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Mukushova D. M.

English teacher of school gymnasium No. 39 named after I. V. Panphilov

Taraz, Kazakhstan

Role play as a method of teaching English

Scholars suggest different steps and various successions in applying role play in teaching. Based on the empirical evidence, we suggest our step-by-step guide to making a successful role play.

Step 1 - A Situation for a Role Play

To begin with, choose a situation for a role play, keeping in mind pupils’ needs and interests. Teachers should select role plays that will give the pupils an opportunity to practice what they have learned. At the same time, we need a role play that interests the pupils. One way to make sure your role play is interesting is to let the pupils choose the situation themselves. They might either suggest themes that intrigue them or select a topic from a list of given situations. You might make up an effective role play based on cultural differences.

Step 2 - Role Play Design

After choosing a context for a role play, the next step is to come up with ideas on how this situation may develop. Pupils’ level of language proficiency should be taken into consideration. If you feel that your role play requires more profound linguistic competence than the pupils possess, it would probably be better to simplify it or to leave it until appropriate. On low intermediate and more advanced levels, role plays with problems or conflicts in them work very well because they motivate the characters to talk. For example, in a role play situation at the market the participants have conflicting role information. One or two pupils have their lists of things to buy while another two or three pupils are salespeople who don't have anything the first group needs, but can offer slightly or absolutely different things.

Step 3 - Linguistic Preparation

At the beginning level, the language needed is almost completely predictable. The higher the level of pupils the more difficult it is to prefigure accurately what language pupils will need, but some prediction is possible anyway. It is recommended to introduce any new vocabulary before the role play.

At the beginning level, you might want to elicit the development of the role play scenario from your pupils and then enrich it. For example, the situation of the role play is returning an item of clothing back to the store. The teacher asks questions, such as, “In this situation what will you say to the salesperson?”, “What will the salesperson say?” and writes what the pupils dictate on the right side of the board. When this is done, on the left side of the board the instructor writes down useful expressions, asking the pupils, “Can the customer say it in another way?”, “What else can the salesperson say?” This way of introducing new vocabulary makes the pupils more confident acting out a role play.

Step 4 - Factual Preparation

This step implies providing the pupils with concrete information and clear role descriptions so that they could play their roles with confidence. For example, in the situation at a railway station, the person giving the information should have relevant information: the times and destination of the trains, prices of tickets, etc. In a more advanced class and in a more elaborate situation include on a cue card a fictitious name, status, age, personality, and fictitious interests and desires.

Describe each role in a manner that will let the pupils identify with the characters. Use the second person “you” rather than the third person “he” or “she”. If your role presents a problem, just state the problem without giving any solutions.

Step 5 - Assigning the Roles

At the beginning level the teacher can take one of the roles and act it out as a model. Sometimes, the pupils have role play exercises for the home task. They learn useful words and expressions think about what they can say and then act out the role play in the next class.

There can be one or several role play groups. If the whole class represents one role play group, it is necessary to keep some minor roles which can be taken away if there are less people in class than expected. If the teacher runs out of roles, he/she can assign one role to two pupils, in which one speaks secret thoughts of the other With several role play groups, when deciding on their composition, both the abilities and the personalities of the pupils should be taken into consideration. For example, a group consisting only of the shyest pupils will not be a success. Very often, optimum interaction can be reached by letting the pupils work in one group with their friends.

Step 6 - Follow-up

Once the role play is finished, spend some time on debriefing. This does not mean pointing out and correcting mistakes. After the role play, the pupils are satisfied with themselves; they feel that they have used their knowledge of the language for something concrete and useful. This feeling of satisfaction will disappear if every mistake is analyzed. It might also make the students less confident and less willing to do the other role plays.

Follow-up means asking every pupil’s opinion about the role play and welcoming their comments. The aim is to discuss what has happened in the role play and what they have learned. In addition to group discussion, an evaluation questionnaire can be used.

The methods submitted above are only less part of the whole list of various effective methods of teaching a foreign language. The teacher should remember that each of the submitted methods works more effectively if they are combined and applied together at every lesson. It is impossible to allocate the best and most effective of them, every teacher himself chooses for himself what method approaches for each concrete case better.

LIST OF REFERENCES

1.       Brown, H. D. (2001). Teaching by principles: An attractive approach to language pedagogy. New York: Longman

2.       Scott, W. A., & Ytreberg, L. H. (2000). Teaching English to children. New York: Longman

3.       Rodrieguez, R. J. & White, R. N. (2003) From role play to the real world. Rowley, MA: Newbury House Publishers, Inc.