mobile technology can help teachers to find new ways to improve students’ language/content learning.
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WhatsApp in the classroom to foster listening and speaking | TeachingEnglish | British... - 7 views
www.teachingenglish.org.uk/...room-foster-listening-speaking
#carlatech18 carlatech18share carlatech18 whatsapp interpretivemode languages technology smarphone
shared by hharb01 on 24 Jul 18
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vaguevara and claire_mitchell liked it
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Ask school to supply a phone and apps installed to overcome giving your personal phone number to students.
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Some of my students use LINE (similar to WhatsApp) to talk with their conversation partners in Japan to practice Japanese and learn about Japanese culture. Mobile phones play a great role in foreign language courses now.
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WhatsApp in your classroom with the purpose of improving students’ oral skills.
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Mobile Phone Operator they contacted offered them a cheaper phone rate than the one they had. We could say they killed two birds with one stone.
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allow their use with a clear pedagogical use and under the supervision of a teacher
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assessed
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WhatsApp recordings of presentations should be just another tool
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on-line pronouncing dictionaries
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will help students who feel anxious in public to relax and it will also create an atmosphere of concentration which is key to effective listening
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The use of Whatsapp in the language classroom to promote conversation in the target language
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Vocaroo - 0 views
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Record an audio welcome message and put it on your blog (or wiki or web page.) Elementary students can practice their oral reading skills. You could even post them on your blog for parents and grandparents to hear. Each day have one student record “what we did in school today” and post it on your blog. Students in a foreign language class could record words or phrases and then email them to their teacher. Left your students with a substitute? Record a message to encourage your students to be on their best behavior!
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I used Vocaroo this week-- a simple app and easy to use that can fulfill a variety of needs for the classroom. I thought I could share some here with you...I am drawn to the second point about practicing and recording reading out loud. This past year with my elementary students, I found a great need to improve their understanding of sounds in Spanish, as well as building their confidence as "speakers" of the language. This gives me an opportunity to work on this issue further this upcoming year.
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How to Use Google Slides in the Classroom - The Tech Edvocate - 1 views
www.thetechedvocate.org/google-slides-in-the-classroom
##carlatech18 #GoogleSlides #presentations #carlatech18share
shared by smuske on 05 Aug 18
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Third, teachers can encourage collaborative learning in a number of ways with Google Slides. An assignment could be designed so that each student creates their own slides; once combined into one presentation, students can learn from each other. Or, small groups can collaborate on one slide presentation in real-time and then present their slides to the class, allowing for an engaging student presentation.
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Error correction and repair moves in synchronous learning activities | International Jo... - 2 views
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This study explores the deployment of correction strategies and repair moves in synchronous learning activities in an online English course.
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When asked to identify the benefits of the synchronous learning activities concerning the correction of errors, the participants point out that events and actions are unpredictable in the online lessons and the online interviews, which provide students with an opportunity to stretch their command of the language.
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The results from the present study show that the preferred correction strategies are explicit corrections and recast.
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Computer Assisted Language Learning Social Networks: What Are They Talking about? - 9 views
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Furthermore, it has been shown that students prefer to contact their peer students rather than their tutor when they are struggling with coursework, facing difficulties in assessing facilities and understanding lectures
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Validates the "three, then me" concept that asks students to ask three other students for help before asking the teacher. Students are perhaps more available asynchronously than the teacher as well, when students need help
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Validates the "three, then me" concept that asks students to ask three other students for help before asking the teacher. Students are perhaps more available asynchronously than the teacher as well, when students need help
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Researchers also noted that people who interact more in an online course tend to achieve higher marks on exams, as opposed to lurking which is not as successful [12]
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Students who are required to collaboratively work online need to dedicate time to get to know each other and therefore are able to accomplish effective communication in an online environment [29]
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This outcome tells us that the students seem to be more excited, talkative and social with one another, as well as chat/contribute more at the start of the course, but their overall participation rates were on a decrease during the duration of the course.
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Furthermore, it has been shown that students prefer to contact their peer students rather than their tutor when they are struggling with coursework, facing difficulties in assessing facilities and understanding lectures
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I offer a course in my school called Computer Mediated Language Learning. But this article gives a new perspective of what computer assisted can be.
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Nice data to back up our use of all of these great online resources-- Thanks for sharing!
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Active participation in discussions is a key to success. If you use a flipped classroom, providing useful vocabulary and sentence structures they might want to use to talk about a particular topic also helps the students participate more in discussions.
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Teaching, Tech and Twitter: Ignite a Flipgrid Fire - 1 views
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5. GridPals! An incredible idea from Bonnie McClelland, GridPals connects classrooms across the globe creating virtual pen pals. You can take advantage of GridPals using Flipgrid One. However, if one of the GridPals teachers has Flipgrid classroom then you can become CoPilots on the same grid giving both teachers access to the educator dashboard.
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The beginning of the year, at parent conferences, a send-off to the next grade are all ways to get families involved in encouraging and supporting their kids.
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ONE of the PVLEGS expectations to focus on at a time
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Flipgrid film festival
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Flipgrid video and a QR code link to the video is stuck on the map? Geography, history and oral reports all rolled into one.
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7. Computer science shareout
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The Global Read Aloud is a set 6 week period that spans from early October through mid-November and teachers all over the globe read one book and connect with other classrooms all over the world.
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10 Ways to Enhance Math Lessons With Flipgrid by Sean Fahey.
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background knowledge
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1. Virtual vocabulary word wall When working on a unit have your students record a video describing the meaning of important vocabulary words. They can hold up a card in their selfie video with the word written on it so the words are easily accessed by other students.
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The Educator's Guide to Flipgrid (2nd Edition).
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Virtual reality narratives in foreign language pedagogy | Harvard Initiative for Learn... - 0 views
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The video project allowed students to engage in four brief VR tours of Parisian quarters.
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The team will expand upon the initial pilot by hiring five Parisians from different neighborhoods to document and share their lives with a VR camera over the course of one to two months.
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Awardees hypothesize that virtual reality will allow language learners to have perceptual, empathetic, and culturally immersive experiences in multiple sensory modalities (visual, auditory, tactile, etc.) that will enhance their vision, perceived value of language and culture learning, and willingness to communicate.
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Tomorrow's College - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views
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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.
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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."
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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 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.
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Blended classes generate the highest student evaluations of any learning mode at Central Florida, and, like her classmates, Ms. Black is a fan.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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"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.
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Education World: Social Media in the Classroom? - 5 views
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“Schools are scared about this stuff,” said Elliot Soloway, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor at the University of Michigan. “Whatever they do, [schools fear that] parents will be upset, money will be inappropriately spent, they will draw the ire of the public. They're scared of all of this, so there is an extra layer of conservatism to protect the kids. But we can’t let it paralyze us from taking steps into the new.”
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Digital Highlighting Activity - Creative Language Class - 6 views
www.creativelanguageclass.com/digital-highlighting-activity
Carlatech17 class activity Group C technology
shared by pludek on 24 Jul 17
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Marlene Johnshoy liked it
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Posted by Kara Parker on April 17, 2017 in 3 Activities, Interpretive Reading, Reading, Techy Stuff, What's New
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Highlighting is one of my top go-to interpretive reading activities. Today I will review an app for Apple devices and Chrome. Let’s see how highlighting can go digital! I blogged about this “Highlight Away” activity before… It was Idea #71 in 2012! If you haven’t read it, take a minute to see where this idea started. Why I love highlighting… It gives a focus while reading It takes away the frustration of “not knowing every word” (adjust the task, not the text) It preps them to summarize It preps them to discuss the reading No comprehension questions needed (low teacher prep) It lets them figure out the meaning and learn new words in context It shows comprehension without translating Here are a few examples of highlighting activities we’ve done in lessons:
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s in the Street Art unit. They were reading opinions about graffiti before they gave their opinion. It was awesome seeing how this activity gave them so many solid reasons that support their opinions.
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template for you to adapt and use if you are doing the activity with highlighters and printed articles. Copy and paste the image to your preferred program (Word, PowerPoint, Pages, Keynote, etc). Add text boxes over the image to create your categories.
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Mirroring Project - 2 views
diigo.com/09z4wp
carlatech carlatech17 groupb group b pronunciation intonation stress presentation video
shared by lars3969 on 27 Jul 17
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Mirroring Project:
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Step 1: Identify major pronunciation challenge
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Step 2: Choose appropriate model
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Step 4: Mirror the original recording.
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speaker with strong non-native rhythm and intonation patterns.
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Flipping my Spanish Classroom: Effective use of technology - 6 views
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YouTube annotations
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flubaroo, which is a Google script that can correct online quizzes for you
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make a sightseeing tour on Google Earth
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This could also be used for travel unit or for giving directions to one another. Another great tool is geosettr.com or https://geoguessr.com/ you are given a map / picture of a location and you have to guess where you are. With settr, you can create your own
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10 Social Media Tips for Reaching World Language Learners | Edutopia - 4 views
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Micro-blogging via Twitter is another way to link students outside of class. Let's be honest -- there are not many young people out there who do not already tweet. You can use Twitter in class in a similar fashion to blogging. If you do, I strongly suggest that you use TweetDeck to efficiently manage your students' tweets. I also love having students tweet a story. You start by tweeting the first line of the story based on the unit you are studying.
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Cool Tools - Collaborating with Padlet | TESL Ontario Blog - 3 views
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An unlimited number of users can contribute to a padlet at the same time, making collaborative work very easy.
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No account necessary to collaborate
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adding example sentences to a shared class padlet
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presentation tool
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I fill those padlets up with a variety of learning materials including photos, YouTube videos, quizzes, worksheets and step-by-step instructions.
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Creating more interpretive listening exercises - Maris Hawkins - 6 views
marishawkins.wordpress.com/...terpretive-listening-exercises
carlatech17 group A creating listening exercises
shared by Anne Dixon on 24 Jul 17
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I think it is important to give students specific tasks while they are working on a listening activity.
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I agree with the idea about assigning specific tasks for listening activities. There is nothing more confusing than not knowing what to do when listening to an audio in another language. What do you think would be best, to watch the entire movie in the classroom, watch some parts of it or watch all of it each o the students in their houses?
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I have struggled pedagogically about showing moves in class. I think that I need to thoughtfully incorporate them because the students enjoy them. I wonder if showing the whole movie, but in parts, depending on the movie, might be the way to go - I always feel that there is so much pressure to get through 'X' amount of curriculum. This has given me food for thought about how I could use them.