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.
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Showing posts with label Simple present. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simple present. Show all posts
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Tangled - Practicing the Simple Present
Tangled is a sweet animation, and it has a great scene to contextualize the use of the present simple. I like the way this scene helps students understand that they are talking about her routine, and the tasks she has to carry out everyday.
Beginners
Simple present
Routine
Grammar practice
Discuss in groups
What is your favorite fairy tale?
Who is your favorite fairy tale princess?
What do you know about Rapunzel?
What does Rapunzel do everyday in her room in the tower? List as many activities as possible.
Watch the movie and check how many sentences on your list are in the movie scene. If you have more that 4 say BINGO!
eg. Rapunzel does the dishes everyday.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Expressing Likes/ Dislikes
- Intermediate
- Teens;adults
- Guessing; Making lists
- Talking about someone important to you
- love/hate ...ing
- Students need to experience the language points we teach in a freer and more authentic way to be able to cope with the pace of delivery out of the classroom.
Teachers usually have to teach verbs - like, hate, can't stand, despise. When I watched these scenes in the movie 500 Days, I imagined that they could provide me with a great chance to personalize this language point and give it an interesting twist by adding elaborated words to go with the verbs and allow students to use these words to talk about someone in their lives.
1. Have you seen the movie 500 Days of Summer? What is the story about?
2. Have you ever been in love?
3. The guy in the movie is deeply in love. He will tell his friend about what he loves about his girl. Watch the scene- sounds off. What does he say?
4. Watch the movie and take notes of what he loves about the girl . How many things did you get right?
6. Write down what you think he will say.
I guess he will say he hates...7. Watch the movie. Were you correct?
8. Write a list of what was said.Your teacher will play music. The student with more correct sentences is the challenge winner.
9. What about you? What do you love/hate about someone in your life?
Monday, October 31, 2011
In the Morning
2. You will watch a short scene in which two people in the US are getting ready in the morning. Make a list of what you think you will see.
3. Lottery - We will play lottery. Watch the movieclip and check all the activities you see in the clip that are on your list. The student with more crossed out verbs is the winner.
4. Spot the lie. One of the sentences is incorret. Can you spot the wrong one and correct it?
She wakes up at 8:00.
He has cereals for breakfast.
He plays in the morning.
5. Watch the movie again and write three sentences like the ones above to challenge your classmates. Can they spot the lie?
6. Tell your partner what you do in the morning. When you are done talk to someone else. Use the verbs/phrases below to help you.
Wake up
Get up
brush
eat/have _____ for breakfast
make breakfast
Play
Get dressed
have a shower
Leave home about ...
7. Play last man standing. Make a circle in the middle of the class. Say a sentence about one of your classmates.
so and so eats cereals for breakfast.
Throw the ball to another student. He/she will say another sentence about another student in class.
so and so wakes up at 6:00. Continue until there is only one student left in the circle.
8. Do you know anyone who lives in another city or country? Make a glogster reporting to your group what his/her routine in the morning is. Is it any different from ours? Why?
Monday, September 19, 2011
Voking in Class -
- Beginners
- Teens; Adults
- Speaking / Listening / Writing
- Text to speech
- Simple present
- Voki
1. Listen to my character and dictate what he says to your partner who is out of the classroom.
2. Answer some questions about my other characters.
3. Now it's your turn. Write a simimar text about a friend you like. Make one character as similar to you as you can, and send it to your teacher because she will post them all here. Who has the funniest? Coolest? Most interesting avatar? Do you have friends in common? Did you write about the same friends?
Marcelo's
Friday, January 28, 2011
Spanish Apartment- Movie Activity - Cultural Differences
Questions to Ourselves
Level Lower intermediate to advanced
Materials Sheets of paper, DVD or VCR, board
1 - Tell your students they will watch a segment from a movie called Spanish Apartment. Introduce the scene, purpose, characters, and other relevant information to activate learners' prior knowledge.
Tell class that a group of students from different countries is trying to get to know a prospective roomate. Ask: What kind of questions will they ask?
2 - Play the scene and ask students if any of the questions they thought of were asked. Ask students to describe the scene.
3- Ask students to think about a sport, hobby or outside interest they have and write twenty questions adressed to themselves. Write the questions on the board and vote for the best ones.
4- You could either have Meaningful Chairs or simply have pairs asking and answering the questions.
Tell class that a group of students from different countries is trying to get to know a prospective roomate. Ask: What kind of questions will they ask?
2 - Play the scene and ask students if any of the questions they thought of were asked. Ask students to describe the scene.
3- Ask students to think about a sport, hobby or outside interest they have and write twenty questions adressed to themselves. Write the questions on the board and vote for the best ones.
4- You could either have Meaningful Chairs or simply have pairs asking and answering the questions.
Tell Me About
Level Lower intermediate to advanced
Materials Sheets of paper, DVD or VCR, board
1 - Tell your students they will watch a segment from a movie called Spanish Apartment. Introduce the scene, purpose, characters, and other relevant information to activate learners' prior knowledge.
Tell class that a group of students from different countries is trying to get to know a prospective roomate. Ask: What kind of questions will they have?
2 - Play the scene and ask students if any of the questions they thought of were asked. Ask students to describe the scene.
3- Ask students to write more questions of their own that facilitate getting to know people on cards. You willl need enough to give one to each student. It does not matter if the questions are similar or duplicated.
4- Give everybody a card. The students all stand up and each one finds a partner. In each of the pairs, one student asks one of the questions from the card which they think their partner might be interested in answering. Then the partner does the same.
When the second conversation finishes, the pairs separate and look for new partners. They should again choose a question to ask. Continue as long as the activity is lively and engaging.
2 - Play the scene and ask students if any of the questions they thought of were asked. Ask students to describe the scene.
3- Ask students to write more questions of their own that facilitate getting to know people on cards. You willl need enough to give one to each student. It does not matter if the questions are similar or duplicated.
4- Give everybody a card. The students all stand up and each one finds a partner. In each of the pairs, one student asks one of the questions from the card which they think their partner might be interested in answering. Then the partner does the same.
When the second conversation finishes, the pairs separate and look for new partners. They should again choose a question to ask. Continue as long as the activity is lively and engaging.
Acknowledgement: I've heard about Tell me About on issue 49 March 2007 English Teaching Professional.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Parts of the body - storybird
I love teaching young learners. Children engage and thrive when we bring interesting activities and books.
I spent years wishing I could bring my esl young learners instructional reading books to help me contextualize my lessons.
I was more than happy when I found storybird on Orze Karaoglu's blog. With this amazing tool I can finally write books to be used in shared reading sessions that match my busy schedule. Thank you for sharing!
This one could be used for parts of the body/face.
Monster Talk on Storybird
I spent years wishing I could bring my esl young learners instructional reading books to help me contextualize my lessons.
I was more than happy when I found storybird on Orze Karaoglu's blog. With this amazing tool I can finally write books to be used in shared reading sessions that match my busy schedule. Thank you for sharing!
This one could be used for parts of the body/face.
Monster Talk on Storybird
Sunday, October 11, 2009
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