Listen and Sketch (For younger students)

ESL picture drawing exercise
Age: 7 years and above
Set up time: 2-4 mins
Running time: 15-30 mins

Class materials/paper/ colored pencils

Overview

The Lesson

-To begin the exercise, students should have a blank sheet of paper and a pencil in front of them. They are first instructed to turn their paper so that it is in landscape format.
-The teacher begins by telling the students the scene they will sketch. This helps to stimulate any existing vocabulary knowledge they may have. One useful scene for this exercise is a park. The teacher starts by instructing the students to sketch a large object for them to work around. For example:
“Draw a tall tree on the left side of the picture”

The ESL student slowly builds up the picture as they listen for details
Monitoring the students during an ESL listening class

(As they draw, the teacher monitors to ensure all the students are listening to their description correctly.)

Once the tree has been drawn, the teacher can link questions together with instructions so that the students are contributing towards creating the picture. For example:
Teacher: “Something is in the tree, what do you think it is?”
Student: “A bird”
Teacher: “That’s right and what kind of bird do you think it is?”
Student: “An owl”
Teacher: “Ok …and it’s sitting on something…what do you think it is sitting on?”
Student: “A nest”
Teacher: “So I want you to sketch an owl, sitting on a nest, in the tree.”

-Further information can be added to the picture in an instruction or question-and-answer form. For example:
“Draw a bench in front of the tree”
Or…
“There’s something in front of the tree. It’s long and we can sit on it. What do you think it is?…and who is sitting on it?…and what is he wearing?…and what is he doing?

So here the students not only listen and sketch the teacher’s description of the picture but also to other students who are calling out other details.
-Gradually the whole scene is built up into a complete picture and the students will have fun, looking at how each other’s pictures turned out.
In a follow-up class, the teacher can review the picture and ask the students questions about what they remember. For example:
“Where was the bench?” and “Who was sitting on it?”

One more step

Teachers can make the exercise more challenging by avoiding mentioning the actual nouns and just describing them. This allows the opportunity to introduce useful adjectives commonly attached to the noun. For example:
“Two fluffy white things are floating in the sky. They are next to a bright yellow thing….sketch them”

“There is a very tall man. He is sitting on a long green thing…he is holding something cold, white, and delicious.. can you sketch him.”
This makes for an interesting feedback session, as students look at each other’s efforts to see if their pictures are the same. The teacher can then review the descriptions again naming the nouns being described. If we take the park picture as an example:

Two fluffy white clouds.

A bright yellow sun.

A long green bench.

A delicious ice cream.


Other useful scenes to try

A train station

A beach

A circus

A birthday party

A zoo