What is a
“pair”? The American Heritage dictionary begins its definition of this word by
calling it “Two corresponding persons or items similar in form or function”.
For
the purpose of language teaching or any other kind of teaching, for that
matter, the “corresponding” aspect is of the greatest pertinence. A moment
comes in a great many lesson plans when the teacher thinks, for example, “OK,
we’ve gotten through inductively figuring out how the present perfect is
different from the past tense. Check. We’ve engaged in a spate of mental
gymnastics filling in blanks in a series of PPT sentences. Aha! Used a
technological resource. Check. Looked at lines of prose and eliciting
individually in a crisscross pattern among students sitting in a U-shape that facilitates
eye contact and intelligible oral exchanges…. decided which sentences contain
the present perfect tense and why that tense was used in those situations.
Check. Now it must be time for pairwork. Right. So the students are given the
assignment to work in pairs on exercise B on page 46 of their textbook. Right
timing; ineffective strategy. If the students are naturally gregarious, they
will do the exercise collaboratively, or at least verify whether their
responses match. But, was there anything about the exercise which necessitated
a joint exchange, mutual input, utterance and response? If the answer is “no”,
then you don’t have pairwork; you have two individuals sitting side by side
engaged in a similar task which can be carried out without the “correspondence”
of two people who depend on each other’s contributions to achieve a requested
result.
The following are a few examples of textbook-type set-ups that result
in genuine pairwork.
Two
students have cue cards which indicate the direction a question & answer
exchange might take: Policeman vs person
suspected of automobile theft.
P: for the past three hours
T: shopping mall
P: own the car you are driving
T: two years
Students
receive A & B dialog cards to practice role-play situations which include
the structure or vocabulary in focus and which can be sequentially shared
whole-class; these varied dialogs can also be rotated from pair to pair in
closely timed progression.
Two
students exchange comments on the ways in which a city has changed in the past
few years, the ways in which parental rules have been modified, the changes
that have taken place in common domestic technology.
Students
pair up to ask and answer questions which will result in the creation of an ID
profile card which can then be shared with the rest of the group. Ex: Where
have you lived, worked, studied, traveled – etc – in the last two years?
Variations of these possibilities are as
infinite as our general inclination to communicate, and can be found by way of
multiple resources, including – most probably – the textbooks you are currently
using. But awareness is key in your inclusion of pairwork in your lesson plan: as regards your students, if they’re not
sharing, they’re not pairing.
Katy Cox |
This gave me some good insight into why "do exercises in pairs" doesn't work. Nice observations!
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree more with you! If there aren't mutual input, collaboration, and eye-contact, we're not talking about effective pair work, which involves reciprocity and personal engagement, too.
ReplyDelete