Active Learning

Active learning is a form of learning in which teaching strives to involve the students in the learning process more directly than when using other methods..

The method is best summarised by Charles Bonwell, an educationalist, who states that active learning is when students participate actively or experientially in the learning process and when they are doing something besides passively listening.

They must read, write, discuss, or be engaged in solving problems. In other words, they are not only doing learning but also thinking about the learning that they are doing.

students active learning

In the MFL classroom, this might look like the following:

Exemplars:

The Game Box

An adaption from stations

The Game Box

The “Game Box” is an adaptation from stations but in this case students are in groups and are given a box of tasks to choose from but they do not rotate as the rotation comes from the tasks/activities in the box.
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Flashcards in the MFL Classroom

Can be used by any languages teacher

Fashcards in the MFL Classroom

This presentation was delivered at the CPD day for Heritage and Lesser-taught Language teachers in June 2019 but can be used by any languages teacher.
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7 Engaging Activities for MFL

7 Engaging Activities for MFL

This log entry gives you 7 ideas of how you can do this in your languages classroom.
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Active Learning - Cambridge

Active Learning - Cambridge

Active learning means that learners take increasing responsibility for their learning, and that teachers are enablers and activators of learning, rather than lecturers or deliverers of ideas
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