Skip to main content

Home/ UMUC-EDTC-WL/ Group items tagged writing

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Barbara Lindsey

ADMC HD Common Year Writing Graphs - 3 views

  • Read this two-page step-by-step guide to writing about graphs, or download in Word, or PDF
  • Class Grades
  • Compare two line graphs: the number of farms in the US and the number of farm workers, 1910-2000. See a suggested answer and short reading with questions on industrialised farming (pdf, 134 kb, includes key).
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Televisions and Computers, Selected Countries.
  • Introduction with Model Answer
  •  
    This site provides comprehensive resources to learn how to read and write about graphs and charts. Especially useful for EDTC 615 students.
William Springer

The Purdue OWL: Research and Citation - 0 views

  •  
    Purdue University's OWL (Online Writing Lab) contains relevant information for students pertaining to academic writing. This part of the site (Research and Citation) specifically outlines different formats for citing and referencing (such as APA and MLA).
Stephanie Heid

MAKE BELIEFS COMIX! Online Educational Comic Generator for Kids of All Ages - 0 views

  •  
    Making comic strips in the TL - fun for writing practice
Heide DeMorris

PopuLLar: Motivating secondary school students to learn languages through their music - 0 views

  •  
    Students are encouraged to write their own lyrics to songs of their choice, translate them into the target language, record them (audio or video), and share with the world.  This is an excellent way of incorporating 21st century skills, ISTEs, ACTFL standards, and more.  This could require collabortion, too.    This project is 'owned' by the students - teachers just guide the process.  Many examples and support available.
Stephanie Heid

The Clever Sheep: Top 20 Uses for Wordle - 1 views

  •  
    20 uses for Wordle in the classroom or out of class. Useful for a variety of purposes and a variety of ages. Wordle also used in a study for analyzing student writing samples, to show overused words and suggest broadening vocabulary.
Heide DeMorris

Chimera EDUCATION - Chimera Blog - 0 views

  •  
    An interesting blog by a teacher of languages and technology.  Three entries, "improving pronunciation using Speech-to-Text Apps", "Using Thinglink to prepare for the AP cultural comparison", and "using google drawing in language classes" have direct correlations to what we do and can use in our classrooms.  Google draw (found in Chrome's Google Drive) would be particularly helpful to practice writing Arabic or Chinese.  
William Springer

Blogger: Blogger Dashboard - 0 views

  •  
    Blogger is a free site for blogging. It is incorporated with Google, so if the user has a Google account, he automatically  has a Blogger account. This site (as well as any simple blogging site) can be used for students to publish their writing and receive a world-wide audience. Additionally, students can keep a reflection journal of their own progress, feelings, and questions regarding their learning. Finally, instructors can use blogs to communicate important information to their students as well as share their voice in an easily-accessed, asynchronous means.
Barbara Lindsey

Preparing for the IELTS test with Holmesglen Institute of TAFE - 2 views

  •  
    Sample tasks with answers that focus on how to read and write about charts and graphs. Great resource for students in EDTC 615.
Heide DeMorris

World of Warcraft Finds Its Way Into Class | MindShift - 1 views

  •  
    students work together to accomplish a task - and this is done in the target language.  Students can also change the language of the game they are playing, and log onto a server in a target-language country.  They then learn how to communicate with them.  You can ask students to write about their experiences and perhaps give a narrative about the quest they went on (in the TL, of course)
amergin2005

WordPress.com - 0 views

  •  
    Start a WordPress blog or create a free website in seconds. Choose from over 200 free, customizable themes. Free support from awesome humans. I think language students - from beginner to advanced - can improve reading and writing skills through blog usage. Adding multimedia elements can help inspire creativity, encourage digital literacy, etc.
Sabine Whitney

Web 2 - 4 Languages Teachers - 4 views

  •  
    This is a great website. Web 2.0 tools divided into oral, listening, writing, vocab, language specific, IPad Apps, Android Apps, 21. C teaching and learning and more. What is great about this source that everything is neatly organized. Information includes cost of the tool, target audience, usefulness and ease of use rating.
  •  
    I checked out the author's blog and found lots of interesting topics for discussion. Thanks Sabine!
  •  
    Sabine, this is a great tool. I checked the apps for practicing listening skills and found a very interesting idea.I shared with my colleagues of Italian language.
Maria Nuzzo

Digital Natives Digital Immigrants - 0 views

  •  
    This is the article that I cited in one of my postings.
Ursula Rockefeller

Storybird - Deutsch1 Morgen Klasse - 1 views

  •  
    An online Web 2.0 tool for creating and sharing student and teacher created books. Great for the world languages classroom.
  •  
    Ursula - I had Storybird as one of the choices my students could use for creating a children's story. They loved it.
Laura Honig

Spanish Graphic Organizers - 3 views

  •  
    This is a great website for all types of graphic organizers to help students with their speaking, writing, or just general ideas.
Stephanie Heid

Daily Formative Assessments in Second Language Acquisition, Tuttle - 0 views

  •  
    This article details various ways to assess student speaking skills quickly in class; aligns with recent ACTFL conference presentations.
Lori Rake

Organize your resources in an online binder - LiveBinders - 0 views

  •  
    LiveBinders is your 3-ring binder for the web, create an online binder for content curation. Livebinders were created so that anyone, including educators, could do with digital information what we typically do with the papers on our desk -- organize them into nice containers like three-ring binders on a shelf. With these online binders, you can also upload your documents and easily combine them with your links in a neat and organized way. Once you've created your binder by filling it with links, resources, photos or videos, you can share it via email, link it to anything, embed it in a blog or view it in presentation mode With LiveBinders ,you can organize a lesson there, collaborate with a colleague in writing that lesson on a binder, and share it across many spaces. You can even have students work collaboratively on binders. Creating a LiveBinder to support your lesson planning will save you time and become a living document that you can update anytime.
  •  
    This is a great way to organize all of your resources online. It looks very interesting and you can get good resources from the featured binders that are on the site.
  •  
    I love live binders. I created one for each of the classes I teach. It is easy to add information, the class notes and handouts, links for extra practice, etc. Students can easily get to it from anywhere.
amergin2005

ePals Global Community - 0 views

  •  
    Account is free; find collaborative projects with students around the world. Has a limited number of free student epals account too.
  •  
    ePals is a free web 2.0 resource that provides language classes the opportunity to connect with target language speakers around the globe. Communication can range from simple email messages to wiki and blog collaboration to multimedia presentations and even Skype video chat. Teachers can monitor all activity, for the sake of student security. A potential project would be for both groups - advanced level students in the local L2 group - to read the same story or poem and then use the ePals blog tool to share opinions (targeting writing skills) and later the Skype video chat to discuss (or perhaps debate) the text (targeting oral skills).
Sarah Finck

Inklewriter - 2 views

  •  
    Create, or have your students create, choose-your-own-adventure style stories. You can integrate cultural norms in the options for each step of the story.
1 - 20 of 21 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page