DAILY LESSON PLAN I. PREPARATION Candidate Teacher : Viktoriya POLTAVETS SÖNMEZ (07271045) School : Mersin University, 3’rd class Lesson : English Course : Pronunciation Skills : Integrated Skills (reading, writing, speaking, listening) Subject : /v/ and /w/ sounds Level : Pre-Intermediate Grade : 8th CEF level : A2 Age : 14 Duration : 15 Approaches and methods : Audio-lingual Method Techniques : Reading Aloud, Repetition, Use of minimal pairs, Dictation Materials : Classroom objects, power point, handouts Teacher Roles : Facilitator, organizer Learner Roles : Imitator, active participant Overall Objectives: 1. Knowledge of pronouncing the aimed sounds. 2. Ability to recognize the sounds in words, words pairs, sentences and tongue twisters during the activities. 3. Ability to recognize the difference between /v/ and /w/ sounds. 4. Ability to identify sounds of /v/ and /w/ in the words during pair dictation. Behavioral Objectives: By the end of the lesson, the students will be able to; 1. Find some words that have /v/ and /w/ sounds. 2. Pronounce the aimed sounds correctly. 3. Recognize /v/ and /w/ sounds via minimal pairs and drills. 4. Produce the aimed sounds correctly in pair dictation activity. 5. Use this knowledge while articulating new words. II.PRESENTATION 1. Warm-up and Motivation The teacher greets the class and asks “How are you today?” If there is not a problem, the teacher starts the lesson. She shows students two flashcards (a vine and a wine) and asks ‘Do you know these flashcards?’ She waits a minute for their answers and says ‘this is a vine.’ by showing it to the class and sticks the flashcard on the board. Then, she writes the word “vine” under the related picture and underline /v/ sound. She shows the other flashcard (a wine) and says ‘This is a wine.’ She sticks the flashcard on the board and writes ‘wine’ under the picture. Then she underlines the /w/ sound to attract the students’ attention to only these sounds. She wants them to look at her mouth while she is saying ‘vine’ and ‘wine’. She wants all students to repeat the words after her. 2. Stating the Instructional Objectives The teacher tells the students the topic of the lesson and he mentions about the aim of the lesson to the students “Today, we are going to learn together how to pronounce /v/ and /w/ sounds. Firstly, we will repeat some minimal pairs together and do an exercise related to them. Then, we will make an activity on our worksheets. Also, you will try to read the tongue twisters as fast as you can. Finally, you will try to dictate a passage while your pair is reading for you. 3. Presenting the Instructional Objectives The teacher shows and explains how “v” and “w” sounds are pronounced. The teacher gives the handouts that contain all the minimal pairs used in presentation and activities which are done in the practice and production parts, and she writes the minimal pairs on the board by reading them aloud. Then, she wants the students to repeat them after her. Minimal Pairs: /v/ and /w/ sounds vine wine vest west vow wow verse worse vet wet veal wheel veil wail viper wiper roving rowing III. PRACTICE In practice part teacher reads some words. The teacher wants the students listen to her carefully. She wants them to listen and circle the correct one. After the each sentence finishes the teacher writes the words on the board. Exercise 1: Listen to the teacher carefully. Circle the word which you hear. These words are; 1. vine wine 2. roving rowing 3. viper wiper 4. verse worse 5. vow wow As the second activity, there are sentences including the words with /v/ and /w/ sounds. Firstly, the teacher read the sentences to the students. Then she wants the students repeat the sentences. Exercise 2: Listen to the teacher. Read the sentences aloud. 1. Victor’s wife Vicky was very wise. 2. It was very warm all week. 3. Don’t wear your valuable watch this weekend. 4. When will Vick weigh the vegetables? 5. Were you involved in Vivian’s wedding plans? 6. Will we view the video on Wednesday? In the third activity, there are sentences and in each sentences two different words are. The teacher wants the students to choose and underline the correct word. She gives a few minutes for this activity, when the students are ready, the teacher wants them to read the sentence with the correct word and correct pronunciation of the word. The students gives the answers one by one but the teacher repeats also each sentence with the correct answer to check the answers of the whole class so all students can hear the right answer and correct their answers if they have made a mistake. Exercise 3: Read the sentences carefully, choose and underline the correct word. 1. My friends had a lot of wines/vines in their basement. 2. His poetry is becoming worse/verse. 3. Her story was disturbed by a wail/veil. 4. A wiper/viper was used in the experiment. 5. Fine wine/vine grows on fine vines/wines. 6. Did you happen to look in the west/vest? IV. PRODUCTION In production part there is a dictation drill. The students work in pairs to fulfill this activity. The teacher divides the students as a pair then she gives the passage ‘Lively Vivian’ to a student in pairs, but the other student must not see the passage. The students who have reading passage starts reading and his or her pair try to dictate the passage correctly. The teacher gives only five minutes for this activity. The first pair completing the tasks will be winner. The student dictating the passage while his partner is reading comes to the board and reads what s/he has written. If s/he has written wrong words and pronounced it wrong, the teacher will correct his or her mistakes. Then, the teacher reads the whole passage at the end of the lesson to improve her students’ listening skills and provides input flood to teach the correct pronunciation of the /v/ and /w/ sound in a context. This is the passage: Lively Vivian Living in a wonderful villa in Venezuela, Vivian loves to dive and wade in the lovely sea every week day. In her villa in the evening, Vivian can jive for five hours on the week- end. While she serves several clever but waist-watching drinks so her visitors can wet their whistles, Vivian awaits her favorite visitor, Wild Willy. Then there are the tongue twisters. The teacher gives a few minutes to students for reading tongue twisters. Then the students one by one reads the tongue twisters. The students try to read them as fast as they can. These are the tongue twisters: 1. Wendell Vaccario wasted vine after vine. 2. Woolen vests for wailing wolves are worn in the vast woodlands. 3. Varied berries are wetted while Val and Walt whisper in vain. 4. Woodson's waistcoat is weirdly vented. 5. Wise women don't walk in the woods while wolves wander. 6. Vivian, Valerie, and Virginia verbally voiced vivid salvos. 7. Mervin never drivels when vexing wooing vendors. 8. Walt's villa is verging on the weird and vile. 9. Groves of vines veered west along the villain's veranda. 10. For once, weary Wanda's woolgathering lost its vim and vigor. V. SUMMARY In a few words, the teacher summarizes the lesson by saying: “Today, we learned some new words and how to pronounce these words and do activities together. Thank you very much.” VI. HOMEWORK: Write a short story which includes ten v/w sound words that you have learned in this lesson. Prepare yourself to have this read to the class the next lesson. Thanks to this assignment, students can not forget the words and the pronunciation of the aimed sounds and have a chance to practice them until the next lesson. REFERENCES: The pictures are taken from “Google Images” Some of the sentences used in practice part, the passage in the dictation drill and the dialog used as homework are taken and adapted from: http://international.ouc.bc.ca/Pronunciation/