www.visual-idioms.com |
Apart from presenting idioms, you can do a lot of revision activities, such as guessing and vocabulary games. Using interactive whiteboards appeals to kinaesthetic type learners, who like to move and touch things, as well as auditory and visual ones.
Prepare a file with photos representing English idioms.
- When presenting an idiom, you can display the picture first and then you can handwrite hints on the board so that the students get the information bit by bit. You can move the hints all over the board and label the parts of the picture with words you need. Later, you can change your handwritten notes into digital text and store it.
- You can also use the highlighting tool and highlight all the parts in the picture you need. So, for example, you can highlight clouds and lining in an image representing the idiom 'Every cloud has a silver lining'. This is something you can't do with photos (you don't want to draw over your coloured copies because they are expensive), and you can't handwrite on a normal screen.
- While being presented new idioms, the students can go on the Internet via the interactive whiteboard to look up words or information they need, and then quickly come back to the original image.
- Display an image at a time full screen and shade it (cover it all). Then reveal the picture bit by bit by pulling the imaginary screen down (or from the side). The first students to guess the idiom score a point. This tool is helpful when you want to show your students only one part of the screen.
- You can write an idiom (or just single words) on the board, turn it around, or flip it so that it's backwards and upside down, and your students play a guessing vocabulary game. You can also make it very small, so that it's almost invisible at first, and then enlarge it gradually. The first student to see it wins.
- Alternatively, you can use the spotlight tool, which makes a part of your picture visible. You can make the spotlight shape as big or small as you wish and you can move it around the screen. Thus your students only focus on one part of the board. This can be turned into a guessing game as well.
- For the opposite effect, use shapes to can create a little gap-fill activity; show the image and/or the text and cover certain words with the chosen shape.
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If you happen to try any of the tips with your classes, please feel free to leave a comment here.