Advice for teachers - Japanese Second Language
Teaching and learning activities
Unit 2
Unit 2 – Area of Study 1: Interpersonal communication
Theme: The Japanese-speaking communities
Topic: Living in a Japanese community/visiting Japan
Sub topic: Housing in Japan
Outcome 1
Respond in writing in Japanese to spoken, written or visual texts presented in Japanese.
Examples of learning activities
- Listen to a conversation about daily life in Japan.
- Role-play a conversation about the ways Australian and Japanese students help around the home.
- Discuss your daily routine with that of a Japanese student.
- Listen to someone describing their house in Japanese. Make a list of specific vocabulary.
- View photos of Japanese houses and answer a series of questions on them in writing.
- Read short passages about life in rural and urban areas in Japan and write a speech in Japanese comparing life in these areas with life in rural and urban Australia.
-
Read and listen to texts about homes in Japan and view a selection of pictures of them. Prepare a short film comparing some features of houses in Japan and Australia.
- Write a journal entry about your experiences of living with a Japanese family for a week.
- Research the Internet about modern and traditional life in Japan and create a photostory. Share this photostory with the class.
- Write a cartoon or comic strip highlighting the daily activities of a Japanese person or family.
- View pictures of different daily activities in Japan (e.g. taking a bath, eating) and describe these activities in Japanese, making comparisons with Australia.
Detailed example
A short film comparing homes in Japan and Australia based on written, spoken and viewed texts.
- View and discuss a selection of pictures depicting aspects of the Japanese culture in homes in Japan (e.g. a kotatsu, a butsudan).
- Read and listen to texts about Japanese homes. Discuss the similarities and differences in the texts to homes in Australia.
- Complete comprehension exercises based on the texts.
- Write a short summary of the features of Japanese homes, incorporating appropriate descriptive and comparative language.
- Create a simple PowerPoint, incorporating relevant images of the features of Japanese homes.
- Make a short film narrating the images on the slides.
Unit 2 – Area of Study 2: Interpretative communication
Theme: The world around us
Topic: Communication and media
Sub topic: Communication and social media
Outcome 2
Analyse and use information from written, spoken or visual texts to produce an extended written response in Japanese.
Examples of learning activities
- Listen to the ways students use social media to support their study of Japanese.
- Interview Australian and Japanese students about the ways they use the Internet. Write a summary report in Japanese.
- Survey your Japanese class and find out how long they use the Internet each day. Present your findings in a graph.
-
Drawing on the information gathered, hold a class debate on the topic, ‘Is the Internet good or bad?’
- Read short summaries of how young people and adults communicate using social media.
- Read blog posts about the way young people in Australia and Japan use their mobile phone as a communication device.
- Write an essay on the pros and cons of the Internet and social media.
- Create an advertisement in Japanese for a chosen product, considering your intended audience.
- View a series of captioned illustrations that depict young people using social media and analyse them.
- Write in Japanese a series of rules when using social media.
- Write an Instagram post for a series of photographs.
- View short advertisements in Japanese (posters or from YouTube) and analyse and discuss the language used.
Detailed example
Drawing on the information gathered, hold a class debate on the topic, ‘Is the internet good or bad?’
- Research internet usage among people in Japan, drawing on a number of different texts.
- List vocabulary related to this topic from all material studied so far.
- Brainstorm useful expressions, grammar and vocabulary for debating the positive and negative aspects of the topic.
- Decide on which side of the debate you will take, affirmative or negative.
- Discuss how to appropriately rebut an idea in Japanese and brainstorm useful expressions, grammar and vocabulary.
- In small groups, write the script of the debate depending on the side taken.
- Perform the debate in front of the class.
- Give oral and written feedback to all the groups and to the teacher.
Unit 2 – Area of Study 3: Presentational communication
Theme: The Japanese-speaking communities
Topic: Living in a Japanese community/visiting Japan
Sub topic: Exploring Japan
Outcome 3
Explain information, ideas and concepts orally in Japanese to a specific audience about an aspect of culture within communities where Japanese is spoken.
Examples of learning activities
- Listen to an announcement at a train station or airport in Japan and identify key information.
- Listen to a description of a place in Japan.
- Use the train maps of a city in Japan and guide someone around to different places.
- Role-play a conversation at a restaurant or a shop in Japan.
- Role-play a conversation with a friend persuading them to visit a place in Japan with you.
- Read a letter from a friend in Japan who introduces their city to you.
- Write a review of a restaurant in Japan.
- Research the Internet to find information about a place of cultural significance in Japan. Present this information in a digital presentation and share this with the class.
-
Create a detailed itinerary for a tour to Japan (e.g. places to see, where you will stay, how you will get around).
- Research the biography of a famous architect in Japan (e.g. Kenzo Tange). Describe in Japanese one of the building this person has designed.
- View different brochures about places of interest in Japan. Write a journal entry about visiting one of these places.
- Research a town or city and write a time-line of its development.
- View short YouTube clips about places of interest in Japan. Write a summary of what you view in Japanese. How do these places compare to Australia?
Detailed example
Create a detailed itinerary for a tour to Japan.
- Watch YouTube clips about several places of cultural significance in Japan.
- Read articles and/or listen to descriptions about different cities in Japan and tourist attractions in these cities.
- Create a vocabulary list from the articles read.
- Revise vocabulary for time words, for example, months and dates.
- Decide on a plan for the tour, where you will start the tour and end the tour.
- Decide on places to include in your itinerary and find appropriate images to include in your itinerary.
- Draft your itinerary providing details about the cities you will visit and what you will do there.