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eric paul

Ratounet sings the French Alphabet - 0 views

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    Ratounet sings the French Alphabet for children and beginners
Michael Sturgeon

Russian Step By Step Books Natasha Alexandrova - Russian Alphabet - 4 views

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    Learning Russian Alphabet, Vocabulary, Grammar. This site provides proper grammar for Verbs of Motion, how to Conjugate verbs and Declension of Possessive Pronouns. The amount of information for learning Russian is almost endless
Isabelle Jones

Alphabet - a set on Flickr - 0 views

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    to incluse in powerpoint presentations to teach the alphabet
Martin Burrett

Quizlet - 0 views

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    This is a comprehensive flash card study aid site. Make your flashcards to study anything. Add pictures, text and it supports a range of non-alphabetical languages like Chinese and Japanese. You can choose to learn, spell things, test yourself or play games with the information. Browse thousands of sets made by other users without signing in. A free account is required to make your own flashcards. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/ICT+%26+Web+Tools
Belinda Flint

Phonetic Chart of IPA symbols - 8 views

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    This web page is for people interested in learning the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbols. This is a useful skill for learners and teachers of English who may want to check the pronunciation of a word in a dictionary. Use the phonetic chart to learn the sounds of English. Then do a quiz to see how well you have learnt them.
Martin Burrett

My First Dictionary - 1 views

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    "A handy blank A-Z Dictionary to support pupils learning dictionary skills, or alphabetic order."
Nergiz Kern

Phonics Software for Key Stage 1 and 2 from Big Brown Bear - 3 views

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    Phonics Software for Key Stage 1 and 2 from Big Brown Bear Good for low level English learners, too.
Barbara Lindsey

News: The Web of Babel - Inside Higher Ed - 1 views

  • Some adventurous professors have used Twitter as a teaching tool for at least a few years. At a presentation at Educause in 2009, W. Gardner Campbell, director of the academy of teaching and learning at Baylor University, extolled the virtues of allowing students to pose questions to the professor and each other — an important part of the thinking and learning process — without having to raise their hands to do so immediately and aloud. And in November, a group of professors published a scientific paper suggesting that bringing Twitter into the learning process might boost student engagement and performance.
  • But while Lomicka and her tech-forward peers are not advocating that every college go the way of Chapel Hill, they are finding out that some relatively novel teaching technologies that are used by academics of all stripes, such as Twitter and iTunes U, are particularly useful for teaching languages.
  • At Emory University, language instructional content is far and away the biggest export of its public repository on iTunes U, where visitors from around the world have downloaded more than 10 million files since Emory opened the site in 2007.
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  • Language content makes up about 95 percent of the downloads from the Emory iTunes U site.
  • the most popular content is audio and video files that were originally developed not for a general audience, but by professors as supplements to college-level coursework,
  • Because language demonstrations often require audio and sometimes video components (e.g., tutorials on how to write in a character-based alphabet), and students often like to practice while on the move, iTunes is in many ways an ideal vehicle for language-based instructional content.
  • what we do offer is an online supplement that enhances what happens both in the classroom and in foreign study in the culture — and it is always there as a resource for our students, because it’s online.”
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