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"How-To" Infographic for Language Learning and Goal Setting

Details

Main Website:
Tech Product/Equipment:
Computer and projector, Computer

Activity Description

Work Process
Source: Pixabay by Geralt (License: CC0/Public Domain)
 
In this lesson, which is useful for the first week of a new class, students discuss strategies for learning and improving their English and then create an informational "how to" guide in the form of an infographic that they present to the class. This is followed by goal setting. 

Preparation

  1. Check the website to ensure it is not blocked at your site.
  2. Read through the lesson plan.
  3. Print and make copies of any handouts.
  4. Choose which edtech tool to have students use for this assignment: Canva, Piktochart, or other. Practice using the tool selected in order ot demonstrate it for students.

How-To

See Canva YouTube tutorial on making infographics.

See Piktochart YouTube tutorial.

Program Areas

  • ESL: English as a Second Language

Levels

  • Intermediate Low
  • Intermediate High
  • Advanced

Lesson Plan

Warm-up
Engagement

Tell students that they are going to get acqainted and share strategies and idea for learning or improving their English.

First, have students converse in pairs or mingle asking and answering questions about learning English. See All Things Topics: Learning English for downloadable A/B conversation questions or sentence strips and "Find Someone Who" PDFs (Permission granted to reproduce for classroom use.).

 

Introduction
Engagement Enhancement

Have students brainstorm and list on paper, a shared Google Doc, on a Padlet wall, or in groups (no more than five) on a Jotboard ways to learn a language (English in this case) and practice or improve in addition to take classes. A free resource is Teach This's "I'm Going to Improve My English" PDF (permission granted for classroom use).

Presentation
Engagement

Ask students if they know someone who is bilingual. Ask students if they know what a polyglot is. Use a video about a polyglot and their strategies for learning languages. Search YouTube for polyglots such as Timothy Doner or a TED Talk such as "The secrets of learning a new language." As students watch, have them note other strategies, techniques, or activities mentioned in the video.

Optionally, have students visit English Club's "How to Learn English" page.

Add to the class brainstormed list any other observed techniques, strategies, or activities from any video viewed or texts read in class.

Practice
Engagement Enhancement Extension

Have students work individually or in pairs or small groups to list the best techniques, strategies, and activities they use and have learned about. Give feedback on the writing. Help students identify and correct spelling, grammar, punctuation, and wording errors.

Demonstrate how to use the site (Canva or Piktochart) to create a "how to" guide. Assign students to create a visual aid for their list, adding graphic and visual elements. Students can share their infographic guides they download or share a link via email.

See the sample student-made infographic in the documents included with this lesson plan.

 
 

Evaluation
Engagement

Students present their how-to guide to their classmates and display their work. Give feedback on oral skills, as deemed necessary, using a checklist or rubric.

Application
Engagement Enhancement Extension

Follow-up with goal setting for the class. Have students select from their own and classmates' guides something to work on as a proximal goal for the time they are in the class. Optionally have students visit English Club's Sample Self Study Agenda and/or complete the site's My English Learning Contract, which can be saved or printed as a PDF. Another option is to explain SMART goals (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound) to students, and they can create a prompt for a Large Language Model such as ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Anthropic Claude, Microsoft CoPilot (depending on what is available at your agency) and enter a prompt to get a starter SMART goal, such as the following: My goal is to improve my ______________ skills in English to ____________ by (date). Create a SMART goal with steps to complete this goal by the date provided and a weekly plan.

Have student post or share their goal statements, check off weekly actions taken, and revise as needed.

 

Standards

  • Speaking and Listening
    • CCR Anchor 1 - Prepare for and participate effectively in a range of conversations and collaborations with diverse partners, building on others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly and persuasively.
    • CCR Anchor 2 - Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally.
    • CCR Anchor 5 - Make strategic use of digital media and visual displays of data to express information and enhance understanding of presentations.
    • CCR Anchor 6 - Adapt speech to a variety of contexts and communicative tasks, demonstrating command of formal English when indicated or appropriate.
  • Language
    • CCR Anchor 1 - Demonstrate command of the conventions of English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.
    • CCR Anchor 2 - Demonstrate command of the conventions of English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing.

Tags

Speaking, Writing, language learning, goals, English, SMART goals, goal setting, guide, how to, infographic

Tools

All Things Topics, English Club, Piktochart, YouTube, Canva

Conditions

Piktochart’s Terms of Use do not prohibit standard hyperlinking to the website: https://piktochart.com/terms-of-use/ For creating free educational visuals with Canva is generally acceptable under standard web linking practices and Canva’s terms of use: https://www.canva.com/policies/terms-of-use/ English Club's permissions state that any material from the site may not be reproduced or distributed without express written permission, unless it’s for your own personal or classroom use: https://www.englishclub.com/efl/ec/permissions/ All Things Topics: Permission granted to reproduce for classroom use
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OTAN activities are funded by contract CN240137 from the Adult Education Office, in the Career & College Transition Division, California Department of Education, with funds provided through Federal P.L., 105-220, Section 223. However, OTAN content does not necessarily reflect the position of that department or the U.S. Department of Education.