I’ve always been fascinated by the story about Betty Crocker and how the company succeeded in designing the experience of making a cake. The company turned the whole process of baking into a simple matter of adding water, but they got off to a bad start. The initial sales were disappointingly sluggish. The company turned to focus groups and psychoanalysis to aid with product development. The solution they came up with was quite unexpected. They believed that powdered eggs, used in cake mixes, should be left out, so women could add a few fresh eggs into the batter, giving them a sense of creative contribution. This symbolic step worked like a charm – sales skyrocketed.
This may relate, to some extent, to teachers and course books. On the one hand, we get a cake mix, on the other hand, no matter how good this cake mix is, we still feel the need to add “an egg”, i.e. add our creativity to meet the “taste preferences” of learners in specific contexts.
Course books might be a useful resource, but they need to be used creatively to make them more learning-rich. This was the theme of the recent Course Materials: Design, Selection and Use with Penny Ur organized by iTDi. (A huge thank you to Penny Ur for sharing her fantastic ideas and techniques and the iTDi team for making it possible!) We talked about different aspects of creativity and course books and tried practical tools and techniques in our own contexts. My today’s post takes some ideas from the sessions and explores a few techniques for grammar and vocabulary gap-fills.
Gap-fill exercises are usually boring; quite often they are designed with a focus on the “result” rather than an “entire experience”. Learners do them trying to “get it right”, which is hardly an effective way to transfer the knowledge they gain to real life communication. However, we can make gap-fills more learning-rich.
What can be done?
Personalise. Get your learners to talk about themselves. People remember what is personally relevant.
1. Invite students to insert the name of a member of the class instead of a proper name, or pronoun, given in the book:
e.g. He ______ (to love) sweets.
James Nikola loves sweets.
2. Ask students to alter the sentences to make them true about them, or someone they know.
e.g. He ______ (to call) Betty yesterday.
I called my friend yesterday.
It is the perception of choice that stimulates learning. Change instructions and offer more choices to your learners, e.g. choose any (number of) items to fill in the gaps; work individually or in pairs, etc.
3. Play Mad Libs. Ask students to choose any 5 items and prompt their partners for words to fill in the gaps before reading the sentences aloud.
Introduce variety. Change interaction type. Recycle in different ways.
4. Get your students to close their books and jot down as many sentences they can remember (Think-Pair-Share).
5. Ask each student to choose one item they like and fill in the right answer in their worksheet (or a book). Get them to rotate their worksheets (clockwise/anticlockwise). The person who gets a worksheet checks the item/items that have been filled in, and corrects if necessary, then fills in another, and exchanges with someone else. And so on, until all the answers have been filled in.
6. Ask students to read the sentences faster, slower, with interest, with irony, whisper, etc.
Make it more challenging. Add, extend or change.
7. Get students to add more items to the ones that are already in the exercise, or suggest more words or phrases that could be added to the item (before/after), or suggest words that might be changed.
E.g. They ______ (to plan) a trip.
They planned a trip to England.
They planned a 2-day trip to England.
The took a 2-day trip to England.
8. Open-end.
E.g. He ______ (to love) sweets.
James Nikola loves sweets.
Nikola loves ______.
Change the way of checking. Gamify.
9. Play the Betting Game. Tell students that they have €100 to place a bet on the sentences they think are correct. If they are right, the bet will double. If they are wrong, they lose the money. The winner is the one who earns more money.
10. Play the Ladder Game to check. Pair up students and have them draw a ladder on a sheet of paper. The number of rungs of the ladder equals the number of items in the exercise. The aim of the game is to climb the ladder. When checking the answers, the players move one rung up and put their name initials on the rung. If the players fail to give the right answer, they stay on the same rung and put their name initials on the same rung again. (Read more here How to Do More by Doing Less)
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Would you like to add anything to this list? Please leave a comment! I would love to hear from you!
This is a great post! There are some really good ideas here. I particularly like suggestion five – the peer correction aspect works really well. I’ll have to try it…
Thanks so much for taking the time to comment, Caroline! Let me know how it goes with your students!
This is a great post! There are some really good ideas here. I particularly like suggestion five – the peer correction aspect works really well. I’ll have to try it…
What a timely post! I’ve been thinking about more motivating ways to approach gap filling FCE Use of English exercises and these ideas are incredible. I love numbers 3,5, and 10. I’ll try them this week for sure.
So glad you like the ideas, Gosia! I hope they go well with your students!
What a timely post! I’ve been thinking about more motivating ways to approach gap filling FCE Use of English exercises and these ideas are incredible. I love numbers 3,5, and 10. I’ll try them this week for sure.
So glad you like the ideas, Gosia! I hope they go well with your students!
Great ideas! Traditional gap-filling exercises are really boring and discouraging.
Great ideas! Traditional gap-filling exercises are really boring and discouraging.
[…] that we had covered in the first part of the lesson. Inspired by Svetlana Kandybovich’s great post on developing gap-fill tasks, I had hoped to do some peer correction: learners would complete two […]
[…] that we had covered in the first part of the lesson. Inspired by Svetlana Kandybovich’s great post on developing gap-fill tasks, I had hoped to do some peer correction: learners would complete two […]
Hi there! Loving the blog 🙂 Here are a couple more ideas… 1. Turn it into a running gap fill dictation (Gapfill around the walls, pairs of scribes and runners race to complete). 2. Replace blanks and bracketed cues with pictures or emojis, or better yet get the students to draw the picture clues for their partners. Hope these help!
Thanks so much for taking the time to comment and your ideas! Love the idea of getting students to draw the clues for their partners – at times, it seems the less we (teachers) do, the more they (students) learn:)
Hi there! Loving the blog 🙂 Here are a couple more ideas… 1. Turn it into a running gap fill dictation (Gapfill around the walls, pairs of scribes and runners race to complete). 2. Replace blanks and bracketed cues with pictures or emojis, or better yet get the students to draw the picture clues for their partners. Hope these help!
Thanks so much for taking the time to comment and your ideas! Love the idea of getting students to draw the clues for their partners – at times, it seems the less we (teachers) do, the more they (students) learn:)
Hi Svetlana,
Just to let you know that we’ve shortlisted this blog post for this month’s TeachingEnglish blog award and I’ll be putting up a post about it on tomorrow’s TeachingEnglish Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/TeachingEnglish.BritishCouncil, if you’d like to check there for likes and comments.
Best,
Ann
Thank you so much, Ann! Great news!
Hi Svetlana,
Just to let you know that we’ve shortlisted this blog post for this month’s TeachingEnglish blog award and I’ll be putting up a post about it on tomorrow’s TeachingEnglish Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/TeachingEnglish.BritishCouncil, if you’d like to check there for likes and comments.
Best,
Ann
Thank you so much, Ann! Great news!
In pairs sts create a dialogue including one of the sentences. Similarly, they pick one sentence and continue from there. Another one: choose a sentence, create a response or just make it a dialogue ( my first suggestion) and role-play.
This post is gold Svetelana. Thanks for sharing.
Great suggestions, Beth! Thank you for stopping by!
In pairs sts create a dialogue including one of the sentences. Similarly, they pick one sentence and continue from there. Another one: choose a sentence, create a response or just make it a dialogue ( my first suggestion) and role-play.
This post is gold Svetelana. Thanks for sharing.
Great suggestions, Beth! Thank you for stopping by!
[…] If you’re looking for more ways to use gap-fills in the classroom, check our 10 WAYS TO MAKE GAP-FILLS MORE LEARNING-RICH. […]