Te Kete Ipurangi Navigation:

Te Kete Ipurangi
Communities
Schools

Te Kete Ipurangi user options:



ESOL Online. Every child literate - a shared responsibility.
Ministry of Education.

Shared dictation

How to use shared dictation

Shared dictation helps students to practise speaking clearly. Teachers can use this strategy to revise recently learned vocabulary, structures and genre, or to focus student attention on something important such as an overview of the lesson.

The language of the dictated text needs to be familiar to the students. Each student has half of the text. The students sit back to back, or facing each other with their papers out of each other's sight. They read out their phrases in turn, starting with 'A' who reads out the first group of words to 'B'. 'B' then writes down what s/he has heard. Then 'B' says the next phrase to 'A' and so on. Students can spell out words only after they have tried to get the message across three times.

Sample texts

Watch this video to see a year 7–8 technology class using shared dictation

 

Teaching and learning sequence planning example:

Primary level:

Secondary level:

Published on: 18 Dec 2017




Footer: