Skip to main content

Home/ CALL_IS_VSL/ Group items tagged composition

Rss Feed Group items tagged

TESOL CALL-IS

Teaching Writing with Google Docs - 3 views

  •  
    Sharing docs on Google Drive creates an excellent environment for good composition practices, especially in a flipped classroom. Students begin writing by structuring in class on computers, using templates and discussion of the assignment with the teacher. Plagiarism is non-existent as all interactions with the text are transparent.
TESOL CALL-IS

Channelnewsasia.com - 0 views

  • "They learn literary devices; that means they learn metaphors, they learn similes - all these are part of poetry writing, part of writing in novels. So when pupils identify these, they can also identify these in comprehension passages and they are able to do comprehension better and understand what is written better and in composition. They learn how to write a story using the plot, the setting, and all these are enhanced through film appreciation, through drama."
  • "They learn literary devices; that means they learn metaphors, they learn similes - all these are part of poetry writing, part of writing in novels. So when pupils identify these, they can also identify these in comprehension passages and they are able to do comprehension better and understand what is written better and in composition. They learn how to write a story using the plot, the setting, and all these are enhanced through film appreciation, through drama."
  •  
    Literature is compulsory at this secondary school in Malaysia.
TESOL CALL-IS

Purdue OWL Site Map - 1 views

  •  
    The targeted audience of this website are teachers and intermediate and advanced ESL students. This rich website has a variety of resources for writing students, covering the following topics (to name a few): - General writing process - Grammar, punctuation, and spelling - Rhetoric - ESL resources - Business writing and resume - Subject specific writing - Creative writing - Research, citation, and documentation FROM Lena Shvidko The grand-daddy of all OWLs -- extremely comprehensive, both for composition and writing, and grammar, email etiquette, proofreading, etc., and includes advice for ESL/EFL writers.
TESOL CALL-IS

Free Technology for Teachers: Poetica - Edit Documents Online as if You Were Writing on... - 0 views

  •  
    Poetica is still in Beta stage as of this writing, but looks to be a good service for composition and peer editing. You click on a space or word, drag out a line and type in a comment or question. R. Byrne has a nice image of the interface.
TESOL CALL-IS

Using Visible Thinking Strategies to Develop Expert Learners | The Construction Zone - 1 views

  •  
    "Back in the day-we usually referred to visible thinking as explicit thinking. But, as with many solid, worthwhile constructs, they are not readily adopted and so often reappear decades (or centuries!) later under a new name with new advocates and with a new dream that maybe this time things might stick and better the lives of students. "So it is with visible thinking. The basic idea is to uncover the implicit and inert thinking and to make that thinking discussable and perhaps available to others. For it is by objectifying knowledge that we can come to understand it." Talking through a project or the composition process is another way to make learning explicit. Explicit understanding of the process is part of Bloom's Taxonomy.
TESOL CALL-IS

PenPal Schools - Connect and Learn Together ❘ PenPalSchools - 3 views

  •  
    classrooms join to learn technology skills while collaborating online; reading comprehension; writing/composition; and social/emotion skills. A techn approach to a long-standing concept. STUDENTS: JOIN YOUR CLASS ADMINISTRATORS: START HERE Picture What will your students learn with their PenPals? CHOOSE A PROJECT All projects promote language, technology, and social-emotional skills."
TESOL CALL-IS

Ableton Learning Music - @ICTmagic - UKEdChat.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Description: A wonderfully designed site with lessons and tools to create digital music and teach music theory. Lessons start at a very basic level and build to advanced compositions." For middle and higher students. May get the uninterested moving.
TESOL CALL-IS

NOVA Elements | PBS LearningMedia - 0 views

  •  
    Use the app to analyze the chemical composition of everyday objects. Could be a hook to bring students to science. T/h to M Burrett
TESOL CALL-IS

Teaching Writing in EFL/ESL Reading List - 6 views

  • Ferris DR (1994) Rhetorical strategies in student persuasive writing: differences between native and non-native speakers. Research in the Teaching of English 28(1): 45-. Ferris DR (1997) The influence of teacher commentary on student revision. TESOL Quarterly 31(2): 315-. Ferris DR (2002) Treatment of Error in Second Language Student Writing. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Ferris DR (2003) Response to Student Writing: Implications for Second Language Students. Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum. Ferris DR (2004) The “grammar correction” debate in L2 writing: where are we, and where do we go from here? (and what do we do in the meantime…?) Journal of Second Language Writing 13: 49-62. Ferris DR & Hedgcock JS (1998) Teaching ESL Composition: Purpose, Process, and Practice. Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum.
  •  
    Recommends Ferris & Hedgcock and Kroll
TESOL CALL-IS

Jing Screen Cast training videos and ideas - R. Stannard - 2 views

  •  
    A large collection of ways to use Jing to teach languages, including feedback, vocabulary and grammar, timelines, using your webcam, reading, etc.
TESOL CALL-IS

Writing Strategy: Dialogue Journals - TESOL Connections - June 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    The concept is easily adapted to a higher end technology, using blogs or wikis. These might be private, with only teachers making responses, or open to classmates so that the comments run freely. Yes, students really do improve by free writing in quantity, esp. as they will be corrected and guided by the teacher elsewhere in the course.
TESOL CALL-IS

LEE3 & more - 2 views

  •  
    A class blog demonstrating how students use blogs (PENZU) for their own work while the teacher keeps them on track with assignments in this blogspot blog.
TESOL CALL-IS

The Impact of Digital Tools on Student Writing and How Writing is Taught in Schools | P... - 2 views

  •  
    "A survey of teachers who instruct American middle and high school students finds that digital technologies are impacting student writing in myriad ways and there are significant advantages from tech-based learning." An interesting study showing that teachers gave students lowest ratings on issues of fair use and copyright.
TESOL CALL-IS

IUB Writing Tutorial Services Pamphlets - 7 views

  •  
    pdf files with papers on such topics as "How to Write a Thesis Statement," "Paragraphs and Topic Sentences," "Taking an Essay Exam," etc.
TESOL CALL-IS

Resources | Writing Support | Pepperdine Community​ - 1 views

  •  
    These resources include an APA Powerpoint tutorial, the APA Sixth Edition, advice on writing a dissertaion -- with samples -- the mechnaics of writing/grammar, and how to avoid plagiarism. For advanced, academic students.
TESOL CALL-IS

Literature Lesson On Themes: Creating Found Poems - 1 views

  •  
    A great lesson plan for writing collaboratively. Students extract memento and write them on large cards/pieces of paper. They then create the poem by placing the cards on the floor or table. The teacher (or students) select a topic that the quotations should reflect. It makes students thing about the real meanings within the text. Students discuss their found quotations as they write them. The 5 min. video shows students discussing and coming to realizations as they collect and collaborate. Great speaking, writing, reading activity.
TESOL CALL-IS

Effective Peer Feedback Through Modeling: Part 1 | TESOL Blog - 0 views

  •  
    "Peer review has long been regarded as beneficial practice in the teaching of writing. In North American educational settings, learners are often asked to provide feedback on each other's papers. However, when international students come to study either in intensive English programs or in institutions of higher education, they may encounter difficulties during peer review activities because many of them never had experiences with this kind of practice. As a result, students tend to give each other broad, irrelevant, essentially unhelpful comments." This blog post offers help in training students for giving good feedback.
TESOL CALL-IS

10 Things I've Learned (So Far) from Making a Meta-MOOC - 0 views

  • Technology has a way of making people lose their marbles — both the hype and the hysteria we saw a year ago were ridiculous.  It is good that society in general is hitting the pause button. Is there a need for online education? Absolutely. Are MOOCs the best way? Probably not in most situations, but possibly in some, and, potentially, in a future iteration, massive learning possibilities well might offer something to those otherwise excluded from higher education (by reasons of cost, time, location, disability, or other impediments).
  • Also, in the flipped classroom model, there is no cost saving; in fact, there is more individual attention. The MOOC video doesn’t save money since, we know, it requires all the human and technological apparatus beyond the video in order to be effective. A professor has many functions in a university beyond giving a lecture — including research, training future graduate students, advising, and running the university, teaching specialized advance courses, and moving fields of knowledge forward.
  • My face-to-face students will learn about the history and future of higher education partly by serving as “community wranglers” each week in the MOOC, their main effort being to transform the static videos into participatory conversations.  
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • I’ve been humbled all over again by the innovation, ingenuity, and dedication of teachers — to their field, to their subject matter, and to anonymous students worldwide. My favorite is Professor Al Filreis of the University of Pennsylvania who teaches ModPo (Modern and Contemporary American Poetry) as a seminar.  Each week students, onsite and online, discuss a poem in real time. There are abundant office hours, discussion leaders, and even a phone number you can call to discuss your interpretations of the week’s poem. ModPo students are so loyal that, when Al gave a talk at Duke, several of his students drove in from two and three states away to be able to testify to how much they cherished the opportunity to talk about poetry together online. Difficult contemporary poets who had maybe 200 readers before now have thousands of passionate fans worldwide.
  • Interestingly, MOOCs turn out to be a great advertisement for the humanities too. There was a time when people assumed MOOC participants would only be interested in technical or vocational training. Surprise! It turns out people want to learn about culture, history, philosophy, social issues of all kinds. Even in those non-US countries where there is no tradition of liberal arts or general education, people are clamoring to both general and highly specialized liberal arts courses.
  • First let’s talk about the MOOC makers, the professors. Once the glamor goes away, why would anyone make a MOOC? I cannot speak for anyone else — since it is clear that there is wide variation in how profs are paid to design MOOCs — so let me just tell you my arrangement. I was offered $10,000 to create and teach a MOOC. Given the amount of time I’ve spent over the last seven months and that I anticipate once the MOOC begins, that’s less than minimum wage. I do this as an overload; it in no way changes my Duke salary or job requirement. More to the point, I will not be seeing a penny of that stipend. It’s in a special account that goes to the TAs for salary, to travel for the assistants to go to conferences for their own professional development, for travel to make parts of the MOOC that we’ve filmed at other locations, for equipment, and so forth. If I weren’t learning so much and enjoying it so much or if it weren’t entirely voluntary (no one put me up to this!), it would be a rip off. I have control over whether my course is run again or whether anyone else could use it.
  • Interestingly, since MOOCs, I have heard more faculty members — senior and junior — talking about the quality of teaching and learning than I have ever heard before in my career.
  • 9. The best use of MOOCs may not be to deliver uniform content massively but to create communities and networks of passionate learners galvanized around a particular topic of shared interest. To my mind, the potential for thousands of people to work together in local and distributed learning communities is very exciting. In a world where news has devolved into grandstanding, badgering, hyperbole, accusation, and sometimes even falsehood, I love the greater public good of intelligent, thoughtful, accurate, reliable content on deep and important subjects — whether algebra, genomics, Buddhist scripture, ethics, cryptography, classical music composition, or parallel programming (to list just a few offerings coming up on the Coursera platform). It is a huge public good when millions and millions of people worldwide want to be more informed, educated, trained, or simply inspired.
  • The “In our meta-MOOC” seems to me to be an over complication, and is in fact describing the original MOOC (now referred to as cMOOC) based around concepts of Connectivism (Downes & Siemens) itself drawing on Communities of Practice theory of learning (Wenger). This work was underway in 2008 http://halfanhour.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/mooc-resurgence-of-community-in-online.html
TESOL CALL-IS

Berta Webheads Convergence May24_2009 - 0 views

  •  
    Discusses how to deal with error correction and revisions with student writing online.
TESOL CALL-IS

Daniel Learned ALL about Audiences Yesterday. | CTQ - 0 views

  •  
    It's all about an authentic learning experience! The 12-13-yr-old kids in this blog discussion really learned a lot more than about the nature of complex carbs in this exchange of views. Should kids be involved in authentic debate -- well, sure!
1 - 20 of 28 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page