Body | For learners to engage with language in the wild, they need to develop a series of critical skills and dispositions - noticing, sorting, analysis, subjectivity, and awareness (see this week's Topic of the Week). This activity is designed to use gameplay to help learners engage in said skill development.
Objectives
Learners will be able to:
- Identify and evaluate communication strategies that they employ during gameplay.
- Connect the communication strategies used during gameplay to spontaneous language use in the wild.
Mode(s): Interpersonal
Procedure
- Discuss communication with the class. Ask that they answer the following questions:
- How do you know communication has been successful?
- How do you know when communication has been unsuccesful?
- What strategies (e.g. mitigation) do you use to ensure communication has been successful? Repair when it has been unsuccessful?
- Explain to learners that they will put their communication skills to the test in a game, One Night Ultimate Werewolf (https://www.fgbradleys.com/rules/rules2/OneNightUltimateWerewolf-rules.pdf). In this game, everyone has a secret identity, one or two players are werewolves, and the other players try to figure out who they are.
- Go over the rules with learners briefly.
- Let the learners play through once so that they get comfortable with the mechanics. (Note: You will need to download the free app or read from the script.)
- Have the learners play again. Ask them to pay attention to the communication strategies they used during the discussion.
- Debrief the experience by having learners note:
- How they analyzed language and used that information to make choices in what to say/how to say information.
- Their reasoning for choosing to communicate in the way that they did.
- The impact of what their language choices had on their fellow interlocutors.
- Then, discuss how their notes relate to in the wild, spontaneous communication. Have learners make a list of the skills and communication strategies they noticed and used on the board. This list will be their “In the Wild” tool kit.
Notes: Learners may find the practice of updating their “In the Wild” tool kit at regular intervals throughout their language study.
|