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"I'm sorry, I can't remember" - Adapting Memorization Activities to Require Thinking

Saturday, January 10th, 2004, 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM

Speaker: John Fanselow

Each time a person in a language class responds to a question with "I'm sorry, I can't remember" the person is implying that language learning consists mainly of memorizing. The long lists of vocabulary items learners try to commit to memory also imply that memorizing is the key mental activity required in language learning. Questions in textbooks and on tests that ask for facts also send the message that learning and memorizing are equivalent. In fact, though we need to memorize some things, much of all of learning, including language learning, requires thinking: processing sounds we hear and symbols we see. Processing requires us to analyze messages we see and hear and compare them with our previous knowledge. In the workshop, techniques will be introduced to show how activities in textbooks that require only memorization can be changed to require thinking as well.
As you introduce some of the activities introduced, it is hoped that learners will say, "Let me try - please wait a second" after you ask them a question rather than "I'm sorry, I forgot." The words "Let me try" suggest that learners are aware of the fact that language learning requires thinking. And the words "please wait a second" show that the learners know that since thinking requires use of previous knowledge, time is required.
Please bring to the workshop a textbook you use in your English classes so that the activities introduced in the workshop can be applied specifically to your own daily classes.

Organization: Osaka Chapter of the Japan Association for Language Teaching (Osaka JALT)

Cost: JALT Members: free
Non-members: 1000 yen

Venue: Osaka City Municipal Lifelong Learning Center, on the fifth floor of Umeda's Dai-2 Building. Tel: 06-6345-5000. http://www.manabi.city.osaka.jp

Location: Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture, Japan

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Bob Sanderson