World Book Day - Reading and Studying Fiction in the ESOL and EFL Classroom
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Temps de lecture 7 min
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Temps de lecture 7 min
To celebrate world book day on the 4th March, this blog focuses on reading and studying fiction in the ESOL and EFL classroom – and you’ll find lots of ideas below. After you have read the blog, check out the excellent world book day website for hundreds of other ideas and fantastic resources.
The first thing to say is that studying fiction should feed into our enjoyment of it. If it doesn’t, then we are doing something wrong. Done well, analysing fiction increases our wonder at the stories and characters brought to life by our favourite authors. It opens our eyes to the creative choices made by the writers and reveals the infinite possibilities of the form.
I have always found a great starting point with my students is to share reading experiences. Here are a couple of activities you might like to try:
Ask students to draw a bookshelf of their favourite books. Have them write their names on the completed pictures and stick them around the classroom walls. Encourage them to discuss with each other. If some students are not great readers, you might allow them to include other things on their shelf pictures, such as video games or dvds of their favourite movies. However, each student’s shelf should include at least one or two books.
With older students, talk to them about books that have been important to you in your life. Then have them create a timeline of books that link to important moments in their own lives. For example:
Before you launch into studying a set text with your class, I’d always advise doing some learner training. We often ask students to analyse fiction, without giving them the tools they need to do the job. We sometimes assume that students are born with an innate ability to analyse a text, without being taught the mechanics of how to do this. Over the years, most of us have developed into sophisticated readers, and we have been exposed to a wide variety of text types and writing styles. It is easy to forget this. The aim of learner training activities is to:
Let’s start with structure. Knowing the difference between story, plot and narrative is really a ‘base camp’ for students studying novels, short stories or plays. Given this, it is amazing how many students have not been taught this – even undergraduate students in literature courses. This Exploring Fiction: Story, Plot and Narrative document is one way of explaining the differences to our students. Here are some learner-training activities you can try:
Doing some simple writing activities with the students is a good way of getting them to understand the stylistic choices that writers make. Have them try some of these exercises:
Get students to discuss what differences these changes make for the reader. You can refer back to these exercises when you are discussing your set text.
As well as understanding the basics of how fiction can be structured, it’s useful to have the students learn some technical vocabulary. Without this vocabulary, students will find it difficult to articulate their ideas without using long and clumsy paraphrasing. Use your favourite vocabulary practice activities, such as word and definition matching activities or ‘Taboo’. I have created a list of Literary Terms that might be useful for your students to know. Once students start to become familiar with the terms, have them practise identifying and labelling examples in a text. Being able to identify and name literary features is something relatively mechanical they can be taught to do before they start having to think about the text more deeply.
Now students know a bit about narrative, and have some jargon, get them to do some close reading of text excerpts and analyse some of the formal elements. You will need some short passages from different books. (A quick tip: I usually search for some books l think they will like on Amazon, then copy and paste into a document, passages from the ‘Look Inside’ previews). Some questions for students to think about:
Okay, learner training is over. So, let’s move on to think about some ways of studying a single extended text together as a class.
Good readers ‘read forward’ by making predictions about the text. This reading forward happens at many levels, including thematically and structurally, but also at sentence and phrase levels. Try some of the following:
Here are a couple of things you can encourage your students to do while you read together in class:
Th | Theme | Im | Imagery |
S | Simile | M | Metaphor |
Ch | Characterisation | → | Refers forward |
← | Refers backward | ? | Question to self |
! | I don’t understand | Sub | Subtext |
When you have done a reading session with your students, why not try some of the following?
That’s about it, I think. However, there is one final resource you might like to check out. I’ve been asked by a few schools what kinds of initiatives they could try to help encourage students to read more widely. So, I’ve spoken to some teachers and done a bit of online research. The below School Initiatives document summarises some of the best.
Enjoy World Book Day – and lose yourself in a book!