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Contents contributed and discussions participated by TESOL CALL-IS

TESOL CALL-IS

http://simplybox.com/index/education - 3 views

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    SimplyBox is a great way to add some Web 2.0 to your research. This would be esp. useful with group objects where students can then look at what each other group member has found. Use SimplyBox for Education, and get the free app (also has fee-based district or school-wide application that can be hosted and access controlled safely, and boxing from any application). The teacher could start the ball rolling, and have students join in, boxing their own sites and info. Esp. good for visual learners. This page has three good help videos: Overview, Sharing, and Twittering with SimplyBox. Fairly easy to use, once you get used to it.
TESOL CALL-IS

English for Child Care - Sunburst Media - 2 views

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    English for Child Care Language Skills for Parents and Providers This is by a friend and collegue in California and should be an ESP of interest. Free download.
TESOL CALL-IS

Using captioned videos for English as a second language or ESL - 5 views

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    This site is going EFL/ESL in a big way, using video: "We recently found out that 22frames.com is becoming a popular site for learning English as a second language (ESL). It turns out that watching captioned videos provides a way to not only learn formal English but also idioms and other cultural concepts. To find videos, you can browse through categories or make caption-only video searches on your interests. Even more, we have been devoting significant time and resources to developing ESL-specific features that are motivated by our users' feedback." "Recently, we found out that many of our users are using the site to supplement their English learning (see: http://www.22frames.com/esl.aspx ). They also began to pitch ideas we could implement to make the site even more useful for this activity. With so many requests, we decided to seriously consider these ideas and devote significant time and resources into realizing them. Now, we are turning our site into a substantial and FREE English learning resource. We are aware of a couple sites out there that are also focused on using captioned videos for English learning, so we've been focusing on the unique user-motivated features. Therefore, my goal here is to let you know about our free resource and that we are opening the door to requests for anyone who might desire features that have not been implemented elsewhere. Perhaps, you can share this with your colleagues/readers/etc as it will help us better gauge which features to prioritize and to increase the rate with which we will release new features. Please note that we are really serious about considering whatever feedback we get. I'm also pleased to announce our first feature, which we expect will help in learning/teaching popular English idioms. Idioms are a big deal in learning English, and it is clear that watching them used in real situations will increase the rate with which they are learned. We therefore processed a large group of YouTube videos in o
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    22 Frames is going to the ESL/EFL market, and is free. First features are idioms.
TESOL CALL-IS

Self Education | Self Learning | Essential Web Sites - 4 views

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    "Big lists of free online courses, Web tools, learning games, and other resources for lifelong learners are relatively easy to find, but sites with a serious focus on helping people along the journey of self-education are fewer and farther between. Here are five you may want to bookmark or add to your feed reader." Thanks to Webhead, Buthaina al-Othman
TESOL CALL-IS

Teaching the Research Paper - 1 views

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    "Shawnee High School Language Arts Literacy teacher Kristin Giles came to the ETTC recently to seek out websites to support her research paper unit. Here are some of the places she visited on the World Wide Web:" A list of links to info/advice/help with research skills. Nice way for a teacher to get herself prepped for teaching the research paper.
TESOL CALL-IS

Google Image Swirl - 2 views

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    An interesting visual way to find images--each image found leads to a "swirl" of other related images, usually from the same site. Images found can be used in content-based/project-based learning. Be aware of copyright issues when using images from the Internet. Thanks to Webhead Rita Zeinstejer for this tip.
TESOL CALL-IS

Teacher's Toolbox - EFL CLASSROOM 2.0 - 2 views

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    A nice set of resources, mainly downloadable apps, for teachers to use with their classrooms. Some might also be useful for students to download and use. Another good resource from the EFL Classroom 2.0
TESOL CALL-IS

Free Online Whiteboard and Collaboration Tool - Scribblar.com - 1 views

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    No downloads, no user limits; only initiator needs to sign in. Can be used for online training/tutoring or brainstorming for student projects.
TESOL CALL-IS

Free online Multimedia Training Videos from the University of Westminster - 1 views

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    Amazing list of video tutorials on various tools and programming languages, including Flash, Photoshop, Dreamweater, etc.
TESOL CALL-IS

wetoku - 5 views

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    Sets up two screen with the interviewer and interviewee--or a role-play dialogue. Be sure to check out the video on their site, "How to Do a Good Interview"--nice tips for students
TESOL CALL-IS

Role Plays in the ESL Classroom - Games in the ESL classroom - Teaching English - 5 views

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    A short lesson plan -- how to do a role-play in class. This is a nice model that can be revised and used for other situational learning role-plays.
TESOL CALL-IS

Tech Notes - 2 views

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    Nice blog on technology tools for teachers. Regular updates and some discussion of uses. Thanks to Jacquie Hewlett from Guam.
TESOL CALL-IS

elearnspace. everything elearning. - 1 views

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    "Welcome to elearnspace! This site and blog explore elearning, knowledge management, networks, technology, and community. Many resources exist for elearning, yet a model of how the pieces fit together is often missing. elearnspace has been organized to present a whole picture view of elearning" George Siemens' collection of interesting articles, mainly about connectivism.
TESOL CALL-IS

elearnspace. Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age - 0 views

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    "In the original 2004 article I stated: "The pipe is more important than the content within the pipe. Our ability to learn what we need for tomorrow is more important than what we know today. A real challenge for any learning theory is to actuate known knowledge at the point of application" (Conclusion section, � 1). I find Verhagen�s (2006) critique falls at precisely this point. The core of what I wrote in the initial article is still valid: that learning is a network phenomenon, influenced (aided) by socialization and technology. Two years is a lifetime in the educational technology space. Two years ago, web 2.0 was just at the beginning of the hype cycle. Blogs, wikis, and RSS�now prominent terms at most educational conferences�were still the sandbox of learning technology geeks. Podcasting was not yet prominent. YouTube didn't exist. Google had not released its suite of web-based tools. Google Earth was not yet on the desktops of children and executives alike�each thrilled to view their house, school, or business in satellite images. Learning Management Systems still held the starting point of most elearning initiatives. Moodle was not yet prominent, and the term PLEs (personal learning environments) did not exist. In two years, our small space of educational technology evolved�perhaps exploded is a more accurate term."
TESOL CALL-IS

Nik's Learning Technology Blog: Animating vocabulary - 6 views

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    "Collect up gifs related to any vocabulary area you want to teach or revise. Embed them in an html page on your desk top and start a collection. Each time you add new ones send the html page to your students. (They will need to have a live connection on their computer to be able to view the gifs) Ask them to make notes of any words they relate to the images they see." This is another neat little tool with notes on how to use it from the very extensive collection by Nik Peachey. I'd suggest having the students make animated vocabulary gifs of words they want to learn/find useful.
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