Friday, January 31, 2014

Week 4 Reading, Writing, and TELP-ing


Even though I have not used books for kids to be incorporated into my English teaching to adults and young adults, Larry J. Mikulecky's idea of "Using Internet-Based Children's Literature to Teach EFL" makes sense to me in a way that reading for vocabulary- acquisition can be encouraged through less challenging literature students can read at home. Assigning out- of- class reading to students also gives students more responsibility for their learning in addition to the fun they may have doing that kind of literature. The only thing I expected to read from Larry's article was the fact of increasing the level of difficulty of reading materials given to students as they go on reading children's books, since today's repeated "unknown words" will become tomorrow's "known words". Nevertheless, many things have been gained from that article with interesting reading sources like: http://www.childrenslibrary.org/icdl/SearchWorld and http://www.magickeys.com/books. Therefore, it is high time I encouraged my students to read children's e- books for the sake of vocabulary and fun.

After reading "Using the Internet in ESL Writing Instruction" by Jarek Krajka, I realize how useful, interesting, motivating and practical  web pages, e- mail connection and class website creation are in improving students' writing skills. The suggested varieties of writing genres have given me ideas of how I should vary the types of writing I can deal with in my classes and how I should exploit our computer lab in the language center I teach.

This fourth week, I have to admit that the TELP (Technology- Enhanced Lesson Plan) task was the most time- consuming one, ever. It consumed my time because every little detail related to the lesson plan's implementation rubrics needs to be considered. Among those minutiae are descriptions relating to:  type of student, duration of lesson, materials, lesson objective, technology objectives, procedures, plan “b”, follow up, and assessment. Fortunately, my current Advanced 1 Certificate class curriculum gave me the idea of addressing one of this class's needs, which is "students' ability to orally tell their past experiences". Based on that need, I designed this TELP, using StoryCorps ( http://storycorps.org/), that you can find at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XgYQ1XJ_S0Cdi_m9ng3caGIvQ-jYZu6MaEsrMj6lNFU/edit
All in all, lesson- planning is worth spending time for " Lesson plans are the foundation of our classes...", according to Robert Elliott, University of Oregon, American English Institute (Fall 2012).

In short, though hard work, this week 4 is considered as one of the foundation stones of our Webskill course.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Week 3 Aural, Oral, Delicious




My third week has been marked by a lot of readings to undertake including:  Lindsay Miller’s helpful illustrated tips on developing aural skills, while CALL-ing, in her article Developing Listening Skills with Authentic Materials;  Maria Grazia Busà’s  New Perspectives in Teaching Pronunciation, in which she gives in- depth explanations of different ways to improve one of the most important oral skills—pronunciation; and the sample project report A Reflection on & Action Research Report, Working with a Large Class of Grade 13 "Terminale" Students. of Tendouinde Bruno Nikiema, from Burkina Faso, whose goals were to develop his "Terminale" class students' writing skills through letter- writing and interactions by making them use e-mails in forms of invitation letters. The latter being mentioned, thanks to Nikiema’s project, those students could embrace new technology in their English learning to make the connection between what happens in the real world and what they do at school. I wonder how I will manage to work on such a good project, during week 9! Hard work!

Social bookmarking with Delicious has also marked this week. Using Delicious now makes my online life easier as I have explained in my Nicenet post on Creating a Delicious Account. It is both a time- saver and brain memory- saver.

Back to oral and aural English: if you want to have one more reading, please add this delicious link http://languageinstinct.blogspot.com/2006/10/oral-and-aural-skills.html to your Delicious Links. In that Peter McKenzie-Brown’s blog, there is this concluding little message which goes: “We are given two ears and one mouth so we can listen twice as much as we talk.”  

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Week 2: A Week of Inspiration and Beginning of Fascinating Hard Work




This second week has inspired me with the Web search, the ABCD objective setting, the revised Bloom’s taxonomy, and the starting course project going on. 

The Web search of this week will probably be an endless passion for all of us who participate in this course, because there are a lot to discover on the Internet thanks to  NoodleTools and company. Don’t you agree with me?

Objective setting with the ABCD model use has helped me frame the way I should work on making everything I do in class teaching  prep clearer.

The revised Bloom’s taxonomy, that I heard for the first during my participation in a Critical Thinking online training with Deborah Healey (UO), is always useful for us to know how measurable our students’ learning behaviors should be.

As for the course project, I let you go to Nicenet for more details on it if you don’t mind reading my post of this week 2!

You know what? Only after using Google Image Search did I know from http://digital.nypl.org/dennis/viewtips.cfm#view that ” jpeg” stands for Joint Photographic Experts'Group. What a shame!

I hope we will all enjoy this second week’s everything.

Manda (Madagascar)