Unit 4, Lesson 4
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Speaking Fluency

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Speaking Fluency




Part 1: Freeze the Video, Speak the Photo (20 min)

The teacher plays a short YouTube video about describing photos, but pauses it after the first 30–45 seconds. Students do not copy the video. They observe what the speaker is doing.

Then the teacher shows a new photo and asks students to produce only one sentence first. This lowers anxiety.

The teacher explains that descriptive fluency does not mean speaking perfectly. It means speaking clearly, continuing with details, and using simple strategies when the student does not know a word.

Part 2: Vocabulary Activation: Photo Voice Buttons (15 min)


Part 3: Speaking Language Input: The 6-Step Photo Description Path (25 min)

The teacher explains that a good photo description follows a path. Students should not jump randomly from one detail to another. They can use the same path every time they describe a photo.

Useful phrases:

“This photo shows…”
“I can see…”
“This picture is about…”
“It looks like a…”

Example:

“This photo shows students working together.”

Useful phrases:

“They are in…”
“The photo was probably taken in…”
“It looks like a classroom / park / school / street.”

Example:

“They are in a classroom.”

Structure:

subject + am / is / are + verb-ing

Examples:

“The students are writing.”
“The teacher is explaining something.”
“Two boys are playing basketball.”
“A girl is holding a microphone.”

Examples:

“In the foreground, I can see a table.”
“In the background, there are some students.”
“On the left, a boy is standing.”
“On the right, there is a window.”

Useful phrases:

“Maybe…”
“Perhaps…”
“I think…”
“It looks like…”

Examples:

“Maybe they are preparing a presentation.”
“I think they feel excited.”
“It looks like a school event.”

Examples:

“I like this photo because it shows teamwork.”
“This reminds me of my class.”
“I think this activity is interesting because students are helping each other.”

The teacher models a full answer:

“This photo shows a group of students in a classroom. They are sitting around a table, and they are working on a project. In the foreground, I can see notebooks and a laptop. In the background, there are more students. The group looks focused, and maybe they are preparing a presentation. I like this photo because it shows teamwork.”


This activity is designed differently from previous rotations or stations. Students work back-to-back.

Student A sees a photo. Student B cannot see it. Student A describes the photo like a walkie-talkie message. Student B must draw a very simple version or arrange objects on the desk to represent the photo.

At the end, students compare the drawing or object arrangement with the photo. The goal is not artistic accuracy; the goal is clear communication.

Part 1 – Photo Soundtrack Match (15 min)

The teacher plays short sound effects: applause, rain, school bell, traffic, crowd noise, birds, cafeteria noise, sports cheering, typing, or music rehearsal. Students choose which projected photo matches the sound and explain why.

This activity helps students describe atmosphere, not only visible objects.

Part 2 – One Photo, Three Voices (15 min)

Students describe the same photo in three different speaking styles.

This helps students practice pace, voice, expression, and fluency. Students learn that speaking is not only grammar; it also includes tone, rhythm, and confidence.


Each student describes one photo in 20 seconds using:

Example:

“This photo shows a school event. Students are standing near a table. In the background, I can see posters. Maybe they are presenting a science project.”

Part 1 – Preparation: Photo Voice Test Warm-Up (15 min)

Students prepare for the speaking test. They do not write scripts. They create a five-word note line only:

Example:

The teacher reminds them that notes are not full sentences. They are only support.


This is the consolidation test.

Students work in pairs.

Part A: Individual photo description
Each student receives a photo and speaks for 45 seconds.

Part B: Partner questions
The partner asks two questions about the photo.

Examples:

Part C: Collaborative choice
The pair receives two photos and chooses which one would be better for a school poster. They must discuss for one minute and reach a decision.


Part 3 – Fluency Reflection Snapshot (15 min)

Students complete an oral reflection.

Questions:

What helped you speak longer?
What phrase helped you continue?
What was difficult: describing, guessing, or answering questions?
What will you improve next time?


NEE – Agregar el tipo de adaptaciones curriculares

Principio II: Pautas 6.1 – 6.3 – 6.4 
Principio III: Pautas 7.1 – 8.1 – 9.1
ALUMNO 1: Constante monitoreo. Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas. 
ALUMNO 2: Constante monitoreo, Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas.
ALUMNO 3: Constante monitoreo. Corroborar que el contenido entregado en clase haya sido comprendido por la estudiante mediante retroalimentación.