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Marlene Johnshoy

UNI-Collaboration | Online Intercultural Exchange - 3 views

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    This site has information about creating and assessing telecollaborative projects - and assessing the "Telecollaboratively Effective Person" (TEP). This is a link to the Evaluation section which has many resources, rubric, descriptors, and examples of how to assess a telecollaborative activity.
papolochan56

Elearning - Ditch That Textbook - 1 views

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    Matt Miller has a wonderful website that has so many helpful items. I am sharing this because these items include a variety of useful activities, templates and ideas regarding online teaching.
Enrica Ardemagni

Winamp - 0 views

An free download audio option http://www.winamp.com/ This app is a way of recording both for instructors and students. They have a fee downloadable version or a pro paid version and it works mp3. I...

@carlatech13 app audio

started by Enrica Ardemagni on 04 Aug 13 no follow-up yet
Marlene Johnshoy

Technology and Education | Box of Tricks - 3 views

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    "Over the past academic year, my students and I have been experimenting with the use of a number of web based applications (often known as Web 2.0 tools). My aim has been to enhance our schemes of work by providing our students with new and exciting learning opportunities. In my opinion, using technology effectively has clear benefits for both teaching and learning and can help to improve motivation by engaging pupils in activities which, perhaps, step out of their ordinary school experience and which show them that it is possible to teach and learn about a subject using tools similar to those they use daily outside school. In other words, we have tried to use the types of tools with which they are often already familiar. I have written about each of these individual tools in separate posts, but I thought it would be useful to list the ten most used internet applications on one post. As ever, I aim to provide, not only a list of the web applications we have used, but also examples of practice which you may wish to follow or, indeed, improve upon. Therefore, each of the entries below has links leading to lesson plans which have incorporated the tools as well as working examples of students' work where appropriate. Without further ado, and in alphabetical order, my ten tried and tested internet tools for teachers are:"
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    from a FL teacher in England - who tries and tests a number of tech tools. Here are his 10 favorite web 2.0 apps.
Marlene Johnshoy

Tomorrow's College - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

  • The University System of Maryland now requires undergraduates to take 12 credits in alternative learning modes, including online. Texas has proposed a similar rule. The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system is pushing to have 25 percent of credits earned online by 2015.
  • In a test, there's no one telling you that you can't look at the book, says Ariel Hatten, 20, a junior and nursing major who considers her online class an easy A. "No one enforces you to do the right thing" in an online course, Ms. Hatten says. "It's at your discretion. I care about my grade, so if I don't know the answer, I'm not gonna let myself fail when I have an opportunity to look in the book."
  • When Central Florida began experimenting with online courses in the mid-1990s, it didn't expect demand from on-campus students like Ms. Black. Officials figured they'd get students who lived far away. But early on, about 75 percent of online students were already on the campus or lived nearby.
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  • The university has a severe shortage of classroom space.
  • The university remains 40 percent short on classroom space. One of its coping strategies is invisible on a campus dotted with new buildings—football stadium, basketball arena, pastel dorms—that scream Traditional State U. UCF has become a hybrid university.
  • Blended classes generate the highest student evaluations of any learning mode at Central Florida, and, like her classmates, Ms. Black is a fan.
  • One of her mixed-mode professors, Youngsoo Choi, likes the online component for another reason: It makes students grapple with material before they meet for class.
  • ther students customize their own unofficial blends
  • Some students show up more than an hour early for a seat, but attendance isn't mandatory. Students can also watch online videos of the lectures any time. Mr. Harrison catches some lectures and skips others. He likes the freedom of these video classes.
  • There's a lot of distractions that come with putting courses on the Internet."
  • His first experience with an online course was a struggle. He got lazy. He'd tell himself, I'll watch the lecture between 2 and 4 p.m. Something would come up. He'd say, I'll watch two tomorrow. He fell behind. There was no help. He got a C.
  • "I tell them, 'Listen, I don't want you to think that I'm stalking you or anything, but I will certainly try to get ahold of you if you're not turning in work and participating,'" she says. Some are adolescents, she notes. Most don't have online experience.
Marlene Johnshoy

50 Ways To Use Music & Song - EFL 2.0 Teacher Talk - 3 views

  • Research suggests that students perform tasks where concentration is required, better with music playing in the background.
    • lars3969
       
      I'm guessing that it should be instrumental. Classical or jazz?
    • Marlene Johnshoy
       
      They say that classical works best for this - right brain, left brain thing.
    • lars3969
       
      This sounds awesome!
    • lars3969
       
      Jazz chants, jazz chants. I feel like these get mentioned all the time, yet I know no teacher who has ever used them...
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  • Students make a doodle video.  It’s easy to do and read about it here.  Students each make a picture for one line of a song. Put them together and then make a movie.
  • Carolyn Graham’s “Jazz Chants” are perfect for any class, young or old. The repetition, rhythm and simplicity of them make any lesson very effective.
    • lars3969
       
      Brilliant!
  • “Second language singers”
    • lars3969
       
      I like how simple this is.
  • Some in the song, some not. Students copy, listen, circle the vocabulary they hear.
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    This blog has good resources - some related to tech and some not. I like that the author links to a lot of activity and lesson plans - it's good to have models.
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    This blog has good resources - some related to tech and some not. I like that the author links to a lot of activity and lesson plans - it's good to have models.
Marlene Johnshoy

Unlock Students' Potential: Developing 21st Century Skills Using Emerging Technologies ... - 2 views

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    ACTFL 2012 presentation Take a look at the wiki link for a lot of information Lauren has put online from this workshop
Beth Kautz

11970.pdf - 2 views

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    " Using TPCK with digital story issues in educational technology Abstract Digital storytelling is recognized as a motivating students in critical thinking and reflective learni ng storytelling are readily available and much easier to use today than they were in years pa convergence of these facto rs has facilitated the inclusion of digital storyte lling in p educational technology courses . Some researchers have expressed concern over approach technology instruction over careful consideration of the educational value of the tool, speculating that such are unlikely to result in powerful uses of technology in schools. Mishra and Koehler (2006) proposed a conceptual framework technology an d pedagogy. With emphasis on the development of Content Knowledge (TPCK) , the model reframes for pre-service teachers. This case stud framework to a digital storytelling project in an u ndergraduate teacher education course. Keywords: digital storytelling, educational technology, Techn ological Pedagogical Content Knowledge, TPCK Journal of Instructional Pedagogies TPCK with Digital Storytelling digital story tell ing to investigate contemporary issues in educational technology "
Marlene Johnshoy

Carolina Online Teacher Program (COLT) - 4 views

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    Here is one certification program that has one course specifically about teaching languages online.
Marlene Johnshoy

An Online Oral Practice/Assessment Platform: Speak Everywhere | IALLT - 4 views

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    "Abstract Despite its obvious importance, it appears that in many foreign language programs, oral practice is not given as much time and attention as it deserves. Or perhaps it is more accurate to say that foreign language professionals recognize the need for more oral practice, but do not have at their disposal a convenient means to provide it. An online oral practice/assessment platform, Speak Everywhere, has been developed to fill this void. It allows instructors without special computer knowledge to quickly create video-based speaking exercises and quizzes for their students to work on outside the classroom. The instructor can access the oral productions that the students submit to the system, and grade them or give individual feedback on them either in text or audio or both. Using its flexible and easy-to-use authoring sub-system, it is possible to create exercises of various formats (e.g. Q&A, repeat after the model, structure drills, role-play, and oral reading)."
Marlene Johnshoy

Student Engagement in the Online Classroom - Do Your Job Better - The Chronicle of High... - 0 views

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    Some good advice for online and hybrid course engagement. One of the comments below says - even for F2F classes! One of the comments also questions the point about responding to all student posts - saying that it's better to let them discuss without you, only adding in occasionally or with a summary or notes in a weekly wrap-up. This "hands-off" discussion method is the route Alyssa and I have taken, what has worked for you?
Marlene Johnshoy

8 interactive Google Slides activities for classroom excitement | Ditch That Textbook - 1 views

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    Google Slides: more than just for presentations! Matt has 8 ways to use GSlides in a more interactive way.
Marlene Johnshoy

Free Technology for Teachers: A Convenient Update to Google Drive File Organization - 1 views

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    This is something that has frustrated me - I'm glad they updated copying to make things easier!
msdianehahn

AFFECTIVE LIVING - Teaching. Learning. Living. - 0 views

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    Wise words from a fellow teacher.  I've been inspired by many of his posts, and it has pushed my own thinking.
kschroed12

10 Cool Ways Teachers Use Social Media to Enhance Learning @coolcatteacher - 1 views

  • While Linda Yollis has a fantastic classroom blog, her 366 Project is incredible. She has clear instructions for how students from around the world can submit their photos to be shared. These photos make great writing prompts, conversation starters, and can spur on so many ideas in the classroom.
buskokov

TeachersFirst Review - PhotoFunia - 3 views

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    PhotoFunia reviewed by TeachersFirst, (review last updated: 1/14/15) : Use your pictures and PhotoFunia to create photo collages, flyers, family trees, holiday albums, and more. No registration is needed! PhotoFunia has hundreds of effects and filters. More are added weekly. To add shadows, age your photo, or rende
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    PhotoFunia reviewed by TeachersFirst, (review last updated: 1/14/15) : Use your pictures and PhotoFunia to create photo collages, flyers, family trees, holiday albums, and more. No registration is needed! PhotoFunia has hundreds of effects and filters. More are added weekly. To add shadows, age your photo, or rende
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    I played with this web app; it's a lot of fun.
Marlene Johnshoy

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | Vol 34, Pgs 1-238, ,(2012) | ScienceDirect.com - 0 views

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    This issue - Languages, Cultures and Virtual Communities - has a number of articles on CALL and online learning.
Beth Kautz

Legal Issues & Language Learning Technology | IALLT - 1 views

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    Eyes are on "the UCLA case," where a university has been sued because it undertook to provide video streams on campus without asking permission from the video rights holders. The case is not likely to be definitive but it raises important questions: What constitutes classroom use of a film? Can an institution sign away its fair use rights? Who is responsible for providing the infrastructure for streaming media distribution at an educational institution?
Charles Zook

ANVILL | National Virtual Language Lab - 6 views

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    Has anyone ever heard of this?
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    Oh, yes! I have met them and they have presented at IALLT and CALICO conferences. It seems like a really great product, but I have never actually used it.
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    Yes - they present at either CALICO or IALLT (or both) - seems like a good product, altho other than playing with it a bit, I haven't actually used it...
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    How do you think this is similar or different from the CLEAR tools? You can have students accounts?! I am posting under my husband's Diigo account apparently... this is Alyssa Rutherford. :)
Barbara Garbin

The benefits benefits benefits of repe repe repetion : EFL 2.0 - Teacher Talk - 0 views

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    I like this blog because it has practical ideas and valuable insights. There is surely much more discussion in the EFL world, it is worth check it out.
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