Friday, September 25, 2009

This Is Where I Am Now


This Is Where I Am Now
Originally uploaded by carlaarena
My son is sick. I got home earlier. Now, I can enjoy the comfort of my home in a pleasant afternoon to be with my kids, work a bit and connect to my friends, colleagues in the Web Tools group. What else could I want from life?

Note: I took this photo from my cellphone, used the email Flickr gives me to send photos from emails, cellphones, and then I just clicked the "blog this" button!

Friday, September 4, 2009

Blogging with language students

Believe it or not, the most important word in this post title is the preposition. I say that because it is very common to see educators blogging at students, at other educators or about students. But the beauty of such a tool is actually to be able to blog with your students.

The first choice you have to make when blogging with students is what kind of blogging you will have:
- A teacher's blog in which students participate in the comment area
- A class blog in which all students are added as authors
- A class portal (using tools like 21classes, pageflakes or netvibes) with students' individual blogs

There aren't better or worse options, all of them work and the examples used to illustrate my suggestions come from the three kinds of blogging:

1. Working with students' writing
The characteristic of being able to receive comments and to edit posts makes a blog the perfect environment for process writing.

1.1 Peer Feedback
You could have class blog and have students post their initial drafts there. You and other students could give feedback and students can then edit their writing in the blog. check these examples of a students giving (previously instructed) peer feedback on content and organization:
- South Africa (esp. Tahís' comment)
- Australia (esp. Luciana's comment)

1.2 World Feedback
The usual route of a student's writing is this: Student gives it to teacher, teacher corrects it and gives it back to student, student sees the grade and rarely cares about mistakes, student puts writing in a drawer (hopefully) or throws it away (most probably).

However, by allowing learners' to realize that in a blog they are writing to a global audience and that anybody can find, read and react to their writings, they can develop a better sense of authorship and readership. Writing to one person only (the teacher) is a very artificial task, whereas writing to a real audience, who is more interested in the content rather than the form (the world), is more authentic.

By networking with other language educators, you could have language students and teachers from different countries read your students' writings and give them meaningful feedback.
Check out the following examples. Students get really excited when they see real people from different countries are reading their writings:
- Chocolate com Pimenta
- Malhação
- The Simpsons
- Kennan and Kell - notice how, in this last example, students from different classes (one from Casa Thomas Jefferson south branch and the other from CTJ north branch) get into real information exchange to whether the actor from the show has really died or not.

1.3 Teasers
You could brainstorm for ideas or simply generate expectations in students about he writing they will have to do. I have used this to introduce a writing about their favorite TV show and about their dream vacation destination.

2. Intercultural Projects
Again by networking with (language) educators from different countries, you could have joint projects with a class of English students in a different country. Here are two ideas:

2.1 What makes your country unique
You could ask your students to answer the question "What makes Brazil (or their country) a unique country" using a word, phrase, sentence, paragraph, picture(s), video(s), etc. and then have them post their finding in the class blog or their own blogs.

Last semester I did this with my students and I had Sophie, a teacher in Australia, do the same with her ESL students. We compiled students answers in an animoto video and here are the results:

- What makes Australia a unique coutry video and word map using wordle

2.2 Questions about your country
You could also have students come up with questions about the other students' coutry(ies). Send them the questions and they can publish their answers, which could also generate more discussions. Here are some of the posts with what my students answered about Brazil and here the one in which EFL students in Australia answered to my students' questions.

You can also vary the way the questinos are answered. For example, in this blog post you can see in a video the answers my students in Brazil gave questions asked by Russian college students.

3. Grammar

3.1 Modal Vebs of Speculation in the past
I searched for images on the web, put them together in a slide.com slide and asked students to write sentences in this blog post about what might/could/may/must/can't have happened to the people in the pictures.

3.2 Second Conditional
I embedded this "If I had a million dollars" video in the blog post and students had to write in the comments what they would do if they had a million dollars.

To get away from the cliche, next time I work with second conditionals, I'll definitely use this other video - if my nose was running money (check it out - it's really funny).

Final Considerations
Only two of them:
- two groups that I recommend if you want to to start networking with other language educators are Learning With Computers and Webheads In Action. Join them!

- All digital activites I propose to students are optional. However, as an incentive, I have been doing something Carla Arena suggested: the HALL OF DIGITAL EXCELLENCE. It's a grid with students' names and the online tasks on the wall and, for each task accomplished, they get a tick in the chart. At the end of the semester the most digitally excellent student gets a prize. It's interesting to see how this HALL works on their egos...

I hope you find some of these suggestions useful!

Ronaldo Lima Jr
more EdTech tips on my blog ihopeitworks

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Stories for the Interactive White Board

I couldn't miss this one and pass it along to you all.

This site is an exciting compilation of stories that are just great to be projected on a big scree for the little ones or even for our adult classes.

Take a look at it and enjoy! Let us know if it was useful for you and if you planned something for it.

http://plattsburgh.neric.org/oak/smartboard/stories.htm

Monday, August 10, 2009

Week 1 - Getting Started


photo by http://www.flickr.com/photos/jonathangill/2357002711

Bud the Teacher wrote a thought-provoking blog post with an open letter to the teachers available at http://budtheteacher.com/blog/2008/08/16/an-open-letter-to-teachers/

After reading his blog post, reflect and share with your colleagues two aspects of your teaching that you want to change or give a different approach.

Then, reply to at least one of your peers by adding a comment or asking a question.

Make this space an open area for your thoughts about the beginning of this journey.

Click on "Comments".

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Telling a Story, Developing Multiliteracies

I just got this video via Twitter (a microblogging site) from a dear friend, Ana Maria Menezes, a mineirinha, who has a bag full of tricks to share.




The story is simple, but then, I just realized that it is a wonderful springboard to explore language. Imagine a group activity, or even a collaborative project with sister classes in which they have the same claymation and learners are responsible for creating the stories to go with the animation. They could even record the stories.

How motivating would that be? Is it the kind of experiential learning we could add more frequently to our lesson plans? Do you have any other ideas to go with this video? Or do you have any other video that could be used for the same idea?

Originally posted on Thursday, October 2, 2008

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Google Reader - RSS

As we are talking this week about RSS and how to add all our favorite blogs, sites, wikis to our Google Reader, I've aggregated all participants blogs in one folder in Google Reader and then I made the folder public by going to the "settings", "Folders and tags". After making it public, I clicked on "add a blogroll to your site", I copied the crazy code there and just copied to this post so that you have an idea of it. The ideal is to add it to your class sidebar if you have students with individual blogs, or if you want to call the attention of your blog audience to certain blogs you enjoy reading.





Here's how the blogroll will look like:





You can also add a "clip", which is like the latest updates on the group blogs so that it's easier for your audience and you to visualize the latest posts on a blog, for example:




And how about sharing a clip of your favorite shared items?




All of this is made through the "Settings" part of your google reader. If you have any questions or comments about this, just ask here!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Edublog Talk - part 2

As I explore the new blogging endeavors of the Webtools4Educators participants, I feel the same excitement I had when I started blogging. It´s a semantic world where we reveal ourselves, we learn more about ourselves and our preferences, tendencies. It´s a faithful portraits of the individuals in their many facets.

One main challenge of blogging is certainly how to keep the conversations going, how to encourage your audience to reply, to comment, to think. What strategies would you use to encourage this dialogic approach?

Well, here´s my comment to all of you and one way to encourage the flow of conversations. You´ve been actively interacting, so instead of keeping the conversation in the comment area, I bring it again to the front page with another post. Any more brilliant ideas? I´d love to finish the week with a pout-pourri of effective ways of edublog talk.

Please, be a little patient for the video to load.