Monday 22 April 2013

Pintrest

Pinterest is another online tool I found particularly easy to set up and generate some useful teaching / learning material from.
The idea came to me while covering a class today. We revised some 'films and cinema' vocabulary and ended up talking about our favourite films. It was a very engaging and lively discussion and it was obvious that the students were keen to have a record of films they talked about, so that they could look them up and watch.  This gave me an idea for a pinterest board.
 I pinned the posters of my top 10 favourite films and added a short comment about each of them. In my commentary I included words and expressions that came up during today's lesson to provide students with a) context and use; b) permanent record of reference.
The link to my board is going to be sent to the students together with the list of instructions:
1. follow the link
2. register with pinterest
3. read my comments and  identify vocabulary from today's lesson
4. like / comment on my selection of films
5. create your own board of top 10 favourite films and comment on each of them
6. send a link to your teacher and classmates


My top 10 favourite films

Monday 25 March 2013

using wikis

It was interesting to find out a bit more about web 2 technology and the teaching potential it may have if used appropriately.

I visited  wikispaces.com and was surprised how easily accessible this website is. The registration process is straight forward and literally takes a couple of minutes. The website is very easy to navigate and there is a short tutorial available when you first log in - this makes it even more accessible for someone (like myself) who has never used wiki style websites.

The layout is very clear and you can see straight away that there is a lot of potential there. You can personalise your wiki in terms of its layout, face and content. It allows you to add widgets, pictures, links and RSS feeds to your site as well as upload files and invite other people to join you.

The fact that it's easy to set up, edit (changing font type, colour and size to cater for users with reading difficulties, dyslexia etc) and navigate makes it extremely accessible and therefore suitable to be used as a teaching tool. I can imagine using it as a tool to set my students additional homework and provide materials for autonomous / flipped learning. It would also make a good collaborative tool as it allows memebers to communicate and exchange resources/ideas in a safe, monitored environment.

It would take time to train some of my ESOL learners (language barrier but also limited electronic literacies) to become competent at using wikispaces, but I would definitely give it a go with a group of EFL learners of the intermediate level and above.

observation report

Monday 18 March 2013

audioboo

This tool is fantastic! Dead easy to use and gives you this instant opportunity to creat a podcast on the go!
I will definitely use it to make listening recordings to support my lessons, but most of all, I am going to encourage my students to use it themselves. This would be great for speaking and listeninng exams preparation, when students need to give a 1min presentation. This will work great for raising self awareness in terms of grammatical errors and pronunciation.

Technology - enhancing or inhibiting learning?

Technology is an integral part of our everyday life and therefore should be equally integrated into teaching and learning. It's vital that we use it to enhhance teaching and learning but also to equip our students with essentail life skills, which computer literacy has become a part of.

Enhancing learning
No doubt about it - there are so many different tools out there that can make our lessons more interesting, motivating and efficient. It works both for the teacher - planning, presentation, setting additional work, checking homework, recycling material etc, and for the students - generating interest, making activities interactive and involving, promoting autonomous learning and developing new computer skills.

Inhabiting learning? - this can happen if technology is 1) overused 2) used inappropriately 3) requires skills students lack.

RSS technology

RSS is a term I have heard about but wasn't really aware of what it was. It was interesting to find out that it stands for Really Simple Sindication and is commonly referred to as Push Technology.

I think it would be useful to make students aware of the fact that they can keep up to date with certain websites and web 2.0 tools by subscribing to them or setting up RSS feeds. I could encourage them to subscribe to my youtube account so that they are instantly notified of any new videos I add/recommend. Social media networks such as twitter or facebook also use this kind of 'push' services in a form of notifying followers/friends of any changes to the user's timeline.