TEACHING YOUNG LEARNERS AND TEENS (ISABEL)
TEACHING YOUNG LEARNERS AND TEENS
One of the most common beliefs is that
teaching teenagers is a difficult task. Many English teachers would probably
agree that it is hard to establish a good learning atmosphere in a teenager
classroom. It is also widely decided that teenagers are less motivated than
other groups of learners. It is the age of students that represents a major
factor in teachers’ decisions about what and how to teach.
The
transition from the lower-primary to the upper-primary school grades generally
represents a breaking point. At this stage, children start entering the period
of adolescence and their attitudes to school change. While young children,
especially those up to the age of ten, show enthusiasm for learning, young
teenagers usually lose interest in learning.
This phenomenon
is recognized as a very important factor affecting both teaching and learning
at primary schools. Since primary school teachers are permanently in front of
problems related to this issue.
There is methodology
information on how to teach both young and teenage learners with regard to
changes that they are undergoing. It intends to define possible reasons why
young teenagers lose interest in language learning and how teachers can deal
with this problem.
According to the nature of teenagers.
It includes the definition of this age group and
provides the description of their character. It discusses developmental stages
in adolescence and some ways to understand the difficulties of teenagers. Both
physical and psychological changes in teenagers are described.
Definition of teenage learners
Most
authors agree that a teenager is defined to be a young person between the ages
of approximately twelve and nineteen. According to G. Lewis most experts
further divide this age range into three distinct subgroups:
·
young teenagers, aged
12-14
·
middle teenagers, aged
14-17
·
late teenagers, aged
17-19
Young teenagers are suffering physical and
social changes, which are more prominent and evident than in middle and late
teenagers.
Young
teenagers and features of adolescence
Teenage learners
are often considered as difficult, undisciplined, impatient and problem students.
Despite their bad reputation.
G. Lewis
emphasises that young teenagers are undergoing dramatic changes in every aspect
of their live (6). J. Lewis’ opinion
corresponds and he points out the need to understand the reasons behind
teenagers’ quick changes in attitudes towards learning and changes in behaviour
in general.
I think that to
understand how to approach teenagers, it is very important to know what is
characteristic for this age group. Which are particularly physical,
psychological and social changes. Furthermore, teenage relations to family,
peers and school are discussed.
Social
changes
J.
Lewis mentions that young teenagers become more adventuresome and experiment
with different ideas. He points out that, “This plays an important role in
finding one’s relations to oneself, groups and opposite sex.”
Young teenagers want to belong to a group. Groups
are very important means of establishing identity and building up confidence.
J. Lewis speaks about the clash between teenager’s own set of values and the
set which is promoted by parents and other adult figures.
Friendships and
peer groups start to strongly influence teenagers, who assert their
independence by getting away from parents and finding new role models. Young
teenagers find comfort and identity in youth culture (G. Lewis 7). This is reflected for example in exclusive
friend groups, fad fashion and music, or socially cooperative. These can often
feel isolated and lonely. In some cases they can even become victims of
bullying and abuse.
I
think that an important source of guidance about how to teach teenagers
successfully is works on developmental psychology. Therefore, based on the
understanding of psychology of teen age, which was discussed so far, It focuses
on how teachers can ensure successful learning despite the fact that teenagers
are generally considered difficult to please.
Teenagers
and music
It seems that all teenagers are interested in
music and like listening to pop songs. It may be a broad generalization, but on
the whole teachers have found it to be true. Due to the fact that majority of
popular song lyrics is in English, it can be a source for highly motivating
activities.
There
are many possibilities how to exploit language in songs. It is easy to find
lyrics on the Internet and teenagers themselves can be involved in creating
listening activities with their favourite songs.
However, especially when dealing with popular
music, opinions of different peer groups can sometimes come into conflict.
Therefore, teachers should be aware of this danger and be prepared to cope with
the tough situations that may arise.
Teenagers
and technology
These
days, “technology has an enormous impact on all aspects of teenage life which
simply cannot be ignored” (G. Lewis 10). The access to information puts
teenagers more in control of their lives. While many young learners are exposed
to computers and have mastered the technology. It is in early teenage years
that they begin to interact freely with the medium and understand its true
power. The implications for teaching are extensive (G. Lewis 10).
In the most of
the time the teenagers prefer leisure activities to studying. Further, they
feel that the upper-primary curricula are more demanding and that they
have too many homework tasks to do, which they sometimes do not manage because
they either do not have enough time or they admit that they just do not want
to. Teenagers are often not interested in homework, because they feel it has no
sense and they do not realise that they would benefit from doing it. In my
opinion, to help this situation, the teachers should assign homework reasonably
and carefully explain how the tasks would contribute to the learners’ language
development and knowledge.
Bibliography
Hargreaves, D. H. Interpersonal Relations and Education. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972.
Print.
Harmer, Jeremy. How to Teach English. 2nd ed. London: Pearson Education
Limited, 2007. Print.
---. The
Practice of English Language Teaching. 4th ed. Harlow: Pearson
Education Limited, 2007. Print.
Hendry, Leo B. School, Sport and Leisure; Three Dimensions of Adolescence. London:
Lepus Books, 1978. Print.
Lewis, Gordon. Teenagers. Oxford: OUP, 2007. Print.
Hi Isabel,
ReplyDeleteI sent you a private message through WhatsApp. Please check it.
Also, you need to take this post down and repost following the instructions given in class on the first day.
Namely, there are two major problems:
1. This work is not your own. It is largely copied from different articles online. You need to ALWAYS write in your own words, paraphrase and use quotes and cite when you use something someone else said word for word.
2. You should choose ONE article for your analysis. Give us the link of the article or where we can access it, and then follow the instructions from the class handout.
In short, for your analysis you should consider one or more of the following ideas/questions
1. what was the most interesting aspects of the article to you and why?
2. How can this article impact your own teaching experience? What can you use in your own context?
3. What questions or concerns does this article raise? What things were not covered well, or what aspects were not considered (that should have been), etc.
Your analysis should be 2 pages long, about 500 words.
Please re-post following these guidelines so that you can receive credit for the work. Thank you.
Obviously teaching is difficult task , first the children come from different education and different homes they arrive to school creatives curious and very intelligent , some teachers become simply instructors, forgetting completely the true mission as educators , but another hand there teachers with vocation that try to finding out strategies to improve the teaching learning process of learners and it adding a motivational level in order to improvement the development cognitive,psychological and even spiritual.
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