For part 2 of the FCE oral interview, it is necessary to practise comparing and contrasting photographs. If you have taken a look at the past paper examination books, you have probably discovered that the photos chosen are not always that telling of exact details of place and what the people in them are up to. My own students usually complain they do not know what else to say about them.
I usually point my students to Flickr for finding striking photos that will ignite their imaginations. I use some of my own photos in class too, but I try to encourage them to surf and find new images.
What to bear in mind when choosing photos:
-You aim at stretching yourselves to speak about a variety of topics.
-You can follow tags to find similar images to pair.
The idea is to get you to be fluent about any topic, not just your favourite ones. You should try to relate to the photos as well as guess and predict what's going on. This exam task is, in my opinion, a step before creating a story.
Think of the story setting or conflict and you get the picture!
The is a drawback. It is hard to find a pair of closely related photos to compare and contrast. Doing it on your own is time consuming.
How to solve this?
I've found this initiative that Sandy Millin explains in her blog. Several EFL teachers have been collecting photos for classroom use and organized them in sets according to topics. These are over 2,000 photos from all round the world and they cover the vocabulary range you need.
Ceri Jones has an idea about annotating the photos on an interactive whiteboard to enlarge your vocabulary. That gets interesting. But why not do it in Flickr? Students could choose themselves whether to click on further vocabulary or ideas for their description on a need-to-know basis.
See this example:
If you go to the Flickr link of the image above and hover the mouse over the photo, you'll get surprised with Cogdog's suggestions.
I think it's great that teachers can share these photo prompts online, but it would be wonderful to see students creating notes on them and sharing the learning!
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