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Showing posts with label Mlearning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mlearning. Show all posts

Saturday, March 15, 2014

The Art of Redesigning Classes

There are at least two different ways to help teachers who are designing iPad activities with students to evaluate the tasks they create. The  SAMR  model helps a  teacher/task designer become aware of what stage the task falls into in terms of the use of tech.  The Bloom Taxonomy applied to apps helps teachers think about the kind of questions we ask students and how we should vary the tasks we offer. By delivering the workshop From Image to Deep Learning, I started to understand that  teachers can also look into the learning cycle as a whole, and how the human learning brain works to promote deep learning. The ideas I share here were inspired by the book The Art of Changing the Brain, which is a must read for any educator willing to take a look into the biology behind learning.


In the workshop, I asked the audience how to teach questions with does to teens, and develop tasks having the learning cycle in mind. After a quick debriefing, I showed a simple iPad activity I carried out in class of 11-year-olds, talked about my take in the lesson, and expanded about why I think this task pleases the learning brain. Now, I post my ideas here to help me reflect on my practice, having the learning cycle described in the aforementioned book in mind.


I showed students a quiz about a famous person I knew they would be interested in. Students took the quiz, and I inductively helped them notice how to make questions about a third person`s likes and dislikes. Then, I asked them to gather information about a celebrity they follow to make a quiz of their own.
I was afraid that I`d have no pictures to work with on the following class, but to my surprise, students had bought the idea and had pictures and lots of information to work with. I was ready to go, so I set the iPad activity and monitored students. Here is what two pairs produced using a wonderful app called visualize.


In the art of changing the brain, Zull talks about phase 1 - concrete experience. In this phase, there is activity in the sensory cortex, where we receive, gather and begin to process the visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, and gustatory information. Phase 2 - reflexive observation, seems to describe an activity that takes place in the integrative cortex. It is time to connect sensory images to prior experience in one`s neural network or schemas. In class, passing from phase 1 to phase 2 might take time as learners need to relate new information to what they already know. We cannot rush. We must allow time for thinking/recalling as well as time to reflect upon the learning experience.

In the activity I proposed, my students were exposed to a visually appealing quiz about a person they were genuinely interested in, and took the quiz themselves to find out how much they knew about the person. As I see it, students went through stage one and two of the learning cycle before we started the second part of the activity.

In phase 3 - abstract hypothesizing, the front integrative cortex is at work. Students start to prepare to do something with the recently acquired knowledge. In the iPad activity, I asked students to get the information about their favorite celebrities and start to put it in the format of a quiz for the other students in class. And by asking students to make these quizzes to communicate their recently acquired knowledge, teachers allow students time to test their hypothesis and think. In phase 4 - active testing, students shared their quizzes, and by doing so, provided peers with concrete experiences, so the whole class was back to phase 1. Learning becomes cyclical and on going, and hopefully they will remember the language point long after the day of the test.

In conclusion, instead of asking students to pay attention, it is better when we can engage students in tasks in which they  are supposed to reach outcomes, or ask them to look at the topics from different angles. Instead of sitting still, learners could be asked to move around to see the details. In other words, by making learning more concrete we might reach concrete outcomes.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Now What? What Do I Do with the Ipads?




I have been using IPads in class for about 3 months. Not every class of course, but at least once a week with all my groups. What I have observed so far is that different age groups react differently, but they all appreciate a change in the pace of the lesson. Some of them get really creative and excel in tasks that they would not really care about if I were not using the IPads. However, I have to confess that sometimes I ask myself: Now what? I have asked them to create videos, posters, notes, walls, but I feel I need to get creative and inspired to do more. ..

I need to get out of my comfortable zone and explore to make the most of the expensive devices I have available for me at school, and thank God there are people around to inspire me and help me redesign my thoughts and enhance the quality of my teaching. Here is an inspirational and resourceful post by Carla Arena  worth reading if you are willing to open your mind to different possibilities in the language classroom!

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Mlearning Activities 1st semester 2013



This semester I had a plan for myself: I wanted to use technology in a simple way to help my students connect to me, to each other, and to the content we were working with. But, I wanted to do it in a way that would not overload me. I still need to evaluate the results and reflect upon what I have done in class, so I I put a brief checklist together to make sure I am using mobile devices in a way that really engages my learners and boosts their learning processes. Please, feel free to comment and leave your feedback, for we are a learning community which needs to stick together in order to make the most of the technology we have available for our students.



The checklist



The tasks

Using Quotes in the Language Classroom

High - Intermediate
Quotes
1 device per pair of student
Camera and Phoster



I have never been a good designer, but I do appreciate good design. Nowadays, I appreciate even more the possibility of having great apps that help students create eye-catching posters to make learning objects that they can refer to whenever they want. I was opening a lesson about experiences that teach us lessons in my intermediate adult group, and the opening task had students choose their favorite motivational quotes. I told them to use their own devices, look for a quote they really enjoyed and write their quotes on the board to work on meaning. Students had to negotiate and narrow their lists down to only one quote per group. Then, I handed out one iPad for each pair of students and asked them to create a poster with their favorite quote. It was interesting to observe that they could remember the quotes later on, and that they used the posters to remind them of the quotes throughout the semester.






App to Make Word-Clouds

High Intermediate
Paraphrasing
App - Cloudart



Many course books ask students to paraphrase what they have heard or read in the book. I find this task really challenging because such input often brings a high amount of words students simply do not know or cannot pronounce well. I downloaded an interesting app that works like my big time favorite word cloud maker wordle. In this activity, I had students underline keywords in a text about Jane Gooddal`s life that could help them paraphrase it. Then, we worked on meaning and pronunciation by having students use their own devices to access dictionaries. I projected the word cloud I made on Wordart while they were working on the vocabulary, and asked students to paraphrase the text, using the words they had chosen. I was impressed by how much awareness was raised, and I was happy to notice that students were taking risks while consciously trying to use new vocabulary items.


Recording Devices as a Self- Assessment tool

High Intermediate
Telling anecdotes
1 recording device per student
Assessment



I've been asking my adult students to record themselves to help them improve their speaking skill. Many students need to get a clear picture of what aspects they need to work on in order to be a more competent speaker of the language. In addition, adult learners often fear being assessed when trying to communicate because they simply are not aware of what aspects they need to focus on, or which strategies they should use. So, I decided to make it obvious that we were using technology to boost their speaking skill, and I made clear that my feedback would be private, so that they could feel more at ease. We were having a lesson using Summit 2 about stories with a moral in which students are invited to tell a personal anecdote. Our branch received 20 devices to boost learning, so I got one recorder per student and after a quick rehearsal, asked them to go outside and record themselves telling their story (I was lucky to have 10 devices at hand, but this activity could be done with students` own devices).  I asked students to send me the recordings, heard each one and was not very sure how to give feedback, because the amount of work seemed a bit daunting. So,  I decided to make a simple poster to help students visualize where they stand in terms of communicative competence and I got a very positive feedback.







Saturday, June 22, 2013

Going to or Will?

Lower intermediate
1 iPad per pair of students
Going to X will
Educreations

Students were studying the difference between going to and will for predictions when you have strong evidence. I asked students to take a look at the going to sentences in the book and role-play the situation. They recorded it on Educreations. During the debriefing phase, I stopped the video right after the role-play and asked the whole group  what the right answer would be. Then, I showed the correct sentence on the video for them to check.

Best Quotes about Love

Intermediate
Educreations or any audio recording app
Quotes about love
1 iPad for each pair of students

I showed students many of my favorite quotes about love, and asked them to choose their favorite ones and prepare to tell the others what the quotes meant, and why they like them so much. Students sat in pairs and had to negotiate to choose only one per pair. Students recorded their messages on Educreations. I showed students all the quotes and we chose the best one.

Collaborative Book about Pets

Young learners
Pets
1 iPad
Keynote


The culminating activity in the unit is a letter students should write in reply to a child in a foreign country telling her about their pets. Students got photos from their own devices, brought from home, or drew their pets. They wrote a letter individually, I corrected them and had students working on their mistakes. I displayed all the posters on the wall and took pictures. I made a keynote presentation with all the pictures and conducted a debriefing activity in the following class. I was very happy to see how engaged they all were and how much they were interested in reading the letters and seeing all the pictures. Parents were happy to see the results and realize how much the children could read in English. I used the book as a way to review the language points before the test.

Go Away Big Green Monster - A Collaborative Project Young Learners


Young learners
Beginners
1 Ipad
Native app - camera

I read Go Away Big Green Monster to my students as a warm up. Students drew a monster on the board as a big group. Each student was assigned the task of drawing a different body part, and I used my camera to record the video below. I sent the video to parents who provided me with very positive feedback and loved the way the children could use the video to revisit content.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Relative Clauses Go Digital



Here goes a simple idea that you can use to practice defining relative clauses with students cameras.

Aim - Sentence level practice of defining relative clauses
Procedures - Ask students to find and interesting picture in their camera roll and write a sentence to describe it using relative clauses.

It`s a picture of a place where...
It`s a picture of a friend who...
It`s a picture of a concert that...

Ask students to read their sentences out loud and have peers guess. Have students ask follow up questions if necessary.

Student`s work

Student A - It`s a picture of a concert that I`d love to go.
Student B - Have you been there? Do you have to fly to get there? Is it Rock in Rio?

Student A - It`s a picture of a store where you can buy amazing t-shirts.
Student B - Is it in town? Are the t-shirts expensive?


Making Soundtracks to Teach Past Continuous



Do you need to teach past continuous and is looking for something simple that requires no preparation and engages students? Maybe you could try this digital task out.

Aim - Sentence level practice of past continuous and simple past
Devices - Any device students have that records voice

Procedures:
Model the activity by playing a soundtrack and asking students to write a sentence to describe it. e.g. The boy was listening to music when the sound system broke. Separate the class in small groups and give them 10 minutes to think of a situation, write a sentence and record their soundtracks. Share students work and elicit what the sentences are.

____________________________________________________________________________

Students`s work

The guy was listening to music when he crashed his car. 


A couple was making out when the girl slapped the guy.

Two friends were talking when a cow mooed

Friday, February 22, 2013

Students` App Reviews - Teaching Passive Voice



I am teaching a group of intermediate students and the unit topic was about manipulated photographs. I noticed that all my students had mobile phones with cameras, so I asked them if they had ever manipulated photos and if they had apps to edit photos on their phones. Not to my surprise, they gladly showed me many interesting ones. I decided to use their gadgets and I was pleased by the results.

Outcome                    Write an app review
Target language         Passive voice
Age group                 Teens or young adults
Number of devices    One per group of three

Starting point - Show students two versions of the same photo and tell them what was changed in the manipulated one. Show them your App review and explore its layout.

APPs` name
Price
System
Features
Quick description of the manipulated photo

Group work - Students have 15 minutes to show each other what they can do with their favorite apps and choose the one they like best. Then, they have to take a photo, edit it using the chosen app, and write a review about it following the layout previously explored.

Debriefing - Ask students to share their work and vote for the most interesting app.
_________________________________________________________________________________

Students` written work


Name: EyeColorizeFPrice: FreeSystem: Iphone-iosYou can change your eye color and pupil size.How/Why was the picture manipulated?- In this picture, the eye colors were changed. The eyes were green, brown and green. But they were changed to brown- green, green- blue, green- blue





_____________________________________________________________________________________________


Camera + 

Free
iOS
In this app, we can add many effects. We can change the clarity, and add some backgrounds. We can also change the position, invert the sides, crop,and  put borders. What makes is app different is the  Fx effects, which are special effects. 
The picture was inverted and it was also made brighter. The  Fx effect  was added, and we also added a white frame. 






















____________________________________________________________________________________________


Name: InstaCollage
Price:Free
System: iOS 
Features: Rotate, edit, take a photo, zoom, camera role, effects, grame, text, stickers.
What you can do: Edit Photos, change the frame, add stickers, zoom, change the colors.
How/ why was the picture manipulated?
To the  original photo, an effect was added, and we put a sun in the back and changed the frame. The manipulated photo looks like an old picture. The result is good.  
































__________________________________________________________________________________________
Name: Editor de fotos

Price: Free

System: Android

Features: With this app, you can change the photo's colors, add decorations, add effects to the photo and crop it.

How/Why was: In this picture, an old photography effect was added, and a tie, a crown and a cigar were added too.

 

___________________________________________________________________________________________

Swapfaces
How/Why was: The app can change faces of 2 or more people and compare with the original  photo. In the second photo, the heads were changed.



Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Listing - Digital Tasks 4 Busy Teachers


The ideas that I write about below were generated with the help of a creative colleague - Fabio Ferreira -  who presented a mini-course on digital literacies and  task design for busy teachers at Casa Thomas Jefferson. We agreed on collecting our ideas and sharing our work with other teachers. The biggest lesson I learned during the planning and delivering the session is that we are not alone and that  there are millions of generous people out there who are willing to collaborate and share online.



Making lists is part of our daily lives and can be very useful in the language classroom. When students bring their gadgets to class, teachers might decide to use them to promote opportunity for interaction and use of language that focus on meaning at first. We, teachers, might get creative and transform a simple brainstorming into a digital task.

Outcome -                   completed list or mind map
Starting points           words, things, people, actions, clothing, places
Offline apps                apps to make word webs, record videos or narrate images
Number of devices      One per group of three or pairs (I-pads or phones)

  • List supporting sentences and arguments for a given topic - campaigns, letter to the editors
  • International words
  • Customs in a place
  • Quotes, mottos, proverbs
  • Everyday things - what you carry with you in a given situation
  • What to wear for specific occasions
  • Qualities in a good friend, people in a city, best friends
  • Features of a place, language school, school, park, city
  • Ways of doing/remembering things
  • Ways to publish ideas and get pieces of information
  • Common questions a person asks in a given situation - at a hotel, in a foreign country, traveling
  • Things you do to prevent crime, store food, cook a special meal, host people, learn well
  • List of questions to ask about a place, trip, experience
  • How to behave in a given situation - you are traveling and you lose your bag, breaking up, talking to people you do not know well, how to behave online
  • Things a person can/should/might do in a particular place
  • What to do to have fun somewhere/on the weekend
  • List of things to take on a trip, to school, to the desert
Follow up tasks
  • Memory challenge games - lists or sources can be hidden and students have to recall from memory what was said or done using an app.




Examples of digital tasks

___________________________________________________________________________
List of questions to ask about a place, trip, experience
Show a video that shows you somewhere nice - fear not! students love when we tell them about us. Ask students to use a device to write questions to ask you later on. Have students record your answers and put everything together on a video or presentation.




__________________________________________________________________________

List of what to take in a trip
Showa video or picture of a trip you have taken and ask students to come up with a list of 5 things you should take and get prepared to justify their choices


___________________________________________________________________________
List supporting ideas and arguments for a campaign
Bring to class a yummy dessert, but tell students they can not have it because it`s No Sugar Day. Show your poster and expand on each supporting idea by adding at least two arguments. Have students get together and come up with a campaign and make a similar poster about it. Before students start, tell them that they might get away with the No Sugar Day and eat the cake if they convince you that their campaigns are better by telling you their supporting ideas and arguments during the debriefing phase.




Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Using Music to Memorize the Order of Adjectives





Intermediate
Grammar presentation, review or controlled practice
Order of adjectives
Ipad  
App - Audioboo
Internet Status; offline  ;)
Number of devices required ; 1 

Instructions:
Have students sing the order of adjectives using a famous, catchy beat to help them memorize it.
Record it offline on audioboo. Whenever you need the file, login to audioboo and click on the recording.
To play it to students offline, or send them the file, add  .mp3  to the url and save it.

See an example here

Monday, September 24, 2012

Memorable exercise correction


Punctuation




Advanced- Prime 7 - Unit 7
Debate 
subordinating conjunctions and transitions
Ipad  
App - Camera
Internet Status; offline  ;)
Number of devices required- 1 

Instructions:
Students debate the statement "Gifted children should be singled out for a preferential tratment. They should be given advantages that other children don't get in order to nurture their special talents."
Students write down their arguments for or against the statement. 
Teacher asks students to write their sentences on the board without puctuation and takes pictures of the board.
Teacher  elicits answers  and asks a student to take pictures of the board again.
Teacher crops the pictures  and shows them to students for extra practice or review.
To create a link to send to your student, open the presentation on Explain Everything, record your voice and export it directly from the app.

See an example here

Punctuating Adverbial Clauses

Advanced
Grammar presentation, review or controlled practice
Punctuating
Ipad  
App - Camera
Internet Status; offline  ;)
Number of devices required ; 1 

Instructions:
Have students do a controlled activity to practice subordinating conjunctions and transitions.
Correct it by showing the answers on slides. Open the presentation in Explain Everything on the Ipad
and record your voice going over the reasoning behind the structure once again.Send
the recording to youtube directly from the Ipad and email the link to your students.
They loved it

See an example here

Monday, June 11, 2012

Uses of Thinglink in a Language Class - Phrasal Verbs


Illustrating Phrasal Verbs





Low intermediate +
Vocabulary Learning Strategies
Contextualizing or personalizing phrasal verbs
Thinglink
Ipad  - Optional
Camera
App - Educreations (free) - Optional
Internet Status; online


Instructions:
This is a good activity to make phrasal verbs more meaningful to students. After they deal with phrasal verbs, ask them to illustrate some that are trickier to remember. If students have Ipads, have them draw on educreations. If not, ask them to draw on a piece of paper. Take pictures and compile all the photos on thinglink. Have students find cool links to illustate the phrasal verbs even more. 
TIP 
When you upload the image to thinglink, have it open so that your students can tag the images from home.
In the following class, have a debriefing moment by exploring their work. 
Extra practice
Play STOP!
Students see the image. Music is on and they have to write as many sentences as they can using the modal verbs depicted in the image. Music stops. Students with more/funniest/most creative sentences win.


Friday, June 8, 2012

Using Educreations to Suggest Movies


Suggesting Movies


Advanced
Speaking
Contextualizing or personalizing language
Ipad  
App - Educreations (free)

Instructions:
Do you sometimes talk about movies in class?
I asked my students to find posters of movies they like on google image. I used educreations to record their talking about the movies. Then I asked them to share their suggestions and agree on the best one to watch right after class. 

Flickr and the Learning Process





Show Me
 Here is an activity to have students reflect upon their learning process
Intermediate +
Speaking/Listening
Cameras
Flickr


A.    Many people believe that an image is worth a thousand words.  Go to flickr.com and choose 5 pictures that talk to you. Prepare a short presentation about them so that your classmates can get a picture of who you are.
     

B. Are you familiar with the rule of thirds? Read the definition below and decide which picture below applies the concept well.
Descrição: http://b.quizlet.com/a/i/spacer.VrUK.gifRule of Thirds
a composition rule that divides the screen into thirds horizontally and vertically, like a tic-tac toe grid placed over the picture on a television set. Almost all of the important information included in every shot is located at one of the four intersections of the horizontal and vertical lines



c. Now it’s time to take some photos. Grab your cell phone and go on a photo taking tour. Write a short text about your photo relating it to your own learning process, and make it available for the other students in class.


See an example here: