About This Activity
Overview This Career Characteristics Survey Activity is a great way for English beginners to build basic speaking and listening skills. This set of instructions are for the Name Write-In version of this activity, which involves interview real people (classmates, school staff, parents, ect), write their names on the left side of the survey sheet, and then recording their personal career characteristic preferences. Students can be introduced to this game after memorizing as few as 10 vocabulary words and 3 sentence patterns. Each Survey Form is designed to record 12 data-points per surveyee. Survey-taking activities like these are a classic example of an information gap activity. |
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Standard Survey Sheet
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Survey Sheet with Example
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Preparation Instructions
Printing Choose either the form include an example on one line or the form without an example, and simply print the needed amount of Survey Forms. Each form has space for 8-9 surveyees, but printing two copies of the form double-sided on the same sheet of paper will allow participants to survey up to 18 people with just one survey sheet. |
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Preparation Aside from printing, none required. |
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Game-Play Instructions
How To Play The survey-collectors will use verbal questions to ask the interviewees for their preferences about 12 career characteristic preferences and then record that information onto their Survey Forms. Materials:
Time / Game Round: varied
1. Provide a Survey Form to each survey-collector participant. They will need a pen or pencil too.
2. Once the activity begins, each survey-collector should approach the interviewees one-by-one and ask them questions about which career characteristics interest them.
3. If the surveyee communicates some level of interest, the following question can be asked:
4. If the surveyee is not interested doing a job with that career characteristic, the following question can be asked:
5. The survey-collectors can use emojis to record the level of interest each surveyee has in each career characteristic.
The example below shows how a surveyee's name can be written on the left side and their career characteristic preferences entered into the same row by drawing the correct emoji for each characteristic.
Annie's Preferences are Shown Drawn in the Orange Area
6. The survey-collectors can also collect information about surveyees' preferences about income level. The following question can be used:
The survey-collectors should classify each surveyee's response into one of the following three categories:
The Column for Income Level Preferences is Marked in Orange
If the surveyee's answer is difficult to classify, the survey-collector may use the following question to get a clear answer:
"Would you say that having a high income is not important, somewhat important, or very important to you?"
7. Finally, the survey-collectors can collect information about surveyees' preferences about how physically active they would like a job to be. The following question can be used:
The survey-collectors may classify each surveyee's response into one of the following four categories:
The Column for Physical Activity Preferences is Marked in Orange
If the surveyee's answer is difficult to classify, the survey-collector may use the following question to get a clear answer:
"Would you prefer a job that is not physically active, just a little physically active, somewhat physically active, or very physically active?"
Optional: When asked a question, surveyees may use the following sentence patterns to reply:
Suggestions & Recommendations
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Words to Learn Before Playing
The Core Vocabulary Words listed below are all words that students should learn BEFORE playing this game.
Core Vocabulary Words Used in Activity | |||||||||
All Forms | art, communication, computers, creativity, equipment, law, math, music, science, tools |
Words to Learn While Playing
The following words will be used to the play this game (with every available set of cards). Generally, these words can be introduced as part of full phrases while demonstrating the game procedures, rather than pre-taught as individual words. In most cases, these words can and should be learned WHILE learning/playing the game.
Vocabulary Best Learned In Context | |||||||||
For Questions | a, are, doing, how, in, interested, involving, job, just, not, OK, or, say, somewhat, that, very, with, would, you | ||||||||
Optional For Answers | a, area, be, but, don't, enjoy, favorite, I, I'd, interest, its, job, like, my, no, not, of, OK, so, that, think, with, yes |
Sentence Patterns to Use While Playing
The following sentences and sentence patterns are recommended for use while competing this communication activity. The best way to teach these sentences, is to use them in context while introducing the activity and demonstrating how to play it.
Standard Sentences and Sentence Patterns |
_________________ is very interested in a career involving _________________. |
_________________ is interested in a career involving _________________. |
_________________ is OK with a career involving _________________. |
_________________ is not interested in a career involving _________________. |
_________________ is definitely not interested in a career involving _________________. |
Vocabulary Icons
The following icons are used to represent vocabulary words on the included Survey Forms.
Note: All of the follow countable nouns are presented as plural nouns, as for the purposes of this activity, the singular forms will not be used.
art
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communication
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computer
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creativity
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equipment
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law
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math
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music
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science
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tools
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