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Any kid will tell you that words like firstly, secondly, and lastly structure a text.
But of course, not all authors will be mindful to structure their texts so prominently. Some may think that using simple signposting words are beneath them.
It is, therefore, the responsibility of the teacher to inculcate in his charges an acute awareness of the range of signposting words. Textbook exercises are indisputably boring to teenagers though; they cannot stimulate their interest.
Hence, I began with the End in Mind. I chose something that I knew my students would like. My school’s speak takraw team competed in the finals against the defending champions in the National School Games. The match highlights were featured on YouTube.
I immediately turned to Twee to generate a summary of the video.
Having obtained the summary, I then flexed my stellar prompt engineering skills on ChatGPT and asked it to condense it into four suit sentences.
No doubt, I got to tweak the sentences to customise them to my students’ level, but I created an interesting text cohesion exercise without onerous effort. Score 1 for Sensei!
You are taking advantage of AI. Good job. Keep it up
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Sensei is No. 1
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Yes, you are No. 1🙂
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I had to teach students how to make a summary. They kept placing those words everywhere. Their grammar needed a lot of correcting!
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I can imagine the horrors. Thank goodness I don’t have to teach summary writing anymore
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oh man, the higher level classes were torture. Especially when it was a class I just started with. I remember one time I gave a class to another teacher. I subbed for him a year later, the kids couldnt even read anymore. Because he was reading all the time to them!
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Wtf all your life energy gone down the drain. I would be mightily pissed off. Thank goodness you got out of that situation.
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Yeah....but I understand. He was reading so he could get through stuff faster. But he sacrificed their reading opportunity.
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