I am learning so much about the technological resources that are available out there through an online graduate class that I am taking. I can't believe how "in the dark" I've been about all of this exciting new stuff! Well, at least now the light bulb is going on! Better late than never!
I recently joined Google Reader, which is a much easier way to keep track of all of the new posts by the authors of the Blogs I have been following. One Blog I am following is called "Free Technology for Teachers" by Richard Byrne. The link to this particular blog is given below.
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/
There was one post by the author that had to do with an online site that taught lessons for learning 60 languages. He describes this site as containing "self paced" lessons where the students complete activities in the target language using their native language to help them make a comparison. I love this idea because the students aren't engaging in yet another site that "translates" incorrectly, they are actually engaging in a learning process that could be fun! I would definitely use this resource in my classroom. Below is the link to my comment on this particular post.
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2011/09/pronunciator-lessons-for-learning-60.html#disqus_thread
Enjoy!
I am using this blog for educational purposes so that I might expand my knowledge on implementing new ideas in the classroom, especially in regards to technology in second language classrooms.
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
"A Vision of K-12 Students Today"
A "Brave New Digital World"
I've recently done some reading in this great book called "Brave New Digital World" by Robert Blake and I would like to share with you some ideas of his that have intrigued me and I am hoping they will spark some thoughts in you as well! Throughout this book, Blake aspires to answer two significant questions:
(1) What does technology have to offer for an L2 (Second Language) classroom?
(2) How can you tie in technologically assisted activities into the foreign language curriculum?
The first chapter of this book gives an overview of SLA (Second Language Acquistion), Language Teaching, and Technology. There is not one idea in particular that stood out to me, however, several ideas really got me thinking about my future classroom in regards to implementing technology. This author is interesting yet informative, so I took a lot out of what he had to say. I would like to share with you a number of quotes that have helped/inspired me from this first chapter in hopes that you too might be able to take something away from it. I will highlight the ones that I thought had the most impact on my own thinking.
"An increasingly multicultural world in global and local contexts will put intense pressure on our profession to find the most efficient and readily accessible ways to learn another language. To that end, using technology is a challenge that language professionals must squarely face and to which they must endeavor to find pedagogically principled responses."---Robert Blake
(1) What does technology have to offer for an L2 (Second Language) classroom?
(2) How can you tie in technologically assisted activities into the foreign language curriculum?
The first chapter of this book gives an overview of SLA (Second Language Acquistion), Language Teaching, and Technology. There is not one idea in particular that stood out to me, however, several ideas really got me thinking about my future classroom in regards to implementing technology. This author is interesting yet informative, so I took a lot out of what he had to say. I would like to share with you a number of quotes that have helped/inspired me from this first chapter in hopes that you too might be able to take something away from it. I will highlight the ones that I thought had the most impact on my own thinking.
- "People's interactions with computers, television, and new media are fundamentally social and natural, just like interactions in real life." ---Reeves and Nass (1996, 5)
- "Computers can make a significant contribution to the SLA process because the students themselves feel that they are interacting with the computer in a real social manner." ---Robert Blake via Reeves and Nass
- "More important, the web gives all peoples a channel to express their voice, promote their self-image, and legitimize their goals. This sense of authenticity provides endless topics for cross-cultural analysis and discussions in any content-driven classroom." ---Robert Blake
- "Networked exchanges seem to help all individuals in language classes engage more frequently, with greater confidence, and with greater enthusiasm in the communicative process than is characteristic for similar students in oral classrooms." ---Swaffar (1998, 1)
- "One of the most significant problems facing computer-using teachers is that no education curriculum can prepare them for the swift and continuing changes that take place in the world of technology." --- Hanson-Smith (2006, 301)
- "Will technology expand in the future from this complementary role to replacing the teacher and the classroom venue completely? A rational response to this question might be that technology will not replace teachers in the future, but rather teachers who use technology will probably replace teachers who do not." ---Robert Blake via Clifford (1987, 13)
- "...L2 learners need input that is both challenging and accessible; they need comprehensible input that is within their grasp, input just slightly more complex than their current, still emerging, mental representation of the target language, or what researchers have called their interlanguage." ---Robert Blake via Gass and Selinker (2001, 11)
- "Technology, then if cleverly designed and properly implemented into the curriculum, has a vital role to play in augmenting the opportunities for L2 learners to receive target-language input." ---Robert Blake
"An increasingly multicultural world in global and local contexts will put intense pressure on our profession to find the most efficient and readily accessible ways to learn another language. To that end, using technology is a challenge that language professionals must squarely face and to which they must endeavor to find pedagogically principled responses."---Robert Blake
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Internet Safety in the Classroom
Dear Students,
There are a great number of things that you must take into consideration when posting anything on the Internet. I know a lot of you are familiar with social networking sites and whatnot, but, there are a lot of different methods out there that you can follow to keep yourself and others safe. I ask you kindly to take this information seriously.
Are you aware that...
I have posted a link to an article about cyber safety. Why don't you expand on this idea and see if there are any other ways that you can think of to keep yourself safe?
www.connectsafely.org/safety-tips-and-advice.html
There are a great number of things that you must take into consideration when posting anything on the Internet. I know a lot of you are familiar with social networking sites and whatnot, but, there are a lot of different methods out there that you can follow to keep yourself and others safe. I ask you kindly to take this information seriously.
Are you aware that...
- if you have your Facebook page set up as "publicly searchable" that your page can be found on the Internet, and not JUST through Facebook itself?
- using location-sharing programs, through Facebook, Twitter, etc...where you may "check in" to places, you are leaking your exact location to whomever reads it?
- nothing is private online; if you post something it can travel far and fast and can be read by who knows who?
I have posted a link to an article about cyber safety. Why don't you expand on this idea and see if there are any other ways that you can think of to keep yourself safe?
www.connectsafely.org/safety-tips-and-advice.html
Using Blogs in an ESL Classroom
Isn't it funny how we have all of these New York State Learning Standards that we absolutely must take into account while we as educators are planning and implementing our lessons and very few of these state standards and performance indicators actually focus on technology specifically? It's a puzzling thought since so much of what we do today, inside and outside of the classroom, relies heavily upon technology. This is when we educators must "think outside the box." Sure, the standards and performance indicators don't outwardly say "Students will use technology to...," however, this does not mean that you cannot use any of these standards and performance indicators when introducing technology into a lesson. Let's face it, when we use technology in the classroom, students are taking away a lot more than simply learning how to use that technology.
I am not a current educator, however; I am currently attending graduate school. I have a BS in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) and I am studying to obtain a Master's Degree in ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages.) At the end of my Master's program I will be a professionally certified ESL (English as a Second Language) teacher, grades K-12. As a future educator I am always trying to discover new and innovative ways to teach, and what could be more new and innovative than technology? One of the biggest technologies that has entered our world is blogging. I have presented myself with this question: "What are some ways in which I could include the use of blogs in my own teaching and what state standards (in the field of ESL) would my students be meeting as a result?"
Since I will be a certified teacher of grades K-12, I will give three examples of how I would include the use of blogs in my classroom; one at the elementary level, one at the middle school level, and one at the high school level. I will then provide the ESL New York State Learning Standards for each level that this student blogging would meet.
*Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
2. Middle School Level (Grades 5-8)
In this type of classroom I could use a blog to post prompts for writing. This could serve as a good practice for them in communicating effectively to both myself and their peers through writing, and even reading. I could post a question that all of the students must answer and after they have answered this question I could in turn have them each ask a question of their peers. I could pick one of these questions to ask in the following writing prompt and continue this process until all of the questions have been answered. I would invite the use of comments on other students' responses so that they may take their peers' advice and improve upon their writing skills. I could use a process similar to a peer review.
* Standard 2: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for literary response, enjoyment, and expression
* Standard 3: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for critical analysis and evaluation
* Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
3. High School Level (Grades 9-12)
In this type of classroom I could use a blog to link our classroom with another class somewhere else in the world, which could include the U.S. It could be relating to the students' native countries or somewhere completely different. Through this blog the students could learn a lot from the other students and could also gain great practice through communicating. This type of blogging could be used for a project where they try to find similarities and differences between themselves and the other students, especially if they come from different backgrounds and cultures. We could then showcase these discoveries through this blog and what they have learned in the process.
*Standard 3: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for critical analysis and evaluation
*Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
*Standard 5: Students will demonstrate cross-cultural knowledge and understanding
I am not a current educator, however; I am currently attending graduate school. I have a BS in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) and I am studying to obtain a Master's Degree in ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages.) At the end of my Master's program I will be a professionally certified ESL (English as a Second Language) teacher, grades K-12. As a future educator I am always trying to discover new and innovative ways to teach, and what could be more new and innovative than technology? One of the biggest technologies that has entered our world is blogging. I have presented myself with this question: "What are some ways in which I could include the use of blogs in my own teaching and what state standards (in the field of ESL) would my students be meeting as a result?"
Since I will be a certified teacher of grades K-12, I will give three examples of how I would include the use of blogs in my classroom; one at the elementary level, one at the middle school level, and one at the high school level. I will then provide the ESL New York State Learning Standards for each level that this student blogging would meet.
- Elementary School Level (Grades K-4)
- State Standards Addressed:
*Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
2. Middle School Level (Grades 5-8)
In this type of classroom I could use a blog to post prompts for writing. This could serve as a good practice for them in communicating effectively to both myself and their peers through writing, and even reading. I could post a question that all of the students must answer and after they have answered this question I could in turn have them each ask a question of their peers. I could pick one of these questions to ask in the following writing prompt and continue this process until all of the questions have been answered. I would invite the use of comments on other students' responses so that they may take their peers' advice and improve upon their writing skills. I could use a process similar to a peer review.
- State Standards Addressed:
* Standard 2: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for literary response, enjoyment, and expression
* Standard 3: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for critical analysis and evaluation
* Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
3. High School Level (Grades 9-12)
In this type of classroom I could use a blog to link our classroom with another class somewhere else in the world, which could include the U.S. It could be relating to the students' native countries or somewhere completely different. Through this blog the students could learn a lot from the other students and could also gain great practice through communicating. This type of blogging could be used for a project where they try to find similarities and differences between themselves and the other students, especially if they come from different backgrounds and cultures. We could then showcase these discoveries through this blog and what they have learned in the process.
- State Standards Addressed:
*Standard 3: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for critical analysis and evaluation
*Standard 4: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for classroom and social interaction
*Standard 5: Students will demonstrate cross-cultural knowledge and understanding
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