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Thumbs UP! Unit 14 – WEATHER WHAT Weather report

This unit teaches students how to discuss and comment on the weather, including how it affects them and their plans, using New Zealand Sign Language.

A group of five people at the beach.

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Curriculum Level12
  • Resource LanguageEnglish

About this resource

Thumbs Up! An Introduction to New Zealand Sign Language is a resource designed for students in years 7–8 working at curriculum levels 1 and 2. It supports the teaching and learning of NZSL as an additional language in English-medium schools. 

In this resource, students will discuss and comment on the weather, including how it affects them and their plans using NZSL. 

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    Thumbs Up! Unit 14 –  WEATHER WHAT Weather report 

    Overview 

    Achievement objectives 

    Curriculum link: levels 1 and 2 of The 2007 New Zealand Curriculum.

    In this unit, students will ask about, express, and respond to feelings, needs, and emotions.   

    Learning intentions 

    Students will: 

    • communicate about plans 
    • ask about and describe the weather 
    • express feeling, emotions, and needs. 

    Success criteria  

    The assessment criteria are based on the curriculum achievement objectives for learning languages at levels 1 and 2. These criteria measure the students’ ability to communicate in NZSL. 

    Vocabulary 

    AUTUMN, AWFUL, BOTHER, CLOUDY, FOG, LIGHTNING, RAIN, SAFE, SPRING, SUMMER, SUNNY (FINE, HOT), SNOW, TEMPERATURE, WEATHER, WEEKEND, WINDY, WINTER 

    Grammar 

    Non-manual signals; conditionals 

    Sentence patterns 

    What will you do today?

    t
    TODAY 
    whq
    IX-you DO WHAT

     

    I'm going to play soccer.

    nod
    IX-me PLAY SOCCER

     

    What's the weather like?

    whq
    WEATHER COLD HOT WHICH

     

    It's horrible weather.

    WEATHER IX-it AWFUL

     

    Oh! We can't go on our picnic!

    neg
    "oh" CAN'T GO PICNIC

     

    What a pity!

    BOTHER

     

    I hate winter because it's too cold.

    t
    WINTER 
    neg
    IX-me DON'T-LIKE 
    COLD++

     

    In summer, I swim a lot.

    t
    SUMMER 
    IX-me SWIM+++

     

    It's not safe to go swimming.

    neg
    SWIM SAFE "wave no"

     

    The temperature is 32° in Nelson.

    NELSON TEMPERATURE-up 32 !HOT!

     

    Argh! That's so hot!

    !WOW! !HOT!

     

    Will it be fine tomorrow?

    y/n q
    TOMORROW SUN

     

    I'm going skateboarding tomorrow if it's not raining.

    cond
    TOMORROW RAIN NOTHING 
    IX-me SKATEBOARD

     

    I have to stay home. (sigh)

    IX-me HAVE-TO STAY HOME

     

    Support material 

    See Materials that come with this resource to download:  

    • Worksheet 14.1: Weather vocabulary (.pdf) 
    • Worksheet 14.2: Describing the weather (.pdf) 
    • Worksheet 14.3: Information gap task on the weather (.pdf) 
    • Worksheet 10.1: Assessment criteria 
    • Scene L transcript (.pdf) 

    Also see New Zealand Sign Language in the New Zealand Curriculum, levels 1 and 2 (page 52).  

    Assessing progress 

    The students will assess their own and others’ progress in achieving the intended outcomes. 

    Videos to use in this activity.

    Tauwhaituhi ā-kiriata
    Tauwhaituhi ā-kiriataTauwhaituhi ā-kiriata

    Assessing progress  

    The students will assess their own and others’ progress in achieving the intended outcomes. 

    From the options below, decide which task best suits your students. 

    Discuss the learning outcomes for Unit 14 with the students and decide on the assessment criteria  (Worksheet 10.1) that are appropriate to the task and the process they will use. 

     If you record the performances, the students will have the opportunity to self-assess as well as assessing each other. You could assess each student on the agreed criteria and give them written feedback on their achievement afterwards. 

    See Materials that come with this resource to download Worksheet 10.1: Assessment criteria.

    Storytelling 

    The students tell a story. Guide the storytelling by having them use a set of prompt cards that enable them to: 

    • pick a place 
    • select a person 
    • choose an activity 
    • describe the weather 
    • describe feelings. 

    They put the cards together to form the basis of their story. Give them time to develop their stories and practise them so that they have a good level of fluency and confidence. 

    Remind them that they need to be a responsive audience by, for example, applauding by waving their hands in the air. 

    Ask them how they felt about their second experience of storytelling and what they learned as a result. 

    For example: 

    • could they tell a story with more confidence?  
    • was it useful to have the cards as prompts?  

    Ask them what tasks help them to learn best. From their responses, you will be able to adapt future tasks to suit their learning needs. 

    Role-playing 

    Play Scene L. The students use their copies of the Scene L transcript as a prompt. Indicate that it is acceptable to vary the role-play as some students may prefer that option. 

    The students present their role-plays, either to another group or to the whole class. 

    Assess the performances. Ask the students to write down and file the feedback they receive so that they know what aspects of their NZSL learning they need to improve. 

    Students need a balance of controlled and free tasks to help them learn the language to communicate well with other NZSL users. 

    See Materials that come with this resource to download Scene L transcript

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