ADVICE AND PREPARATION Here are a number of tips and ways of preparing for a successful kindergarten or elementary school
visit. These have been collated from a number of JET participants with experience:
• Bring indoor shoes. Running around in vinyl slippers may be entertaining for the children but
will make things more difficult for you.
• Use the teacher for crowd control. They are usually pretty good at keeping things quiet, getting
the children into groups and playing fairly.
• Make a lesson plan, but keep it flexible. Prepare more activities than you have time for.
• Avoid games that could potentially get violent. Students often get carried away.
• Do not wear anything restrictive or expensive.
• Try to meet the teacher before the lesson and explain the games.
• Laminate anything you want to use again.
• Do not scrap an activity just because it did not work in one class. It may work fine the next day
with a different class.
• Keep the class student-centred at all times. Have the students give out handouts and collect up
afterwards etc. It takes the pressure off you and keeps them occupied.
• Use incidental language as much as possible. This will help them remember it and how to use it
(ie., “Hello”, “Here you are”, “Thank you”, “You’re welcome”, “Bless you”, etc.)
• Keep things simple. Games you spent hours preparing are often the first to flop. Explanations
should be carried out within a minute or two. Where possible, demonstrate with the Japanese
teacher rather than explain.
• Eating lunch with the children helps to get to know them and create a little informal
internationalisation.
• Do not jump randomly between topics. Keep activities related.
• Phrases should be repeated frequently.
• PLAY between classes and TEACH during them.
• Try teaching with other classes like cooking or gym for a bit of variety.
• Praise individuals.
• Using a game more than once saves explanation time.
• Make sure the Japanese teacher knows what to do.
• Make vocabulary posters to save time.
• Balance activities that “stir-up” and “settle down”.
• Make name cards so you can address the children as individuals.
• Prepare an activity or video in case you are absent.
• Let the children teach you something each lesson.
• Buy teaching aids. Invest in self-training.
• Children will understand a lot from tone, gestures and facial expressions.
• Use lots of English words which are also used in Japanese in the katakana form.
• Keep notes of what you taught, so you can re-cap on previous areas.
• Try repeating explanations and phrases in several different ways.
• Use a toy to talk to if the Japanese teacher is not already prepared.
• Try to get feedback from the children as well as the Japanese teacher.
• Use commands and phrases in various contexts to highlight their usefulness.
• Have an emergency teaching pack ready for unexpected circumstances. Some ideas for things
to include:
Bingo cards
Glitter pen for autographs
Posterboard
Mr. Bean video
Blank Karuta cards
Book of games
Colour markers and pencils
Nametags
Stuffed animals/Mascot
Blindfolds
Music tape
Prizes
Book of games
Indoor shoes
Photos/Slides/Video of your home country
Advice and Preparation