Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada

French as a Second Language (FSL) is not often a popular subject among Canadian elementary and high school students. Negative attitudes and low motivation for learning French contribute to attrition at the high school level. In this article, an alternative teaching approach is applied to the Canadia...

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Main Author: Göksel, Eva
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University College Cork 2019-01-01
Series:SCENARIO: Journal for Performative Teaching, Learning, Research
Online Access:https://journals.ucc.ie/index.php/scenario/article/view/scenario-13-1-1
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spelling doaj-ce03a5bdd8e94ba7867a515e89e86d222021-03-04T17:16:24ZdeuUniversity College CorkSCENARIO: Journal for Performative Teaching, Learning, Research1649-85262019-01-01XIII112010.33178/scenario.13.1.1Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, CanadaGöksel, EvaFrench as a Second Language (FSL) is not often a popular subject among Canadian elementary and high school students. Negative attitudes and low motivation for learning French contribute to attrition at the high school level. In this article, an alternative teaching approach is applied to the Canadian FSL context at the elementary school level in the province of British Columbia. This action research study conducted in 2010 investigated the outcomes of using a drama-based approach to instruct Core French to 12 year-old students at a Montessori elementary (public) school in British Columbia, Canada. Ten students worked with a teacher/researcher twice a week over a six-week period, using drama strategies and improvisational activities to practice and improve their French language and literacy skills. The use of drama strategies proved motivational for the students who participated with enthusiasm and expressed a desire to continue learning French through drama. The action research approach allowed the students a greater degree of autonomy as their feedback was used to develop lesson content. Engagement in their own learning contributed to improved student attitudes towards attending French class. Ways of further implementing this teaching approach in elementary classrooms needs to be the subject of future research.https://journals.ucc.ie/index.php/scenario/article/view/scenario-13-1-1
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Göksel, Eva
spellingShingle Göksel, Eva
Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
SCENARIO: Journal for Performative Teaching, Learning, Research
author_facet Göksel, Eva
author_sort Göksel, Eva
title Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
title_short Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
title_full Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
title_fullStr Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Playing with Possibilities: Drama and Core French in the Montessori Elementary Classroom in British Columbia, Canada
title_sort playing with possibilities: drama and core french in the montessori elementary classroom in british columbia, canada
publisher University College Cork
series SCENARIO: Journal for Performative Teaching, Learning, Research
issn 1649-8526
publishDate 2019-01-01
description French as a Second Language (FSL) is not often a popular subject among Canadian elementary and high school students. Negative attitudes and low motivation for learning French contribute to attrition at the high school level. In this article, an alternative teaching approach is applied to the Canadian FSL context at the elementary school level in the province of British Columbia. This action research study conducted in 2010 investigated the outcomes of using a drama-based approach to instruct Core French to 12 year-old students at a Montessori elementary (public) school in British Columbia, Canada. Ten students worked with a teacher/researcher twice a week over a six-week period, using drama strategies and improvisational activities to practice and improve their French language and literacy skills. The use of drama strategies proved motivational for the students who participated with enthusiasm and expressed a desire to continue learning French through drama. The action research approach allowed the students a greater degree of autonomy as their feedback was used to develop lesson content. Engagement in their own learning contributed to improved student attitudes towards attending French class. Ways of further implementing this teaching approach in elementary classrooms needs to be the subject of future research.
url https://journals.ucc.ie/index.php/scenario/article/view/scenario-13-1-1
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