ОСОБЕННОСТИ РАБОТЫ С АНТОНИМАММИ В ШКОЛЕ
Категория реферата: Топики по английскому языку
Теги реферата: конспект урока 9 класс, банк рефератов
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If the antonyms are difficult for understanding the teacher may use the learners’ mother tongue and translate them directly or to give the analogies. For example, the teacher says: антоним слова “широкий” на русском языке будет “узкий”, а по-английски это слово звучит как “narrow”.
ANTONYM QUESTIONS TEST KNOWLEDGE OF VOCABULARY
The teacher must be sure of his vocabulary. . These questions obviously test vocabulary. So if yours could use some work, spend time improving it. Apart from having a great vocabulary, you can also do well on antonyms by using test-smarts and strategy.
Antonyms present you with a single word followed by five answer
choices containing words or short phrases. Your task here is to find the
answer choice that’s most nearly opposite in meaning to the original word.
If you’re stumped about the meaning of a word, try to think of a context
where you’ve heard the word before. You may not be able to recite the
definition of the word covert, for instance, but you’ve probably heard the
phrase “covert operation” to describe some type of cloak-and-dagger
activity. Also, use your knowledge of foreign languages and word roots to
help “decode” the meaning of a tough word. For instance, you may not know
what benediction means, but you may be able to determine that the root bene
means “good” from knowing the more common word “benevolent.” That may be
all you need to answer a question if you spot a word like “curse” among the
answers.
Although antonym questions test knowledge of vocabulary more directly than do any of the other verbal question types, antonym questions measure not merely the strength of your vocabulary but also your ability to reason from a given concept to its opposite. Antonyms may require only rather general knowledge of a word, or they may require that you make fine distinctions among answer choices. Antonyms are generally confined to nouns, verbs, and adjectives; answer choices may be single words or phrases.
Here are some approaches that may be helpful in answering antonym
questions:
1. Remember that you are looking for the word that is the most nearly opposite to the given word; you are not looking for a synonym. Many words do not have a precise opposite, so you must look for the answer choice that expresses a concept most nearly opposite to that of the given word.
2. In some cases more than one of the answer choices may appear at first to be opposite to the given word. When this happens, try to define more precisely or in greater detail the meaning of the given word.
3. In weighing answer choices, it is often useful to make up a sentence using the given word or words. Substitute the answer choices in the phrase or sentence and see which best “fits”. The best answer will be the one that reverses the meaning or tone of the sentence or phrase.
4. Remember that a particular word may have more than one meaning.
5. Use your knowledge of root, prefix, and suffix meanings to help you determine the meanings of unfamiliar words.
WORD RETRIEVAL ACTIVITIES FOR CHILDREN
What is a word-retrieval problem?
The terms “word retrieval problem” or “word finding difficulty” imply
that the person knows and understands the word, and has used it correctly
before. However, they have difficulty retrieving such known words at times.
Children and adults with language disorders are frequently found to have
word retrieval difficulties. Often when a person (child or adult) is having
difficulty retrieving a word they will have the sense that it is “on the
tip of their tongue”: a state of affairs familiar to all of us; at other
times they seem simply to “go blank”.
ABOUT THE ACTIVITIES
These activities are intended for children .
Not all of the activities will suit all children - so be selective.
Put the emphasis on listening, thinking and speaking.
The activities are aimed at having the child retrieve known words - not at extending the vocabulary by teaching new words.
Use a minimum of visual cues. If the word to be “retrieved” does not come easily for the child, provide an auditory cue (e.g., say the first sound or syllable of the word) or a verbal clue (e.g., “it rhymes with...).
Give the child time to think, but don’t leave it so long that they are
struggling to find the word. Rather than letting them persist
unsuccessfully, tell them the answer, and go on with the next few items.
Then ask them the one that was difficult again.
Aim for a high success-rate to encourage motivation and confidence.
Adapt the tasks to suit the (developmental) age of the person. Talk about words and word-meanings.
As natural opportunities arise talk about such topics as “Why is Big
Bird called Big Bird?” Talk about people being named after other people.
Talk about why certain names might have been chosen for pets and TV
characters (Cookie Monster, Vinny the Poo, Uncle Scrooge, The Fat
Controller, etc). Try to work these conversations in around topics of
genuine interest to the child.
PLAYING GAMES INVOLVING ANTONYMS
Do this as a sentence completion (cloze) activity (e.g., “The opposite
of hot is...”) or use a question-and-answer format (e.g., “What is the
opposite of hot?”), or as a confrontation naming task using pictures in
which the child has to name “opposites pictures” as rapidly as they can
(e.g., hot cold, wet dry, big little, fast slow, deep shallow, apart
together).
( Play word games involving differences
For example, “What is different about a bird and a plane? They can both fly, but they are different because...”
( Checking test
Each of the following questions begins with a single word in capital
letters. Five answer choices follow. Select the answer choice that has the
meaning most opposite to the word in capitals.
1.CEDE:
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