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CC0212Policy.pdf - 10 views

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    This article describes the features in communities of practice and provides a real life example of how it is used and what it looks like in an educational setting. The article also shows how communities of practice can be extended through the use of new technologies.
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    In the opening section it describes the community of practice as being different from the typical teacher development model because it reaches "beyond individuals and toward alignment". This confused me at first, because it seemed to oppose the other information about communities of practice. I had seen a community of practice as a way for individuals to find what they need. However, as I read on, I realized that it was referring to the fact that teachers are now linked to one another and can work together to find coherence and best practices.
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    As an English teacher I can see the value of the example in this brief. The English department gets together and reflects on similar commenting styles for students to revise papers. They study which commenting helped the best after students turned in their revised copies. My English department just had to do this type of collaboration, but we were analyzing introduction paragraphs written by students and how we could improve teaching this. Unfortunately it was one of those times that were "mandated from the top down" as the brief mentions. Our collaboration was not voluntary and our department is not cohesive. I liked this idea of creating a community of practice with my department, but I am not sure how to get everyone on board Think of the power a CoP would make if it were campus wide, cross-curricular.
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    A research brief produced by the National Council of Teachers of English, this publication focuses on three aspects of a successful community of practice: mutual engagement, joint enterprise, and shared repertoire. Although the phrasing is different, the central concepts are similar to other reports on this topic. It does, however, also break down the needs of institutional support as a necessary condition for these communities to thrive.
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    The national Council of Teachers of English reviewed Communities of Practice as they worked to develop better feedback for student writing. Successful Communities of Practice have been shown to be beneficial provided that specific characteristics are in place, including a common goal. Both face to face CoPs and online CoPs need these specific elements. What sets communities of practice apart from other professional development models is their reach beyond individuals and toward alignment
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    I found this article or brief by the NCTE (National Council of Teachers of English) helpful in that it gave context to how teaching organizations view of the communities practice theory. The article paints a picture of how schools try to use the theory as a framework for collaboration. I appreciated how it presented the goals of COPs in schools with some possible pitfalls. The main takeaway being that COPs are less successful when they are implemented "from the top down". It still drives home the reality however that COPs do need an organizational structure and good leadership, but that connections and shared vision are still the cornerstones of COP's. The article was published in 2011 and appears to be preparing it's readers for the wave of new media. It references blogs as emerging COPs and drives home point that online communities, while not face-to-face, still need strong leadership and organizational structure to be successful. It ends by providing questions to consider when trying to form COPs.
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    Re: The main takeaway is that COPs are less successful when they are implemented "from the top down". I agree with this statement, The most successful CoP that I have been involved in were initiated within the district, but the administration was not overseeing the work being done. This freedom allowed for a more relaxed and teacher supported group. The department was kept in close communication, however, as some time to open our community funds were necessary and therefore it was important to have an advocate.
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    This article really captivated me, especially how it started with the vignette about the English teachers collaborating over how to mark their students' papers. I am an English faculty at a university and I have sat through collaborations on such things. I appreciated how such a simple paragraph on this collaboration could embody the three tenets of communities of practice.
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    The National Council of Teachers of English wrote this briefing with the intent of helping not just English teachers but any educator understand the alignment, implementation, and instructional support of a CoP. The comprehensive but short article is an easy read to get a basic outline of communities of practice.
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Alisha Long's Blog: Social Media Lesson Plan and Rubric - English, Language Arts - 0 views

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    HS English teacher's lesson plan that embraces social media for the English classroom.
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Lost in Translation: Reaching Out to English-Language Learners | Edutopia - 1 views

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    Great article about how to assist English Language Learners
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Breaking News English Lessons: Easy English News Materials | Current Events | ESL Mater... - 0 views

shared by kettaku on 29 Oct 18 - No Cached
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    This website is very popular with English Language Learner teachers. It has articles divided by level of difficulty and with comprehension questions. It also has many current and relevant articles
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Learn English - LanguageGuide.org - 0 views

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    Great site for early childhood students learning English. Gives picture and audio and an opportunity to practice the skills.
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Twitter for Academia - academhack - Thoughts on Emerging Media and Higher Education - 1 views

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    Great uses of Twitter in classrooms. For English, I like Dave's suggestions for teaching grammar's rules and structure, storytelling, and rule based writing.
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Eight Ways to Use Video With English-Language Learners - 0 views

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    Larry Ferlazzo I teach English & Social Studies at inner-city high school in Sacramento,CA This blog was co-authored by Katie Hull Sypnieski. This post is excerpted from their new book, The ESL/ELL Teacher's Survival Guide: Ready-to-Use Strategies, Tools, and Activities for Teaching English Language Learners of All Levels.
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What's the Language of the Future? - 1 views

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    As English takes over the world, it's splintering and changing -- and soon, we may not recognize it at all. This article is excerpted from the new book, "The Language Wars: A History of Proper English" from Farrar, Straus and Girous
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Mirriam-webster Visual Dictionary - 4 views

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    English Language Learners can find pictures by category, then see and hear English words
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    I like this one! Have you seen the Visual Thesaurus? It's also very cool and useful for both ELL and native English language learners: http://www.visualthesaurus.com
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    Susan, thanks for the reference; I like that one, too!
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Grammar Girl :: Quick and Dirty Tips ™ - 1 views

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    A terrific resource for 21st century English teachers - podcasts explaining puzzles in grammar.
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Middle School (Grades 6-8) English Language Arts Activities, Lesson Plans, Worksheets &... - 1 views

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    Download FREE middle school grades 6-8 English language arts activities, lesson plans, educational worksheets & games today!
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Classroom Ideas - Nimitz Twitter Project - 2 views

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    These are some great ideas for using Twitter in the English classroom. In particular, I like using Twitter to build vocabulary, debate an issue or book interpretation, write a book review, or for short grammar exercises
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ESL Gold - Start learning English as a second language today! - 0 views

shared by kettaku on 29 Oct 18 - Cached
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    English as a Second Language lessons with recorded video to focus on different skills. This site is especially useful as supplementary material for classes.
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Using Facebook as a Teaching Tool - PraxisWiki - 0 views

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    Elaine Childs, at the University of Tennessee, uses Facebook to bring relevance to abstract English concepts.
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IBL41-282-FP-Rudy-ICT4LL2011.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    Teacher uses Facebook for uploading English papers for peer review.
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Supporting English Language Learners with Technology | Scholastic.com - 2 views

  • 3. Multimedia ProjectsIn the upper-elementary and middle-school grades, students study content areas in greater depth and are exposed to more complex vocabulary and complicated concepts. With just a textbook, ELL students may experience enormous difficulty. Multimedia projects offer students hands-on, engaging ways to explore the scientific content and concepts presented.
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    A brief article with three tips on how to integrate technology for ELL students
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Facebook Used in the Classroom - YouTube - 0 views

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    Facebook used at Niagra County Community College in Intro English. With it students asked & answered each other, studied for tests, and collaborated on group projects. Streamlined approach to compiling links/images/videos which are accessible to classmates. There was simplicity in having class info where students are spending time already
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Social Media Video_Twitter_Jackman - YouTube - 0 views

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    Krista Jackman of U of New Hampshire instructs Freshman English Comp class and uses Twitter to build community. Micro blogging incorporates the fundamental classroom elements of writing, reading & talking. Students become experts and can know & be known
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Teaching with Blogs: "The English 19th Century Novel" - 1 views

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    This professor discusses how her class was better organized using a blog to generate comments, questions and collaboration. I enjoyed this particular article because it brought to life this idea of chunking a course by adding a blog element during the class. This is particularly meaningful to block teachers that may have students for 90 minutes. It is a great way to break things up.
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Annotated Bibliography - Twitter, Social Networking and Communities of Practice - 5 views

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    I really like annotated bibliographies because they provide so much information on a topic in a fairly simple analytical summary, and they allow the reader to delve further by providing the source. The author, Kristi Newgarden, has two fields of interest: educational technology and teaching English as a Second Language. Overall, the focus of the bibliography is on Communities of Practice and Lave and Wenger's concepts of Legitimate Peripheral Participation.
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    I agree with you about annotated bibliographies being a great resource. Not only did this great link provide further scholarly readings but gave a glimpse into what we could expect from them as well. I really enjoyed the list and found it great that some of them were brand new from the research I've already done at the beginning of this module. Great find!
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    Though not an academic study, this annotated bibliography from Electronic Journal for English as a Second Language, gives the reader summaries of over 40 sources related to Twitter, Social Networking, and CoPs. This bibliography is similar to one required in EdTech 501 at BSU. The resources provided come from a wide-range of academic disciplines and publications providing the reader with a diverse bibliography to look over.
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    Scott, it's great that you found this annotated bibliography. What caught my attention initially was that it was posted on a TESL website, but after reading further the author mentioned that the resources mentioned could benefit any teacher in any subject area. This is a nice way to find resources on a topic without having to type in a search engine or review resources at the end of a research study. Even better when there is a summary provided so you don't have to figure out if that is a beneficial resource or not.
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    J Matibag - One thing I didn't touch upon, but didn't, is the benefit summaries provided in an annotated bibliography like this one. Thanks for putting that into your post. Having these description certainly gives the reader a chance to discover more sources in less time. Most studies I've read tend to be 10-25 pages, so this circumvents sifting through studies that may not be what one is looking for.
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