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Marlene Johnshoy

Wiki in the Curriculum - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 1 views

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    ACTFL 2012 Presentation
Marlene Johnshoy

Incorporating advertising and smartphones into instruction - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 1 views

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    ACTFL 2012 presentation "Attendees will learn to revise traditional activities by incorporating advertising and smartphones into their teaching. Advertising is everywhere and smartphones are part of most students' life. They can be tools that shape student awareness of other languages and cultures. "
Marlene Johnshoy

Research in Computer-Mediated Language Exchanges: Uniting Confidence and Proficiency - video - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 1 views

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    ACTFL 2012 presentation This is a short video of students at Marquette University participating in OCMC in Spanish and French.
Marlene Johnshoy

Creative APPlications of Digital Storytelling - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 2 views

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    ACTFL 2012 Presentation
Marlene Johnshoy

Unlock Students' Potential: Developing 21st Century Skills Using Emerging Technologies - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 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
Marlene Johnshoy

Gabbing with Gusto Using Google Voice Session 499 - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 0 views

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    ACTFL 2012 Presentation
Marlene Johnshoy

New Media Literacies and Language Learning - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 4 views

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    ACTFL 2012 presentation
Marlene Johnshoy

Session 027: Effective Use of Web 2.0 Tools in Arabic Instruction - American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages - 0 views

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    ACTFL 2012 presentation
Marlene Johnshoy

Online Peer Feedback in Beginners' Writing Tasks: Lessons Learned | IALLT - 1 views

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    Abstract This study contributes to the body of research that aims to understand the relationship between online communication and foreign language (FL) learning, in particular when teachers seek to provide authentic opportunities for interaction for their learners. The study was motivated by efforts made in the New Zealand context to overcome the geographic limitations of interaction between FL learners and native speakers. We report on the findings of an exploratory study into an online reciprocal peer tutoring program established to enhance the FL learning of a group of beginner eleven-year old students of Spanish, with particular focus on the benefits of written corrective feedback. The project aimed to examine the processes by which students tutored each other in the online environment as they responded to each other's texts. The analysis of the students' messages focused on (1) the aspects of language corrected by the tutors, (2) the frequency with which tutors accurately identified and provided input on errors, (3) the types of feedback provided by the tutors, and (4) what the learners did with the corrections and feedback. The findings indicate that the students were willing to contribute to peer correction and used different strategies and correction techniques to foster attention to linguistic form, although they were not always capable of providing accurate feedback or metalinguistic explanations.
Alyssa Ruesch

7 digital resources for students learning English or any other language | eSchool News - 1 views

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    These look like some good tools and ideas to support the interpersonal mode of communication
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    And it's perfect timing!
ismaelfranqui

Mix It Up! Authentic Activities for the World Language Classroom | Edutopia - 15 views

  • But true authenticity comes from the activities we use during class time, leaving an impact on the communicative skills of our students.
  • Use the language proficiency site developed by UTexas to gain access to native Spanish speakers talking about a variety of themes. These are conveniently divided into proficiency levels.
    • Shereen Elgamal
       
      I tried this activity by having each group research then report about an Arabic speaking country of their choice and the activity was a great success. They seemed to have had a lot of fun, presented short clear sentences (for the most part) that also provided factual and relevant material, and it opened the door for some spontaneous cultural themes and relevant dicussions.
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  • If we make activities genuine, our students will be much more inclined to participate, acquiring new knowledge through the process.
  • Make a fun interactive quiz using Kahoot!
  • ) Sign
    • amychang52
       
      Kahoot! is a good tool to create a quiz.
    • czuchnow
       
      I've used some of the videos from UTexas. Some of the novice level videos are still too difficult for my middle schoolers though! I have to give lot's of scaffolding and support.
    • ismaelfranqui
       
      These are great resources!
  • remember these rules when selecting activities: They must be authentic. They should always be engaging. Activities should be varied. They need to be focused around the unit theme. Perhaps most importantly, they should force students to use the target language.
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    Authentic activities for the 3 modes of communication: interpretive, interpersonal, presentational. Great technology tools mentioned.
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    Amazing resource! I love how this article offers ways to integrate technology through accessing each mode in several ways!
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    It carries over well into the German classroom too!
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.
Marlene Johnshoy

On the attractiveness of social media for language learning: a look at the state of the art - 0 views

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    Abstract: This paper sets the stage for the articles selected for the special issue "Language learning and social media: (r)evolution?". Starting with some definitions of mainstream terms like "social media", "web 2.0", "social web", "social networking sites (SNS)" and "web 2.0 language learning communities". The purpose is not to "reinvent the wheel" by suggesting new definitions, but to synthesize definitions of mainstream terms and juxtapose them to similar concepts from CALL literature. We then critically discuss three key features of web 2.0 technologies (user participation, openness and network effects). Despite the fact that these three features were present to some extent in technologies prior to social media, we examine whether they take on a radically different meaning in the social media era. Research insights are discussed in the last section of the paper.
Marlene Johnshoy

Free Virtual Classroom Premium Membership for Academicians on WizIQ - 1 views

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    Sign-up for the 30-day, but a year - free! Here's info I got in an email notification: We are glad to announce a free WizIQ individual membership for K-12 and College teachers. To be eligible for this offer, teachers need email addresses associated with their educational institutes (e.g., aprofessor@college.edu or ateacher@adistrict.k12.ma.us.) If you are a teacher from K12 or a College, apply and claim your free membership by following the steps below: Steps to get free WizIQ membership: 1.Sign up for a 30-day trial by clicking on the 'Apply now' button below 2. Verify your email address from your email inbox 3. You'll receive a confirmation email from us once your free membership is approved Apply now  WizIQ's free teacher accounts give educators at accredited institutions access to a range of teaching tools. To many educators, the virtual classroom for which WizIQ is best known only means live classes, which they might not need considering they see their students in person every day. But with the WizIQ Virtual Classroom teachers can also: Offer online courses for their school Run virtual office hours and homework help Run summer school online to address transportation and facilities issues Give AP students a jumpstart with virtual summer class sessions Let athletes or homebound students work with their classes, live, even if they can't be there Easily set up classes - without IT help Bring subject matter experts into their classrooms virtually Support group and project-based learning Engage hard-to-reach parents with: Virtual parents' nights Virtual conferences Adult education and community outreach Virtual math and literacy nights Broadcast live school committee meetings on the web Record lectures or flip their classrooms Conduct virtual field trips Run professional development when and where staff are available Share teaching resources among schools Teachers can take full advantage of every WizIQ feature, including screen-sharing, polling, video-confe
Louiza Kondilis

SpeakApps project - 0 views

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     Focuses on creating a free and open source on-line platform that gathers Information and Communication Technology-based applications and pedagogies to practice oral skills on-line.
Claire I

Integrating Intercultural competence into language learning through technology - 2 views

  • in which technology can support teachers and learners as they seek to understand language through culture and culture through language
    • Claire I
       
      different definition from Byram's?
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    from teaching culture to intercultural communication competence
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    oh, well, highlight somehow did not stay when submitted... ;-(
klmcguinness

Wiggio - Makes it easy to work in groups. - 4 views

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    "the easiest way to communicate and work in groups" - might be good for classes? - communicate via group email, text, and voice messages - host web meetings, conference calls, chatrooms - keep shared calendar - store and edit files in one common folder -poll group in real-time - keep track of group's task, resources
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    A virtual learning platform that looks very simple to use and can create an environment much like Facebook without the security issues or Twitter exposure
Marlene Johnshoy

What's the best way to teach languages? | Teacher Network | The Guardian - 7 views

  • my approach is much more topic based with as little grammar as possible
    • Marlene Johnshoy
       
      The opposite of most traditional language courses.
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    Although this article is about British language education and it's two years old, my interest was piqued when I read it: ""Languages cannot be taught, they can only be learnt. The best way is to tell students right away that they are responsible for their own learning process, and the teacher is just a guide who has to motivate them."" Made me think about relevancy and how Tech is only one part of that.
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    Fascinating article. Quotes a professor of linguistics who suggests that one reason for the move to Task Based learning is that in the UK, unlike in Europe, students don't know English grammar - so teachers can no longer use that as a bridge between languages! The article also quotes Michael Erard, author of 'Babel No More,' - a study of people who speak multiple languages - says: "They use a mix [of methods], with a focus on accomplishing tasks, whether it's communicative tasks or translation tasks."
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    Yes, the Erard quote really gets to the heart of it: what combination of learning methods will work for each, individual student? Learning is personal and those who develop their own methods (hopefully with effective guidance) will go far.
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    Really interesting. I wonder if we changed the setting to the U.S. if the same difficulties would apply. I never really thought about grammar being discarded simply because students don't know it well enough. While I've found that most students we teach don't understand their mother tongue, I still think that the shift to task-based work had as much to do with the lack of real communication skills. Just teaching them grammar and relying on them to go abroad to learn to speak wasn't doing it. That being said, I think the mixture of methods is best, and by mixture I mean the integration of many methods into accomplishing a task. And I agree that the meta-learning is key.
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    I remember getting a comment from a student once, many years ago, that she had learned more about English grammar in my Spanish class than anywhere else... (sigh)
Caroline Switzer Kelly

Is Twitter the Best Option for Online Professional Development? - 1 views

  • or at least, I’m more and more convinced that we should not rely solely on Twitter as the site for online PD or for online educator community. Both can and do exist online — PD and community — but I’d wager the best place to find both remain on educators’ blogs. I wonder if, in fact, “the future of professional development” might be a “return to blogging.”
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    Ok - so this article isn't on the interpretive mode...but it makes some good points - pro and con. The author is an entertaining self-described rabble-rouser!
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