This is a blog created for keeping a record of what has been learnt during the course 'Building Teaching Skills Through the Interactive Web' of the University of Oregon.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Overall Reflection
What I learnt in this time? - easy! Use technology in an effective and productive way.
So many tools available since the very first week: online resources for teaching like Blogs and social networks, ABCD Objectives, Effective web searches, Delicious, tools for aural/oral development, CALL and tools for reading/writting development, PBL, Webquests, Rubrics, multimedia tools, theories about student centered classes, learner autonomy and learning styles, LoTi, and so much other things that come from experience.
I am really thankful to Donna and my e-classmates with whose experience and knowledge I learnt a lot.
I will always remember everyone of you: Abdullah Saykili who impressed me since the very beginning of the course, Makiko and Tomoko whose names sound similar to me but by the content of their blogs (so much interesting) and their photos on them I can realize the difference; Marialoly, José Carlos Manrique (Jota from Cultural Arequipa), Boris, Galo Palacios, Mr. Holguer Heredia (the three last from Ecuador), Sylvia Moncayo, Mónica Vaca whose names are very familiar to me for being Spanish names and being Latin American colleagues, Malu from Brazil, Karolina De Vrgna who is the only one from Eastern Europe I think; Nehir, Athar Hussain, Akifa,Yea-huey and Meita I remember your posts and your blogs, Kamal Raj and Hari Maya my two project partners I remember your posts and your blogs (Kamal Raj to whose blog I cannot access); and ofcourse, Donna whose guidance was all the time Highly exceptional.
Dear Donna, I learnt a lot from you. Thank you so much for your support and all the things I learnt these ten weeks.
Wish you all the best.
Loti
I can say that I wish I were in Level 6, which is a truly high level of students-learning and students-production of content learnt and teacher effectiveness. However, I barely get up to Level 2.
This situation makes feel kind of unconfortable but challenged to keep working on my new goal: Get to Level 6.
I am going to start by re-checking the material studied in this course and aplying the techniques and suggestions gotten. We are a great group of teachers and I learnt so many things from you. And I am definitely going so scan on every post to get details and ideas to work on this new goal.
I want to thank Donna for all the support I've been given and all my e-partners from whom I learnt a lot. I wish you the best.
Dalton
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Learning Styles and Technology
I remember having read Daniel Goleman book about Emotional Intelligence a time ago, and afterwards the book about Social Intelligence and even Ecological Intelligence; and now, having read something about Multiple Intelligences and the research made by Howard Gardner broadens my capability to interact with my students and their individuality.
I aim to remark now the term individuality, which emphasizes the concept that we are all different, with individual learning styles and information-process pace that need to be respected at every place or activity.
We, the teachers, have much responsibility on sensing and respecting those different styles by designing class activities that go with both, active and reflective learners, a time for thinking what to do or say, and a time for taking it to praxis. Taking care of visual/verbal and sequential/global learners, or even assigning tasks that can involve different types of intelligence to mixed groups of students.
I remember an activity I worked with a group of students that were into a folklore music band. It was just amazing how motivated they were having known that they were going to travel to US for a presentation and how much important English was in their careers, and even better, designing activities linked to music really took them into classes.
I can think of an activity in which my students can make some kind of internet research, so active learners join reflective learners and allot the surfing work to active learners, and the process of discussing and making the report by email/blog to reflective learners.
There are so many things we can do. Some of those activities are well listed in Teacher Tap website: http://eduscapes.com/tap/index.htm, some others can be created using the tools we've already used in the Webskilled Teachers course like ANVILL, webquest, blogs or social networks, or Power Point for activities in classroom.
Dalton
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Online Tools for Enhancing Learning
I really like how ANVIL works. I didn't know there was such a tool available for teaching. With all those components that give students a tool to practice in real and meaninful context the language they are learning and supporting their autonomy not only for aural/oral skills but also for writting and reading skills through the forum where students can practice vocabulary, grammar and syntax.
What I might use in class? Well, I once used Moodle for giving my students extra practice with the topic I taught in class, however, it didn't work that well because lack of motivation I think, know I am thinking of giving the tool a new perspective by using it in class and then giving my students an asigment in that matter.
I really love what Jeff Magoto, an e-partner in the course does using cartoons to set up a class topic. We can also use real information taken from news websites as we discussed in previous weeks, we can use sequences of TV series or programs to involve our students in developing their language skills by asking them to narrate what they got from the media and promoting in this way the skill of connecting ideas to make communication meaningful to them.
All of this resources are quite useful in diseminating knowledge and information, creating a collaborative community for ideas that can be exchanged, and assesing the progress of students.
From the websites I checked, I have just tried Hot Potatoes tool.
As I said in a previous post, I have a problem with student's tiredness in class, consequently, I aim to develop tools that I can use in class to wake their excitement up for English learning in classroom environment.
I really love having known about this tools.
Dalton Mendoza
Monday, August 8, 2011
A way to Student's Autonomy
I learnt that Learning Autonomy, the ability to take charge of one's learning, it is a skill we are not born with but is something we can develop under certain psychological and environmental factors. These factors set the basis for students motivation to be actively involved in their own process of knowledge acquisition.
Different strategies can be assumed in this process; some cognitive strategies as repetition, translation, note-taking, deduction, among others; and some metacognitive strategies come to take part of it as well. And, in order to promote Students Autonomy, teachers must be autonomy practitioners.
What we, as teachers, can do to promote students autonomy to learn is basically motivate them to get involved in the process of learning, helping them to identify and be conscious of their objectives, giving them the tools that support their process of learning, making them feel aware of what they have learnt and the abilities they have gotten. Teachers are just facilitators in this process.
We can provide students with the tools to support their learning process: it can done through technology which provides us with information and tools (internet, power point, electronic surveys, multimedia content, etc.) that only need to be organized and properly guided; on the other hand, non-electronic sources of information and tools are also available: books, letters, cards, newspapers, pictures, classroom storytelling, and others can encourage students to lead their own process of research and learn.
A one-Computer Classroom provides teachers with these tools: Power Point, Internet, e-books, digital magazines and newspapers, social networks, and so many others facilitate our lesson plans with giving students Authentic and Meaninful Information to work with.
However, non-electronic material is also necessary on this stage: books, magazines, papers, and even posters from a concert in town can become a great source of information to work in class.
I would say that mixing electronic and non–electronic resources might become the best way to motivate students autonomy for learning.
I prepared a Lesson Plan for a One-Computer classroom. It's published using Adobe Acrobat. You can get access to my Lesson Plan clicking HERE.
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Power Point to Support the Learning Process
Once I got into the institution I work for, I learned the concept of Student-Centered Class and I thougt, "This is wonderful."
Having technology to use in classes, and having attended to numerous speeches where Power Point was the common thing, I took it myself and started doing my own.
I remember my first slides, haha, they were like primitive but attention-getting. None of the students at the language center had attended to a class designed in Power Point.
I think that Power Point Presentations give a lot of interaction to the class as long as they are well designed, and the design should be created in such way that the student is the center of it.
Lately, and thanks to this course and Donna Shaw, I realized that there is a great world of digital resources I can use to make my students get interested in learning.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Project-based learning & WebQuests
Technology has given students a high degree of independency in the process of learning; the only one thing we should to do is inspire our students to asume this new challenge as theirs in perspective of Learner-Centered Education.
Project-base Learning (PBL) is defined as collaborative learning and gives a high-degree of independency to our students and is expressed in rates as Pew Internet Website shows in its research about Social Media and Young Adults.
Some requirements to be followed are necessary, and criteria to design Project-Base Learning activities should consider centrality, driving question, constructive investigations, autonomy, and realism.
However, a big question comes to my mind: How are We -The Teachers- going to integrate this new tendency to teaching procedures? and even harder to think, what kind of tool do we have available?.
WebQuest is a good way to go through. Guiding our Digitalized Students to make some research on the web, designing inquiry-oriented lesson formats in which most or all the information that learners work will come from the web.
Wow, this is great!
Well, not at all. If content is not well designed, it might become totally meaninless to our students, and it won't have any expected result.
Jeremy Harmer has a very interesting point of view on the matter that all of this content must be meaninful to students. Here we can listen to what he said to BBC Learning English a time ago.
ESL classes are rich of material to explore in making Language-Learning Process meaninful by using authentic and atractive e-content.
Some examples and guidance on creating Rubrics for Projec-Based Learning Activites can be found in Rubistar, and WebQuest.org is also a well rated site for teachers support in this matter.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
The Future Of School Social Networks
A very interesting view of Social Networks at schools by Lindsay Wright.
I just found this article and thought it would be useful spread this information in order to visualize and let you know that we can lead this change.
Social Networks are part of our lives, thus there is no way we can avoid it.
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Sunday, July 17, 2011
Technology Enhanced Lesson Plan
Here is what I worked with one of my classes and I am glad to share that.
Unit Name: | Coping with Technology |
Lesson Title: | Express Frustration about a Machine |
Lesson Author: | Dalton Mendoza Alayo |
Grade Level / Subject Area: | Basic Two Level Students |
Time allotted for lesson: | One session - 60 minutes |
Short Description of Lesson: | The lesson aims to develop vocabulary awareness on the students to express frustration for a bad working machine or even express sympathy to a friend with a technology problem. |
Classroom layout: | A 12 students class sitting down on horseshoe shape desks. |
State Curriculum Standards: |
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NETS•S (2007) Performance Indicators: |
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Instructional objectives: | Students (Audience) will be able to express feelings of frustration for a bad-working machine and show sympathy to a friend that faces similar problem (Behaviour), using the vocabulary learnt (Condition) grading the sympathy expressions according to the problem-gravity (Degree). |
Materials, resources and technology: |
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Prerequisite skills: | Proper use of Present Continuous Tense for actions in progress |
Instructional Procedures: | - Tell the students the objective they are to achieve at the end of the class. - Show a slide with a computer and ask students whether they have a computer at home. - Ask Students to mention other electronics the have. - Show the students the book picture on page 44, with the man expressing a bad feeling about an electronic device he holds no his hand, and ask them to predict what they think the conversation is going to be about.- Play the audio CD on track number 8. - After listening ask some comprehension questions: what are the names of the two men in the conversation?, what are they doing?, what is Ed holding on his hand?, what brand is the cd player?, is there any problem with the CD player?, what is the problem with the cd player?, is Ed happy?, what did he say that makes you think He is not happy?, does Louis feel happy for it?, what did He say? - Play the audio cd and make students repeat the conversation in the pauses, pating attention to phonetic, rithm and intonation. - Show students some ways to show sympathy and frustration for feelings about machine problems. - Move to vocabulary activity by showing electronic devices with their names and make students listen and practice the vocabulary. - Ask students comprehension question by giving them uses for the electronics vocabulary practiced in disorder and making them tell the teacher what electronic he is refering to. - Make students complete the sentences in activity letter B. - Play the audio cd and make students identify the electronic device people in the audio are talking about. Repeat if necessary. - Ask students to personalize in pairs the use of the vocabulary learnt in a conversation to express regret and sympathy for a machine problem. - Make students role-play their conversation out loud to the class. - Ask the class some comprehension questions as the inicial conversation model. - Make students summarize what they learnt in class. |
Assessment/Evaluation: | According to the Lesson Objective, students English Performance is going to be evaluated in the rate of proper responses for facing electronic machines problems. |
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Passion with Words - Reading and Writting
There is no doubt that reading is a useful tool for language adquisicion in terms that it nourishes students with vocabulary knowledge, grammar awareness, accurate spelling, and efective writting among others. And it is an important part of teacher's job to stimulate the develop of the skill throughout his o her students.
On the path of motivating students for reading we need to make a distinction between extensive reading and intensive reading. While extensive reading involves the joy of reading for pleasure, intensive reading refers to detailed-focus on the construction of texts and ususally takes place in a classroom environment.
Both, extensive and intensive reading, are a great source for language understanding. However, it is important that it be well guided and graded according to the student's english level, and in this matter, there is plenty of material we can find whether online of offline for assessment. I dare to recomend you Penguin Readers where you can find great graded material for extensive reading that can be used as intensive reading as well according to how the teacher designs its class.
Some principles Jeremy Harmer provides in his book "How to Teach English" prompt us to design our reading lesson plans in terms of:
- Encourage students to read as often and as much as possible.
- Engage students with what they are reading.
- Encourage students to respond to the content of a text, and explore their feelings about it, not just concentrate on its construction.
- Prediction is a major factor in reading.
- Match the task to the topic when using intensive reading texts.
- Exploid reading material to the full.
And as Krajka says, among other authors, bringing authenticity to the reading content will surely motivate students to read. Contents or activities that enhance the willing for reading through jigsaw reading, reading puzzles, using news websites, reading poetry, event descriptions, and others. Websites suggested all along this class, I have checked some of them and I surely find them useful.
How I applied this to my classes? - This is what I did: Pre-Intermediate Students are going to look for a news about any natural disaster occured in the last twenty years on two different websites and seek a difference in the information provided by the broadcaster, and by tomorrow are going to report orally to the class.
I was really surprised with the results of this activity, and I have found several others to make my students read with no feeling of indisposition. I kind of agree with what Tomoko Kurita said lines above about the students level for the reading activities in the websites suggested; however, we can make it work at different levels with just a bit of creativiness.
On the other hand, and to complete the skills development, Writting is as quite important as the others. Writting gives our students consciousness of the language they are using in a process that gives them more 'thinking time' than the time they get when they attemp spontaneous conversations. This allows them more opportunity for language processing, that is thinking about the language.
In this matter, taking our students involved in writting activities, it is important to make a distinction between writting-for-learning and writting-for-writting according to Jeremy Harmer. The kind of writting we ask students do will depend, as most other things do, on their age, level, learning styles, and interests. At lower levels, we may give them clear models to follow.
When writting-for-writting, we will want to involve students in the process of writting; this typically involves planning what we are going to write, drafting it, reviewing and editing what we have written and then producing a final version. In a process that should be considered pleasant in different contexts: when emailing, posting on a website, giving opinions of any topic in a written format, fulfilling applications, designing brochures and guides, publishing poems or stories, etc.
The process of correcting written work should not fall into over-correction, in which case it could have a very demotivating effect. Rather than this the teacher has to achieve a balance between being accurate and truthful, on the one hand, and treating students sensitively and sympathetically, on the other. Here is where ABCD Methodology comes to be quite useful. We must give clear instructions and the conditions to write, thus the correction focuses just in the condition given. For example, Basic level students will publish on Facebook a short activities-description of a family member using apropriately the adverbs of frequency studied in class and the simple present tense by friday. This ABCD objective gives the teacher a component to measure: the proper use of frequency adverbs in conjunction with the simple present tense.Sunday, July 10, 2011
TEACH South Africa
TEACH South Africa is a non-for-profit organization that trains and supports the most talented recent university graduates to commit to teaching for a minimum of two years in some of South Africa’s most disadvantaged schools.
Runganayagie's plan aims to provide support on training teachers to use the various technologies they are introduced to, for being able to either individually or collaboratively prepare grade appropriate, thematically integrated, exemplary lesson plan/s to teach English.
The most difficult part of this is that he pretends to work with teachers (Audience) dispersed all over four provinces with almost no technology tool available in South Africa (Condition).
Through a web-designed environment with just one-hour e-session Runganayagie intends to support teachers with their own English-Teaching-Skills Development, part synchronous and part asynchronous guidance.
Runganayagie's Project, in my opinion, is quite ambitious and, what I got from it is that besides being conscious about the obstacles he is going to face, he is very well oriented. He really knows where he wants to go.
I hope sometime I can design and implement such a project similarly ambitious and change the world around me as well as Runganayagie is doing. And I pray God that Runganayagie can get such noble project to success.
This what I got from Runganayagie project.
Dalton Mendoza
Peru
Aural / Oral Meaningful Communication
When teaching listening is really helpful set up a previous background, thus students can take their minds to the context the conversation is really happening; by this time, it is really important to lay down clear and measurable objectives as well, in such way students can take themselves ready for what they are expected to achieve.
Teaching Listening
So many techniques and ways to help students develop their Listening Skills as Lindsay Miller mentions in her article, include Pre, While, and Post-Listening guided activities designed by the teacher.
I found quite interesting what Randall's Cyber Listening Lab does and I took it to classes for Basic and Intermediate Level students; working with these three (pre, while, and post listening) steps.
Another very interesting way to take students involved into English listening is by motivating them to hear real life English. Here is what Lida Baker and Judy Tanka call Using Authentic Audio. That way, I took a radio program recorded on Voice of America News about Excercising and downloaded to work with my students, and since the audio was quite slow, I used the Media Player Feature to faster the audio velocity in a range of 20% in order to suit it to my students level.
Using Authentic Audio recorded from Radio or TV Programs as Baker and Tanka say would carry grammar errors on it, and it would be considered terrible to bring material with grammar errors to class environment, however, "it is the way native speakers speak;" so, exposing our students to Authentic On-Street English would not be such bad idea, but productive.
English Oral Skills
Since communication involves several skills besides aural, oral proficiency requires also practice and devoted attachment to phonetics, rithm, accuracy and prosodic English production. CALL tools can help tune our students pronunciation in a mechanical aspect, but real-context exposure to English Communication is much productive in providing meaningful speaking as Julia Gong mentions in her article The Empoyment of CALL in Teaching Second/Foreign Language Speaking Skills.
A very useful approach I read about comes from the serie Top Notch Professional Development. An article written by Allen Ascher and Joan Saslow gives us ideas for setting things up in a classroom environment to lead a discussion activity with very enriching results.
And, to conclude with my reflections, I can say that propper guide using the appropriate tools can help our students achieve their goal for English Speaking.
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Looking for Something?
Google is a very powerful tool with a huge collection of data in its servers. The algorithm Google uses works quite well allows me get to any web page just by setting my search criteria properly. Here you can find a (.pdf)search guide that will give you an idea of how to set appropriate searchings up.
A web server is a pretty big and powerful computer that stores information about websites in the entire world indexed and classified by topic (tags). How powerful and useful a web search engine is depends on the amount of information it stores and the algorithm is performs.
In order to fulfill the objective of our task, I tried SweetSearch and look for the same information: ABCD Objectives.
As I predicted myself, I got the same result by using SweetSearch as using Google. And I got to the same website with the same material. The key here is to follow the rules for setting up a search appropriately.
Nevertheless, SweetSearch is great for beginer searchers that cannot state a complex instruction on Google.
It was great to try this different web searchers and I am surely going to suggest this to my students in order to help them with their own researches.
Being Clear
I remember I learned that delivering clear objectives in class means making your students aware of what they are really required to achieve in class.
ABCD is a quite clear methodology to follow where we can set:
A: Audience
B: Behaviour
C: Conditions
D: Degree
These components are necesary to deliver clear objectives to class.
The classes I teach are mostly teenagers, and some of them are really interested in learning English and some others just go to classes because of their parents demand or because they need a certification in English Language. Such a difficult class, but challenging at the same time.
That way, I am always focussed to encourage my students to produce English in class with a clear objective. And it is important that I transmit the objective to them and make them feel involved and dared by that.
Here is what I used in a class yesterday:
Pre-Basic 2 Students will be able to ask for and give directions for the location of places in the community according to a map given and trying from different starting points on it, with a 75% location accuracy.
I tried this and challenged my students to achieve this objective. I got good result.
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Running on Week # 1: Blogger!
It was not that hard. However, being the first time I create a blog it was not such easy.
It's just a matter of patience and perservance. Someone said, "The race is not always to the swift, but to those who keep on running." and i did!.
What I did!
Just simple. Folowing the instructions on the course website. I created and account using my personal e-mail in www.blogger.com.
I didn't know it was part of Google Company, and I am not a Google client; nonetheless, it is great to know that I won't pay a penny for this. Google has its own money comming from publicity.
Once I got registered to the site, I had to create my blog. It had to be a Self Reflecting Blog for the course "Building Teacher Skills Through the Interactive Web."
I just had to clic on some icons that are very clear about its purpose-design.
I started writing this and voilà. Just clic on Publish!
What I learnt?
During the process I learnt that in Blogger.com I can create more than one blogs with the same e-mail account. I am really excited about it.
How I can aply it to my classes?
Being able to create more than one Blog with the same account, I am going to create personalized material for promoting discussion among my students. I can publish extra explanations for certain class topics. I can keep my class active in a funny way.
Wow! Such ideas come to my mind. There are so many things I can do for the benefit of my students and my own teaching performance.
This is just the beginning. We will keep this thing running and let's see what's comming on.
































