. Any lesson that allows students to build a comfort zone that they can then break away from with confidence is great. The Japan Sea in particular allows students to feel comfortable speaking up in class and encourages longer utterances than beginner students usually feel comfortable with. After having taught this lesson a few times, I like to simply start the lesson with “What did you do last weekend?” and let them use the Japan Sea framework to tell the class about their weekend. If the student gets stuck, the other students can easily encourage them along by using the [easily modifiable] questions. Have fun with that!

    Edward, SSE Ohtsu

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