Most teachers agree
that teaching a small group of students is easier, more enjoyable, and less
time consuming than teaching a large group. Unfortunately, due to budgets,
space, or lack of teachers, many ESL schools only offer large classes. In some
schools, large classes may consist of up to 50 or more students. While your
class may look more like a University lecture hall, your job is not to lecture.
Just like teaching a small class, you must come up with engaging activities
that keep all of your students interested and participating with the goal of
improving their communication skills. While there are numerous challenges when
it comes to teaching large classes, there are many coping skills and activities
that you can use to make your job easier.
Advantages of Teaching Large Classes
- High
Energy: Classes with many students may be noisy, but they are also fun and
exciting.
- Timing: Classes
go by quickly in a large class, and you will rarely catch yourself looking
at the clock. You will regularly find yourself with extra activities that
you did not complete that you can save and use in your next class.
- Participation: There
is always someone who is willing to answer questions even if they are just
guessing. Make sure to take answers from a variety of students.
- Fillers: Teachers
have less need for fillers since core activities and lessons take longer
to complete.
Challenges of Teaching Large Classes
- Intimacy: Remembering
student's names can take a while. Teachers may feel that they do not get
to know their students as well as they would like to.
- Anxiety: Some
teachers feel anxious being so outnumbered by the students. In addition,
some students are afraid to ask questions or participate in a large class.
- Student
needs: Meeting individual needs can be difficult or impossible when class
size is very large.
- Marking: Grading
assignments and tests can be very time consuming, and your pay will
generally be the same for a smaller class.
- Distractions: There
are more distractions for teachers in large classes, such as latecomers
and people chatting while you are teaching.
- Preparation: Making
photocopies for a large class can be very time consuming. Other teachers
may be bothered by how much time you spend using the photocopier.
- Noise
level: Large classes can become out of hand when students are working in
pairs or groups. At times you may feel more like a disciplinarian than a
teacher.
- Monitoring
students: Teachers may find it difficult to keep students on task as they
monitor pair and group work.
- Space: There
is limited space in a classroom for energetic activities such as
role-playing.
- Textbooks
and resources: There may not be enough textbooks or computers available for all
students.
Strategies for Coping with Large Classes
- Use a
teacher's notebook: Attach a small notebook and pen to your belt loop. Take notes while
you are monitoring pair or group learning. Review common errors as a whole
group after an activity is complete.
- Spread
out: Find another space that your class can use for energetic whole
group activities. Find a lobby or spare classroom in the building that
your students can spread out into when they are preparing a project or
performance. Take students outside if there is no indoor space available.
- Create
a participation grade: Make homework and attendance count by doing regular checks and
making it part of their final grade. Giving a daily exam tip also
encourages attendance.
- Encourage
competition: Establish a fun and competitive atmosphere within the class, by
dividing the class into teams. You may change the teams once in a while or
leave them the same throughout a semester. Teams can win points for
certain accomplishments (If noise and behaviour is a problem, students can
lose points too.).
- Relax: Find ways
to relax before class so that you don't feel anxious. Never attempt to
prepare a lesson in the morning, right before class. Always have a water
bottle handy. Always have an extra activity on hand in case something
doesn't go as you expect it to.
- Establish
trust: Learn unique ways to remember names and do your best to get to know
something about each of your students. Create a seating chart on the first
day and ask students to stick with it for a while. Tell your students at
least one or two things about yourself beyond your role of teaching.
- Manage
the noise: Establish a signal that you want your class to stop what they are
doing and listen. This should be done from the first day, so that students
become accustomed to it right away. Be careful not to use gestures or
sounds that would offend anyone.
- Reduce
marking and preparation time: Design quizzes and tests in a way so that you
can reduce the amount of marking. Use peer evaluations when possible. If
students submit journals, just read them and leave a short comment and/or
suggestion, rather than fixing every grammar mistake. Designate a specific
time when the teacher's room is slow to do most of your photocopying for
the week. This will save you from feeling guilty for taking up the
photocopier for a long time when another teacher only has a few copies to
make.
- Enforce
a late policy: Notify students of your late policy on the first day and stick to
it. For example, don't let students enter your classroom after a warm-up
has ended. If students miss class, make it their responsibility to catch
up, not yours.
- Share
your e-mail address: In a large class, you will find yourself feeling drained before and
after class if you let students come early or stay late to ask questions
every day. This alone can make you hate your job, especially if you are
not paid for hours when you are not teaching. Encourage students to e-mail
you with questions, and answer them on your own time. If you don't like
the e-mail suggestion, try finishing your class ten minutes early once in
a while and allow your students free conversation time. Take questions on
a first come basis during this time.
Activities to use in Large Classes
- Small
group discussions: Use topics related to a theme, or ask students to submit topic
suggestions.
- Who Am
I?: Tape the name of a famous person to the back of each student.
Students go around the room asking questions and trying to identify
themselves. Once they guess who they are they can place their nametag on
the front and continue helping other students identify themselves.
- Team
spelling contests: Each student who gets the spelling correct gets a point for their
team.
- Balderdash: Large
class can be split into teams. Teacher calls out a word and students have
to write down the part of speech and definition. Each student to get both
correct gets a point for her team.
- Write
the question: Large class can be split into teams. The teacher calls out an
answer and the students have to write the question. (ex. "Lynn")
Each student to write the correct question gets a point. (ex. answer:
What's your middle name?")
- Questionnaires: Students
circulate around the room asking each other questions. Students can create
their own questions on a given topic or theme, or you can provide the
questionnaire handout. Follow up by asking each student to report the most
interesting answer they received.
- Categories: The
teacher calls out a category, such as fruit, and each student has to name
a fruit when it is his turn. If a student hesitates for more than five
seconds, he or she has to choose a new category and sit out the rest of
the game. The last person to get out wins.
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