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Use simple sentences.


Date: 2015-10-07; view: 399.


Shorten your message.

Monitor your speech rate.

Study these Communication Tips

Students with language difficulty have trouble listening to and interpreting a fast rate of speech. If you pay attention to your speech rate and lower it, particularly when communicating a complex concept or theme, it will help your students to understand your message.

A shorter message is easier to understand than a longer message. If you use long sentences, packed with information, it's a fair bet that some of your students won't understand all of the information. An example of a long sentence is "Get out your red science book and write your name in the top right hand corner, and then write the title of your science project in the box marked heading."


Clearly there is a large amount of information to process in the above sentence. For this type of sentence it may be best to shorten it to bite sized chunks, such as "Get out your red science books. (Pause)Write your name in the top right hand corner. The top right handcorner. (Pause) Ok, when you've done that I want you to also write the title of your science project in the box that is markedheading."

Oral sentences with a simple structure are much easier to understand than sentences with complex subordinate clause structures. Complex sentences require a lot more processing power than simple sentences, so must be used with caution. Even students with typically developing language skills may have trouble with this sentence, "Before you can go to lunch, I want the students from the red team who made the blue tower and the green team who made the steel bridge to write their results on the board."


The above sentence has a compound-complex structure. A student with processing difficulties would be quickly overwhelmed by the complexity of the message and may fail to comprehend large parts of it. A good way to simplify classroom language is to use short, sharp sentences that don't have long strings of subordinate clauses.


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Here's a list of 10 common grammar and vocabulary mistakes that novice teachers sometimes make. Study them and memorize. Act out short dialogues using these examples. | Present Continuous
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