Audience
Attendees
Number of facilitators
Level
Preparation
Activity
Description
The participants will be familiarized with the latin alphabet and learn how to decipher and write their name and the words “Hi”, “Hello”, “Food”, “Hospital” & “Market”. This class is destined to people who don’t know English written or spoken. This class is open to illiterate people.
Objectives
To learn to decipher and write “MARKET”
Worked skills
Personal Development
Prerequisites for the audience
None
Equipment
• One pen and one notebook per participant
• Whiteboard and marker (if at the Ideas Box space)
• Alphabet board game
Alphabet card letter, each card with one letter of the English alphabet in capital
Content used
No specific content was used
Introduction (5 minutes)
· Welcome the participants
· Remind the participants the general objective of the course
· Introduce the session of the day (objective and how long it will be)
Ice-breaking game (10 minutes)
· Ask the participants to stand in a circle.
· One will volunteer to stand in the middle of the circle.
· The person in the middle will say a color or accessory. For example, “If you are wearing blue” or “If you are wearing a dress.”
· The people who match that description will quickly try to swap places with another individual who matches that description. The person in the middle must also try to find a space so that one is left in the middle.
· This new person in the middle now will do the same for example, “If you are wearing earrings” or “If you are wearing green clothes”.
· Continue like this for at least 5 times.
Main activity (70 minutes
Part 1 – Review (10 minutes)
Ask the participants if they found some words with the letter from HOSPITAL that they were attribute. Write them down on the board, explain the meaning of them and the names of the other letters in it. Ask them to say out loud the letters of HOSPITAL (name of the letter and pronunciation of the letter) learned during the previous workshop. Ask them to write them down a couple of times in their notebook, capital and small letters.
Part 2 – the word “MARKET” (40 minutes)
- Discovering the word MARKET: ask the participants if they know what does it means. Ask them if they see any letters in it that they already know. They should know A, E, T.
- Ask the participants to circle in their alphabet sheet the letters that compose the word MARKET. Help them if needed. When they all found in their alphabet sheet all the letters that compose the word “MARKET”, repeat the name of the letter and how we pronounce them. Repeat several times with them, and then them alone. Ask the participants to copy the letters of MARKET in their notebook. For each letter, show them step by step how to ‘draw’ the letter. Take the time to do it several times, at least each letter should be copied 20 times, more is better.
- Using the cards that match the letters of MARKET, choose one and ask the participants to say the name of the letter and pronounce it. Ask them to do it several times. You can ask each participant to repeat the name and pronunciation of the letter individually.
Part 3 – Word Puzzle & Word race (15 minutes)
- Ask the participants to find the word “MARKET” in the Word Puzzle. (4.1)
- Game: Divide the class into two teams. Have one member of each team race to the front of the room and write the first letter of the word MARKET on the board (one part of the board for each team). Then the first runner comes back, the second runner starts (like relay race) and has to write the second letter of the word and so on until all the letters learnt today have been written. The first team to complete will win.
Conclusion (5 minutes)
- Thank the participants for their involvement and concentration during the session.
Summarize what was learnt during the session: Today we learnt the letters of our names.
Ask the participants to recite one by one the letters of their names.
- For each participant, give him/her a letter that is in the word “MARKET” and ask him/her to find a word in the camp that has this letter. Several participants can have the same letter depending on the size of the group.
- Collect feedback from the participants. Ask questions like: Do you feel that you learnt something during the session? Do you think this new knowledge can be useful to you? Were you comfortable during the session?
- Give the date and location of the next session to the participants, make sure everybody will be available. If not, find a more convenient time and place so everybody can be here.
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