25 April 2017 / by Ryan Beaudelaire

How to adapt articles - Oxbridge activites

 

 

www.oxbridgetefl.com




 

Oxinity Friday Meeting - Barcelona


 

How to adapt articles


Today at our team meeting here in Barcelona we worked together to practice how best to adapt articles to match the different levels of our students when we are creating and teaching Oxbridge Topic Activities.


We´re always looking to each other for tips and hints on how to create better, more relevant and concise activities and this week British politics once again caught our interest (obviously!) with an article on the upcoming snap election, so we got straight to it, and started creating a topic activity to get the latest news to our students - in fun interactive topic activity kinda way!!


Now, we like to make sure that the latest new articles and current affairs are part of our classes for the different levels we teach, so we need to be prepared to adapt these articles from a native audience to various levels of Esl students.






Top tips from our Michael Turnbull


In order to adapt articles best, Michael says that all the important information is at the beginning, this is where we find all the good stuff, to entice the reader! Then there is normally a summary or quote to pull you into the article, followed by another quote to hook take you in further. He says when cropping the text ¨Cut it once keeping all the relevant information, then cut it again pulling out the unnecessary sentences until it´s the size you want.¨

 

What we did today - Editing team!


Well, we got engrossed in this article on the UK snap election and decided to use the power of the team to adapt it for teaching. We got into teams of 2 teachers and starting cropping, cutting and editing the article to suit a P5 class and another for a P3 class.

 

Here is the original article, have a read and see what you think, then below have a look at our new adapted versions.



Our P3 and P5 versions,

Click here - Edited articles

 


Target Language


Now we have our adapted articles, we need some target language. So, we went through the articles together and agreed on target language that we thought would be useful for each level. Have a look and see what you think.

 

P3 target language

Held-up   Polls   Reality-check   Resilience   Uncertainty   Debt   Rising   Painful   Aftermath   Prospect   Regain   Triggered

On-hold   Squeezed   Heightened   Weaker   Relocation   Dropped   Sharply   Outcome

 

P5 target Language

Call (for an election)   Hampering   Stunned   Lawmakers   Breakup   (go) Right back up   Fraying   Surges   Mandate   Mounting

(hard) Stance   Snap (election)   Narrowly (voted)   Sharply (fell)   Hard/soft Brexit   Links (with the EU)

Idioms - Pay a heavier price   Clean but painful break   Cracks starting to appear

 

Good luck in the editing room!


So, if you need some help adapting articles top create Esl activities, we hope this experience share has been helpful. Use it as a guide for your own creations! And share it with a friend, we like to share the love!

Good luck and have fun in the editing room!

Team Oxinity Barcelona.

 

further-reading-1 (1)


Check out BBC News for more info on the snap election.


http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39623674


Take a look at BBC Councils guide to using news articles


https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/using-news-articles


hashtag



Quotes from today!


Sandra Morwani #editing #rewriting #learning #LessIsMore


Peter Nesbitt #TeresaMayJumps #TargetLanguage


Ashley Curran #HeWhoDaresWins


Amanda Sakina You'll find everything at the beginning #NewsArticles


Micheal Turnbull #RegisterToVote


Alex Johnstone Make things funny, it helps people remember.


Gabrielle Riley I learnt how to modify long complicated texts #winning

20

January 2012
Friday Fun: The History of English #3
by Radmila Gurkova
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMkuUADWW2A&feature=relmfu The series of posts about the history of the English language continues with this video about Shakespeare and his impact on the development of English. Have you ever seen a Shakespeare play? Can you recognise any of the roots of the words?...

13

January 2012
Mystery “GOLD BARS” Found on Paris Train are Fake
by Radmila Gurkova
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apD5cPVsDjc A suitcase containing an estimated $1 million in gold bars was abandoned on a commuter train near Paris, but police now say the 20 gold bars were fake. The ingots would have been worth around 800,000 Euros ($1m; £670,000) if they had been genuine. The bars, made from a base metal were l...

13

January 2012
New Year’s Resolutions – Can You Keep Them?
by Radmila Gurkova
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVA9IOMKl-A&feature=fvst “I love a good checklist. A to-do list starts my day off on the right foot. So when it comes to creating New Year’s resolutions, I take it pretty seriously. I mean, it’s a year-long to-do list, it better be a good one.” Resolutions are what you make of them. Without some thought...

13

January 2012
Can...Auxiliary Verb subject + can + main verb
by Radmila Gurkova
Can is an auxiliary verb, a modal verb: talk about po...

13

January 2012
Talking about likes and dislikes.... I love ice cream
by Radmila Gurkova
We use the present simple tense to express likes and dislikes in English. For Example: I like chocolate I don't like chocolate. I like cycling I...

13

January 2012
softEST and most valuable.... Comparison of adjectives
by Radmila Gurkova
(See if you can spot the mistakes in the picture - scroll down to check for answers) Suffixes are groups of letters added to the end of other words t...

13

January 2012
I am going to......do more exercise
by Radmila Gurkova
I AM GOING TO - Future simple to express things in the immediate future. So when we make New Year's Resolutions we normally use GOING TO to express actions in the nea...

13

January 2012
Friday Fun: The History of English... #2
by Radmila Gurkova
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B8TwBrCIEY Another fun post for a Friday at the end of a busy week... this continues the history of English series that is produced by the Open University in the UK. This short clip talks about the Norman Conquest in 1066 and the influence of French on the development of English. How many of these words do ...

06

January 2012
Elephant Poaching: 'Record Year' for Ivory Captures
by Radmila Gurkova
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbMNaGt8qjc Charity organisation TRAFFIC said that 2011 it had seen high numbers of large ivory captures. TRAFFIC represents the support of Illegal ivory trade. Illegal ivory trade has increased since 2007, the increase is over 800 kg in weight. But in 2010 they only had 10 large captures. There...

06

January 2012
FOR years TO stop
by Radmila Gurkova
FOR & TO ...