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Designing Tasks for Interaction Anne Cummings Hlas University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Author of Practical Creativity: Activities and Ideas for Your Language Classroom © Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

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Page 1: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Designing Tasks for Interaction

Anne Cummings Hlas

University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire

Author of Practical Creativity: Activities and Ideas for Your Language Classroom

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 2: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Task or Activity?

• With a partner, ask and answer the following questions about your weekly schedule and daily routine using the present tense.

• What class do you have in the morning?

• What time do you have lunch?

• Which class is after lunch?

• When is your homeroom?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 3: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Definitions

•Activities: “any type of language practice that involves the comprehension or production of oral or written language, often with a focus on vocabulary or grammar (p. 6).”

• Task: “is meaningful and has a communicative purpose” (Leeser & White, 2016, p. 7).

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Why are tasks useful?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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High-leverage Teaching Practices

“a core set of teaching practices that are said to promote higher gains in student learning over other teaching practices” (Hlas & Hlas, 2012, p. S76)

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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What is interaction?

Interaction

Input

OutputFeedback

Negotiation of Meaning

Generally referred to as the Interaction Hypothesis (Long, 1996)

Empirical research exists and supports the Interaction Approach and its link to learning (Gass & Mackey, 2015; Skehan, 2018).

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Task-based learning informed by interaction

❑ Interaction where meaning is primary

❑ Real-world relationships

❑ Communicative purpose that needs to be accomplished

References:Bygate, Skehan, & Swain (2001, p. 11)Skehan (1998, p. 268)© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Tasks provide opportunity for:

❑ Interaction❑ Real-world relationships❑ Communicative purpose that needs to be accomplished

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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AnalyzeA• What problem can students solve?

InferI• What can students learn and then conclude?

Make a DecisionM• What choice can students make?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 10: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

AnalyzeA• What problem can students solve?

InferI• What can students learn and then conclude?

Make a DecisionM• What choice can students make?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 11: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Analyze: Planning Prompt

•Let me analyze my information about ______________and you analyze your information about _______________

so that together we can __________________________.

the recipe for banana bread

the ingredients in the pantry

decide what we still need to buy to make the bread

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Student A Student B

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 13: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Together we can solve a puzzle

Task: Given a set of clues, map the Rescue Center.

1. Students are each given a different clue and read them to one another. Using one map per group, they complete the logic puzzle to map the center.

2. When they are done, they compare their map to the real center map.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Mapping the Rescue CenterSTUDENT A

• Tapirs are between the bathrooms and the Snakes.

• Sainos are beside the Big Cats.

• The Monkey house is very far from the Birdhouse.

• The Crocodiles are alongside of the pond.

STUDENT B

• The Bird house has nothing to the left nor right.

• The Monkey house is in the corner.

• The Tapirs are very close to the bathrooms.

• The Big Cats are next to the Entrance.

Tapirs Snakes

Bird House

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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http://halfacrossword.com/

Student A Student B

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Scaffolding interaction in the Target Language

1. It is ____________ (a drink, a fruit, a vegetable, a food, etc.) that is _______(color) and/or ____(size).

2. Typically one eats this for ___(breakfast, snack, lunch, etc.)

3. In general, we eat/drink this with ______(name other specific foods).

4. What do you think it is?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Together we can sequence a storyTask: In pairs, students retell the story.

• Student A receives half of the pictures and Student B the other half of the pictures.

• Sequence it.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Wordless books

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Resources for storytelling • International Children’s Digital Library [http://en.childrenslibrary.org/

• Get Epic [https://www.getepic.com/]

• Dixit and Big Apples Pictures decks

• Wordless books

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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http://en.childrenslibrary.org/

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Languages available: 59 different languages

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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https://www.getepic.com/

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Together we can find differences

• Students seek specific amount of differences between two pictures. Then, they compare to see if they were successful in spotting all the differences.

• Clip art sites [http://www.kidsfront.com/find-differences.html]

• Dollar Street Gapminder [https://www.gapminder.org/dollar-street/matrix]

• High Five Magazines

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Add an example from high five

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Low Floor

High Ceiling

Input-Oriented

Output-Oriented

Tell me more (open)

2-3 word (e.g. why)

One word (e.g. who, what)

Either/Or Questions

Yes/No Questions

Nonverbal

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Let me analyze my information about ______________and you analyze your information about _______________

so that together we can __________________________.© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 35: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

AnalyzeA• What problem can students solve?

InferI• What can students learn and then conclude?

Make a DecisionM• What choice can students make?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 36: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Infer: Planning Prompt

•Tell me about ______________and I’ll tell you (infer) _________________________________.if you are a Social Butterfly or Homebody

your bedroom closet

• Type A or B personality • Sedentary or Active Lifestyle• Nostalgic or Forward Looking• Idealist or Realist• Minimalist or Extravagant

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Tell me….

about your pantry or refrigerator and I’ll tell you (infer)

• __________________________

• __________________________

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Tell me what you would do, and I’ll tell you if you are a risk-taker

Input-oriented (VanPatten, 2017)

Part I. Individually. Answer the following, what would you do for $1000:

❑ I would lick the exhibit room floor.

❑ I would post a public YouTube video of me teaching.

❑ I would eat an entire lemon with peel in one sitting.

❑ I would crack an egg on my face and attend a WAFLT workshop.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Part II. Now interview a partner by asking these questions.

❑Would you lick the exhibit room floor?

❑Would you post a public YouTube video of yourself teaching?

❑Would you read the last text you received out loud?

❑Would you crack an egg on your face and attend a WAFLT workshop?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 40: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Rate yourselves

• Finally, together decide where you and your partner fall on the following scale in terms of their risk-taking.

•Risk-taker Zone Comfort Zone

5 4 3 2 1

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Output-oriented (VanPatten, 2017)

• Part 1. Individually, list 8-10 wacky things you would do for $1000.

• Part 2. Then, ask and answer questions about what you and your partner would or would not do for $1000.

• Part 3. Now, if there was an activity the person would not do for $1000, ask them if they would for $100,000.

• Part 4. Rate yourselves and Justify your Answer.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Tell me about

Triangle Talk

1. Let me tell you about my ___.2. Ask a follow-up question.3. Make an inference.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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What is your idea?

• Think about a lesson or unit you have recently taught. Then, complete the prompt to design a task.

•Tell me about ______________and I’ll tell you ___________________________________.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 44: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

AnalyzeA• What problem can students solve?

InferI• What can students learn and then conclude?

Make a DecisionM• What choice can students make?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 45: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Give me… and I’ll decide…

• Give me _______________and I’ll decide ________________________

• what gift I’ll bring with me

an invitation what I’m going to wear

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Give me… and I’ll decide…

• Give me recipes from the target culture and

I’ll decide________________________

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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I’ll decide my resolutions

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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I’ll decide the moral of the story

An example of a deck of cards comes fromSánchez, J. & Sanz, C. (1993). Jugando en español: Actividades interactivas para la clase de español.Niveles elemental-intermedio. Berlin: Langenscheidt.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Colombian artist Fernando Botero:

Which is most beautiful?Which is most meaningful?Which is most unique?Which is the most creative?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Beauty Meaning Creativity Uniqueness Total

1 2 3 4 5

I’ll decide which to hang in the classroomStudents use the following scale to rate the art. Then, they negotiate which piece to hang in the classroom.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Picture This

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Beauty Meaning Creativity Uniqueness Total

1 2 3 4 5

I’ll decide which to hang in the classroom: The Persistence of Memory, Salvador DaliStudents use the following scale to rate the art. Then, they negotiate which piece to hang in the classroom.

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Las Meninas—Diego Velázquez© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Make a decision about

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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What is your idea?

• Think about a lesson or unit you have recently taught. Then, complete the prompt to design a task.

•Give me _______________and I’ll decide _________

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 57: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Tasks provide opportunity for:

❑ Interaction❑ Real-world relationships❑ Communitive purpose that needs to be accomplished

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 58: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Convert to a Task: Round Two

• With a partner, ask and answer the following questions about your weekly schedule and daily routine using the present tense.

• What class do you have in the morning?

• What time do you have lunch?

• Which class is after lunch?

• When is your homeroom?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

Page 59: Designing Tasks for Interaction - WAFLT – World Language

Take an activity you are already doing…

meaningreal-world

relationshippurpose with AIM

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Ask yourself these questions

1. Will the task engage learners’ interests?

2. Do they need to listen to one another to complete the task?

3. Does the task provide opportunity to negotiate meaning?

4. Is there a primary focus on meaning?

5. Does the task require the use of vocabulary, form, and function as planned?

6. Is there an objective or goal?

7. Does the task relate to the real-world?

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Questions?

• https://tinyurl.com/designtasks

Anne Cummings Hlas

[email protected]

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019

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Selected references:• Ball, D. L., & Forzani, F. M. (2009). The work of teaching and the challenge for teacher education. Journal of Teacher Education, 60(5), 497-511.

• Ball, D. L. & Forzani, F. M. (December 2010/January 2011). Teaching skillful teaching. Educational Leadership. Association of Supervision & Curriculum Development, 40-45.

• Bygate, M., Skehan, P., & Swain, M. (Eds.). (2001). Introduction. In Bygate, M., Skehan, P. & Swain, M. (Eds.) Researching pedagogic tasks: Second language learning, teaching and testing. London, UK: Longman.

• Dornyei, Z. (2001). Motivation strategies in the language classroom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

• Ellis, R. (2000). Task-based research and language pedagogy. Language Teaching Research. 4(3), 193-220.

• Grossman, P., & McDonald, M. (2008). Back to the future: Directions for research in teaching and teacher education. American Educational Research Journal, 45 (1), 184-205.

• Hlas, A. C. & Hlas, C. S. (2012). An examination of high-leverage teaching practices: Making connections between mathematics and foreign languages, Foreign Language Annals, 45 (S1), s76-s97.

• Johnson, K. (1995). Understanding Communication in Second Language Classrooms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

• Lee, J. & VanPatten, B. (2003). Making communicative language teaching happen. McGraw Hill.

• Leeser, M. J. & White, J. P. (2016). Interactive tasks. Modules on contemporary language teaching. Routledge.

• Long, M. H. (2009). Methodological principles for language teaching. In M. Long & C. J. Doughty (Eds.), The Handbook of Language Teaching (Chapter 21). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.

• Skehan, P. (2018). Second language task-based performance: theory, research, assessment. Cambridge University Press.

• VanPatten, B., Hopkins, W., & Kraemer, A. (2016). Principle 5: The nature of tasks. Tea with BVP [Audio podcast]. Retrieved from http://www.teawithbvp.com/

© Anne Cummings Hlas 2019