In this article in AMLE Magazine, Melanie Greene and Grayson Chell (Appalachian State University/Boone) say that many American idioms are incomprehensible to English language learners. Consider baseball expressions that a teacher might use without a second thought:
-
We’re
setting the ground rules.
-
Play
ball!
-
Who’s at
bat?
-
Are you
ready to step up to the plate?
-
He’s a
real rookie.
-
Touch
base with her.
-
Can you
be the pinch hitter?
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Looks
like you dropped the ball.
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You’re
way off base.
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That’s
two strikes. If you get three, you’re outa here.
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Wind up
for the pitch.
-
Brush
him off.
-
Ted hit
it out of the ballpark!
-
It’s a
home run!
Hearing all this, say the
authors, ELLs might “be so busy trying to determine where the ball was, who was
up at bat, and who hit a home run that they miss the key concepts of the lesson.”
The Common Core ELA standards expect students to master
figurative language, word relationships, and nuances of word meaning, but
students shouldn’t be expected to pick up these concepts “on the fly.” Here are
some strategies to teach idioms more systematically:
• Introduce idioms in context, never in isolation. Show
students how idioms are used in newspaper and magazine articles, songs,
cartoons, videos, and advertisements. Another approach is to use the idiom in a
conversation and ask students to try to figure out the meaning.
• Have students use idioms in conversation. Pairs of
students might be asked to write a conversation using idioms and then perform
it for the class.
• Make sure
students understand. Many idioms are used in informal spoken exchanges, not in
writing.
• Practice with
games and activities. These are good ways to engage students and help them
internalize idiomatic meanings. Here are some helpful websites:
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StickyBall:
www.stickyball.net/idioms.html
-
Activities
for ESL students: http://a4esl.org/q/h/9801/lk-idiomsp.html
-
Using
English: www.usingenglish.com/reference/idioms
-
ESL
Mania: www.eslmania.com
“Using
Idioms with English Language Learners” by Melanie Greene and Grayson Chell in AMLE Magazine, January 2014 (Vol. 1, #5,
p. 21-22), www.amle.org; the authors can be
reached at greenemw@appstate.edu and
chellgl@email.appstate.edu.
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