Pages From Wellspoken
Pages From Wellspoken
Pages From Wellspoken
Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
CHAPTER 1:
Can We Talk?
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
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was crucial to getting hired. How many other signicant events in your
life can you think of in which your ability to speak well mattered? A
wedding toast? A eulogy? Inspiring the tee ball team you got conned
into coaching? If these events havent occurred yet in your life, they
will. There are many, many opportunities for meaningful speeches in
a normal life. Simply put, oral communication is our predominant way
of communicating.
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
But public speaking? Well, we might have one required speech during
the year that we grade based on a rubric that mentions eye contact. In
my experience, however, very few teachers specically teach the skills
needed to make that speech more successful. After the speech, we might
give some comments as feedback, but thats about it, right? Where are
the specic lessons about hand gestures, analyzing the audience, or
using pacing for emphasis?
All students can talk (sometimes we need to ask them to stop!) and,
therefore, teachers often assume they dont need to offer instruction
in verbal communication. But listen to what they say: Im all like,
whoa, what is that about, but he is like, whatever, I dont know what
you mean, so I like get all mad and ready to, like, leave but suddenly
he, like, changes, know what I mean?
Are you impressed? Could your students benet from some more
instruction?
Imagine walking into a ninth-grade English class to observe the
teacher. As you enter, the teacher informs you that he will not be
teaching writing this year because the students already know how to
write. The teacher can prove this and shows you the What I did this
summer paragraphs, text messages, and entries from online chat
rooms. That seems absurd, doesnt it? It is equally absurd when you
imagine the teacher saying this about speaking: I will not be teaching
speaking this year because my students already know how to speak.
Students need direct instruction to help them speak effectively, just as
they need direct instruction to learn how to write effectively.
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
CHAPTER 2:
Effective Communication
Take a look at the following two essays.
SAMPLE ESSAY 1
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What grade would you give each essay? Essay 1 is perfectly capitalized, perfectly spelled, perfectly punctuated. Should Essay 1 receive an
A grade? Essay 2 is full of problems with capitalization, spelling, and
punctuation. Should that paper get an F? Most of us would have a hard
time accepting those grades. Essay 1 indicates very little understanding of the problems involved in the Iraq War debate. Does that mean it
deserves an F? Essay 2 demonstrates an understanding of the problem,
but does it deserve an A? Again, most of us would say no.
Years ago, teachers were making decisions exactly like this. They
assessed a piece of writing with only one grade. Maybe both essays
would get a C, albeit for very different reasons. At some point, teachers realized that writing is a collection of various parts, which means
that a single grade is not always useful. Rather, we must examine the
parts. Content, word choice, sentence structure, writing conventions,
paragraphing, organization, and perhaps other traits must be analyzed
separately.
Look back at the two essays. If we graded each essay based on two
aspects of writing, Essay 1 would get top marks for writing conventions
but low marks for content. Essay 2 would get the reverse. The grades
entered in the grade book might end up being the same, but if the
teacher explained how the two aspects of writing were assessed, the
students would have an understanding of what the grades represented.
With specic writing traits delineated, the authors can focus on areas
of strength and weakness.
A multiple-trait framework was a great advancement in writing
instruction. Effective speaking is also a collection of various parts, so
let me suggest, then, a multiple-trait framework for speaking. A new
way of looking at oral communication will make it easier to teach the
skills involved and will make it easier for students to become competent
communicators.
In Figure 2.1, you will see a rubric currently used by a prominent
school district near my home.
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
The student attempts to inform, explain, demonstrate, or persuade through a formal speech.
Organization of the speech lacks a beginning, middle, and/or end.
I will comment much more extensively on rubrics in Chapter 15.
Here I want to focus on the elements of effective speaking. According
to the rubric in Figure 2.1, an advanced speaker effectively delivers
the speech, but a procient speaker appropriately delivers the speech.
Is this a useful distinction? I am not sure that a student would know
what distinguishes effective subject, vocabulary, and delivery from
appropriate subject, vocabulary, and delivery. The advanced speech
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.
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Well Spoken: Teaching Speaking to All Students by Erik Palmer. 2011 Stenhouse Publishers.
No reproduction without written permission from the publisher.