6 Lessons Using Smartphone Cameras
Almost everyone has a smartphone these days, so why not start using this technology to help you teach? The best ways to get started is to use the camera feature. Getting your students talking about and taking photographs is a great way to encourage real communication and do something different with your class.
Get started with these activity ideas:
1. Tell me about your photo
Get students to work in pairs. Ask them to take their phones out and choose three photographs that they like from their own gallery. They should spend a few minutes choosing and thinking about what they are going to say. Now, ask students to explain their photographs to each other, encourage students to ask questions and generate discussion.
2. Take photos of objects
Put students in pairs or teams. If you have mixed language speakers, make sure that the groups are made up of students who speak different languages… the target task here is speaking and communicating in English, not really taking photos. Give or dictate students a list of objects that they must go out into the world and take photos of. Depending on the level of your class you can use easy things like ‘a chair’ or ‘a book’ or make it much harder by asking them to capture ‘sadness’ or ‘happiness’ to stretch their imagination.
Before students go outside the classroom to take their photos, remind them that they need permission before they photograph anyone! Give them a time limit; say fifteen minutes depending on the list. When students return to the classroom, have them show their pictures to other groups or the class. Encourage discussion; ask where they took the pictures and why they chose those particular things.
3. Tell a photo story
Put students in groups and tell them they are going to make a photo story for one of the titles. Allow students time to discuss the title and work out a story that they could tell. Give them some time to take the images, they could use each other as actors and use any part of your teaching institution as the set.
After students have taken their photos, have them share their photos with the rest of the class. You could ask them to do this in Word or as a PowerPoint presentation. They could explain or write what is happening next to the images.
4. Be a tour guide or create a brochure
Have your students choose a place that they know well near the classroom, this could be your own school, a park, a shopping center, a gallery, a market… anywhere. Explain that in groups they are going to take a series of photos for a tour magazine. Allow students time to discuss the kind of photos they’d like to take before sending them off to get the images, remember to make sure groups are of mixed languages to maximise discussion time.
Students can share their images with the rest of the class or other groups when they have finished.
5. Make a ‘how to’ slideshow
In group or pairs, ask students to think about and choose one of the following tasks that they could present as a slide show with photos and verbal explanation. Unless this is a homework task (which it’s great for) you’ll need to use situations that students can photograph straight away and don’t need any special equipment.
When completed, groups can share and explain their tasks with other students or the rest of the class.
6. Give tasks for homework
A day in my life
My family
My house
My Street
My neighbourhood
Choose one of the titles above and ask students to take some photographs that they can show and talk about in the next lesson. Learners could put their snaps into Word or PowerPoint and give a presentation to the class.
Most of these activities require you to be able to display photographs for the class. If you have a projector or an interactive whiteboard, you could get students to email their photographs to you.
Another good way to manipulate and display these photographs is by using PowerPoint. After students have completed the main activity, you could ask them to create a PowerPoint show which they email to you.
Happy photographing!
Get started with these activity ideas:
1. Tell me about your photo
Get students to work in pairs. Ask them to take their phones out and choose three photographs that they like from their own gallery. They should spend a few minutes choosing and thinking about what they are going to say. Now, ask students to explain their photographs to each other, encourage students to ask questions and generate discussion.
2. Take photos of objects
Put students in pairs or teams. If you have mixed language speakers, make sure that the groups are made up of students who speak different languages… the target task here is speaking and communicating in English, not really taking photos. Give or dictate students a list of objects that they must go out into the world and take photos of. Depending on the level of your class you can use easy things like ‘a chair’ or ‘a book’ or make it much harder by asking them to capture ‘sadness’ or ‘happiness’ to stretch their imagination.
Before students go outside the classroom to take their photos, remind them that they need permission before they photograph anyone! Give them a time limit; say fifteen minutes depending on the list. When students return to the classroom, have them show their pictures to other groups or the class. Encourage discussion; ask where they took the pictures and why they chose those particular things.
3. Tell a photo story
Put students in groups and tell them they are going to make a photo story for one of the titles. Allow students time to discuss the title and work out a story that they could tell. Give them some time to take the images, they could use each other as actors and use any part of your teaching institution as the set.
After students have taken their photos, have them share their photos with the rest of the class. You could ask them to do this in Word or as a PowerPoint presentation. They could explain or write what is happening next to the images.
4. Be a tour guide or create a brochure
Have your students choose a place that they know well near the classroom, this could be your own school, a park, a shopping center, a gallery, a market… anywhere. Explain that in groups they are going to take a series of photos for a tour magazine. Allow students time to discuss the kind of photos they’d like to take before sending them off to get the images, remember to make sure groups are of mixed languages to maximise discussion time.
Students can share their images with the rest of the class or other groups when they have finished.
5. Make a ‘how to’ slideshow
In group or pairs, ask students to think about and choose one of the following tasks that they could present as a slide show with photos and verbal explanation. Unless this is a homework task (which it’s great for) you’ll need to use situations that students can photograph straight away and don’t need any special equipment.
When completed, groups can share and explain their tasks with other students or the rest of the class.
6. Give tasks for homework
A day in my life
My family
My house
My Street
My neighbourhood
Choose one of the titles above and ask students to take some photographs that they can show and talk about in the next lesson. Learners could put their snaps into Word or PowerPoint and give a presentation to the class.
Most of these activities require you to be able to display photographs for the class. If you have a projector or an interactive whiteboard, you could get students to email their photographs to you.
Another good way to manipulate and display these photographs is by using PowerPoint. After students have completed the main activity, you could ask them to create a PowerPoint show which they email to you.
Happy photographing!
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