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Teaching basic English to immigrants
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.God Bless you in this cause. I'm sure you will find it very rewarding.
Teaching the most frequently used words in English may also help. This site lists them in groups of hundreds.
http://www.duboislc.org/EducationWatch/First100Words.html
I hope you enjoy the experience. Good for you!
If you want to get into a bit of grammar, may I suggest you get hold of the book 'Teaching Tenses' by Rosemary Aitken (ISBN: 0952280868), which is very user-friendly to a novice in the field. Maybe it's something the church would get a couple of copies of for the team of tutors?
Good luck and have fun!
Long post - divided into two. Please read this and the next one together.
I am a teacher of English as a foreign language (TEFL). Trying to teach words out of context would be both extremely difficult (how do you teach 'the' to somebody with limited English?).
Better, I think, would be to take a functional approach. Decide what circumstances your student is likely to need English in and work with those situations. These will include introducing her/himself and others; asking for and giving directions; buying things from shops; giving and following instructions.
You could start off by scripting a role play, for example in a shop. Get the student to play the role of customer and you are the shop keeper. Practise the script together a few times - paying attention to pronunciation and intonation. Then, when you think the student's feeling confident, cover up her/his first line and do the role play again. Then cover up the first two lines. Proceed like this until the whole thing is being done from memory.
Then introduce other things which the student needs to buy (bring the things with you to the lesson, so that the word and object are associated together). See if she/he can go through the role play again, substituting the new object/s. Next, have something 'go wrong' - for example the shop's sold out of something, or the fruit is rotten or something. This helps to prepare the student for when interactions don't follow the script.
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