Friday, August 30, 2013

Final week's reflection

Hello and Good bye!

Reflecting on the past ten weeks and on what we have been actively involved, seems like writing about one long day filled with activities. It does not seem at all that we have been spending ten weeks learning and discussing about such an important topic as it is our teaching methodology.

Under the guidance of Courtney and with the insights of my course mates, I explored deep down my approach to identify my failures and successes of my teaching so far. Problems and issues that I often thought belonged to students, in fact originated within me. Changing a learning context from its roots, perhaps it is a very difficult task but transforming your approach, it is a task that can be accomplished with some persistence.

The content of this course was like a spark to change my attitude towards technology integration into my teaching. There are so many things that you can do with technology even if there is not enough technology. There is always some space where you can integrate technology, if there is a will.

The reason why I took this course in the first place was actually related to the change it provoked within me. I often felt that I did not know enough on the new use of technology into teaching. There was a subject that I was teaching and I needed some new orientation to improve myself and motivate my students better. The result is clear. I had a great instructor, who was actually answering and clarifying all my doubts. It seemed as if she was reading my mind and every week gave me a new tool to analyze and accommodate within my context.

The discussion with the other course mates were always helpful and made me feel that I was not alone in this journey of self-exploration and learning. We all shared one thing in common: we were all eager to learn and benefit from this experience. They shared their knowledge to change the course into a platform of learning and teaching, as we often do in our daily profession.

With the hope that this will not remain the first and the last experience, I am writing this last reflections, feeling grateful to the people who enabled it.

Good bye to all and we will keep in touch!
Daniela

Friday, August 23, 2013

Multiple Intelligence and technology integrated teaching

Hello again,

This week has been the most challenging of all the previous weeks of our course. Keeping up with the schedule of this week's assignment with all the extras of this week's personal involvement has not been easy at all. Anyway, we are talking about the different intelligences we possess and how we can use them to make the most of any situation. This is what I did this week!

When we talk about multiple intelligences and our students different learning styles, the issue plays a fundamental role in our teaching approaches. Our methodology and our instructional materials should be designed to fit the different intelligences that our students have. Technology comes with the most appropriate solution to this. The advantages that technology provides us and the variety of media and modes that we can include with its help will accommodate the different learning styles of our students.

At first sight, it might seem impossible how can one teacher in the class accommodate all the different learning styles of the students? In fact, he cannot do it all the times but at least, a teacher can change parts of their lesson or lecture, such as asking an open-ended question for the reflective learners or allowing some group work for the active and collaborative learners. 

PBL is perhaps the best strategy that provides space for all the different types of learners. The different roles and tasks that our students have to perform while preparing a project will strengthen their weak points and develop further their strengths. A teacher should identify his students’ strengths and provide them with an opportunity to work with these strengths. 

We completed our project plans this week after the reviewing process of last week. With the suggestions and comments that my friend Anila gave me, I could deliver a complete report. I have never written a report on how a change could affect my teaching or my students.


Finally, I could say that in every step that I have made during this course, I have walked on fresh ground. The good thing about it was that I learned everything by actually trying them out. Once you know what new experiences feel like then you can really comment on them. 

Cheers,
Daniela

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Teachers and Learners Tools

Hello,

I would like to start with the proverb that we have all been repeating throughout our course:

Tell me and I will listen,
Show me and I will remember,
Involve me and I will learn!

The proverb illustrates best what Courtney has done during these weeks. I have been involved and I have learned so many things.

The week has been overwhelming for most of us. We had to finish our drafts, to keep up with our weekly assignments and to learn more about ANVILL with our special guest, who was the creator of a wonderful tool.

I would like to start with my draft project, first. I managed to finish it on time but I had to work really hard. These two weeks will be hectic for me and I won't be able to follow our class discussion as closely as I used to do. Anyway, writing the draft required to think and anticipate all the details related to my course. Since it is during the second term, which means it does not start until March 2014, it was a little bit more difficult for me to plan the course so much ahead of its time. However, my analysis and my ideas were mainly based on the past experience.

Regarding our week's assignments, I really liked the sited on designing our exercises and making our tests. I got so much carried over them that I prepared four exercises, two crosswords and two exercises on Hot Potato. I installed the program on my computer as I am definitely going to use it more often during this year. It was easy to use and you could do a variety of exercises, you could even add images, links with the exercises, designing your exercises quite different from the traditional way that our students are used to. When our students will see that we make efforts into our teaching, that we are more committed and by bringing a variety of materials in class, they will feel more appreciated and will become motivated. They will perceive our genuine engagement in their learning process, which will make them to be involved and to participate in class activities.

Last but not least, ANVILL and our unique opportunity to speak with Jeff Maggot, its creator. What I found really fascinating about the tool were the various activities that students and teachers could do with the tool. It is an authentic tool that improves students' pronunciation, their listening skills and speaking skills. The four language skills were smoothly combined with any activity. If students are reluctant to write, they could record themselves. It was truly an international tool as you could use it for different languages. I really liked the multimedia options that you could use with any lesson that a teacher could design.

Well, there were so many new things that we did not only learn about during these weeks, but we were invited to be actually "full hands on them"!

Regards,
Daniela

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Promoting our students autonomy



Well, here we are again at the end of another productive week. The course is almost reaching to its end and I am already starting to miss this wonderful experience. It has been a very busy summer but enjoyable and quite rewarding.

Hi, 




This week I learned about Padlet or the Wallwisher, which is a new sharing tool where teachers and students contribute to the building of the wall together. Interaction and autonomy are both promoted and motivation is also increased with the activities that they both prepare. Regardless of the various activities that can used with the Padlet (interactive in nature, web-sharing, vocabulary or grammar), students and teacher can both collaborate effectively.

As teachers, we want our students to feel responsible for their own learning, set their goals and assess their needs. When students are involved in the learning process, when we start to relinquish some of our authority then we promote students to a different level. Introducing students with Penzu, they can start an online diary where they can reflect and write about their own progress. With the means of technology, we can emerge our students in an authentic context, where students start to make use of the appropriate target language.






Even with one computer in class, a teacher can use it to keep his students focus on one station only. The necessary activities are prepared and published through the computer. However, it cannot be a tool that a teacher may use. On the contrary, with an appropriate planning and organization any of the students can make use of that station in class. 




With a perfect combination of the Padlet and one computer in the class, the teacher cannot only develop a variety of activities but most importantly students’ autonomy will be promoted. If my class wants to develop a project, either in groups or as a class, I could use the Padlet to publish on the wall all their ideas and materials, which will then be finalized with a project.

As with the project we will have to draft, Anila and I are going to be peer-review partners. It will be a little bit difficult for me to keep up with all the work and class discussions in the two weeks to come; however, I will try to do my best. Hopefully, Anila and I will come up with useful suggestions to include in our final report so that we could have more useful ideas to apply in our real classes when the new academic year starts.

Looking forward to our peer-reviewing experience!

Regards,

Daniela

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Large classes and Interactive PPT (week 6's reflection)

Hi,

The readings of this week were quite extensive and rich in volume and information as well. We all discussed an issue that some of us are directly affected and others only partially affected. However, engaging students' attention, it is a topic that involves us all, regardless of the fact that we teach small or large classes.
I learned a lot of new techniques that a teacher can use to motivate students and engage them in discussions in class. 

However, the real challenge was the task of creating an interactive power point. We usually use power points only during lectures and this is related to two reasons (technical in nature): there is only one LCD projector in our department of 50 teachers and the teacher has to bring his/her own computer in class and additional equipment, if necessary. This situation really discourages us from using PPT more often. 

Lecture were previously taught in class where the teacher talked all the time and students "listened", or the teacher spoke slowly and students wrote. It demotivated students so much to the point that they did not attend lectures any more. As a student of this old tradition and my other younger colleagues introduced PPT during our lectures. Still, our presentations are linear and were not at all interactive. 

I even enhanced one of my existing lectures to an interactive PPT and I could realize immediately the benefits that it will have in my students. Firstly, it is more interesting and eye-catchy. Secondly, it allows students talk, discuss and share what they know. Thirdly, it even helps the teacher to activate discussion in class.

I would also like to say something regarding JiTT, briefing students before they come to class. I personally had an erroneous view in the past. I thought if students were previously informed on the content of the lecture, they will lose interest and will not be active. Whenever I raised a point to discuss, I never got back what I had actually thought. It was my mistake and not theirs.
I am definitely going to use JiTT this year and I will see if there is a difference. We are here to learn not only from our mistakes but from the new information that we are getting. 

Regards,
Daniela

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Project Task: Details of implementing a technology related change

Hi,

Following each step of the project has given me the opportunity to reflect more on every detail that I would like to mention and change in my class.
The technology tool that I decided to introduce in my class is related to one of the main problems that my students have: improving their web search skills. Thus, I am choosing to introduce Noodletools to them as a way of helping them research, organizing the content and consult reliable sources.

This new technology tool will help them to accomplish the course assignment, mainly, a project that they have to prepare in pairs related to teaching English as a foreign language.

The way I plan to introduce this technology related tool to this problem is as follows:

  1. Students will be firstly asked to open a blog. That will be our way of communicating and sharing with each other whatever we come across during class.
  2. There will be a tutorial class on how to use blogs, if there are students in the class that are not familiar with blogs or are experiencing difficulties how to open and publish in the blog.
  3. I will do a survey as well, in order to get to know my students better in terms of their intelligences, in order to have mixed intelligences and abilities working pairs, as well as assign the proper roles to each of the student.
  4. Students will be also introduced to the concept of Cooperative Learning, to foster their collaboration in the class.
  5. Each pair will report in class the topic (or one of the skills) that they have chosen to teach in a simulated class.
  6. The progress of their work as well as any other materials related to teaching and technology tools will be regularly posted on their blogs.
  7. As an optional tool, I will introduce them to Penzu so they can keep an online diary, recording their progress or any concern.
  8. Students will make use of Noodletools to search for the materials that they want to incorporate in their final project.
  9. Students will be also asked to design their own assessment tools during their project, as it will be a simulated teaching.
  10. At the end, they will create the project with the WebQuest, including multimedia elements and have the link published on the blog.
  11. An alternative to the Webquest project could be the creation of an interactive power point, where multimedia elements should also be part of the PPT.
  12. Along with the Noodletools, students will also be introduced to Prezi, Glogster or PicLit.

Their assessment will be based on their progress during the course, their blog posts, their comments as well as their final project task. We are not talking about a traditional way of teaching, so I will introduce to them alternative assessment and rubrics. Rubrics will be distributed, in the beginning of the course. They can act as instructions for students while they will work for their final task. There will be two types of rubrics to be used in the class, one that will be designed by the teacher and the other that will be for peer assessment. Both the teacher and students can work on designing the latter.

Students will be assessed for their research skills, their content organization skills, collaboration with the partner, the originality of their project, their innovative skills, technology skills and presentation skills.
There will not be any formal assessment for this particular subject, since students will demonstrate during the course whether they have mastered the literature given during the lectures, or the additional readings that they have to digest to master and operate the new technology tools.

Some of the resources that students should consult are as follows:

Web Tutorials and Information

www.thesearchenginelist.com/#e

 

http://www.thesearchenginelist.com/video-search/

 

Blogger Help - Google Help









A project-based learning activity about project-based learning - a good how-to, step-by-step approach:
http://www.sun-associates.com/lynn/pbl/pbl.html

Authoring Information on the Web

Multimedia and Authoring Resources on the Internet: http://www.library.northwestern.edu
/media/resources/multimedia.html
Multimedia Authoring Web: http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/authoring/

Digital Video Information on the Web

Adobe Premiere: http://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/main.html
Digital Movies in Education: Tips and Techniques: http://www.apple.com/education/dv/tips.html
Digital Video with Windows Movie Maker: http://www.microsoft.com/WINDOWSME/news
/articles/digitalstate.asp
Video Guide: http://pblmm.k12.ca.us/TechHelp/VideoHelp/VideoGuide.html
Windows Movie Maker: http://www.microsoft.com/WINDOWSME/guide/digitalmedia
/moviemaker.asp

Literature review:

  • Ivers, S. Karen and Barron E. Ann Multimedia Projects in Education: Designing, Producing, and Assessing, Libraries Unlimited.
  • Rose, H. D.,  and Jenna, W. G. (2012), Curricular Opportunities in the Digital Age, The Students at the Center Series, Job For the Future Project

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Week 5


                          

This is another week of reading, exploring, sharing and learning!
This week's main topic was about PBL and closely related to that we also had to read about alternative assessment.
Since PBL is in itself an alternative way of teaching, we could not but learn about alternative assessment as well. PBL was not something entirely new, or something that I have never tried before.
In fact, in one of the subjects that I am currently teaching, we encourage our students (future teachers) to turn PBL from an alternative way of teaching to a traditional one. While reading about PBL, about its advantages and how it is gaining more and more ground in teaching nowadays, why can't we also encourage our students and colleagues to work with it?
Recalling the old saying that Omar also mentioned in one of his class discussion, only when you do something, then you will never forget it. This is the essence of PBL. Students are actually doing something that they will never forget. Let them learn geography or history or English by actually searching for that information themselves, by actually building it themselves and being proud of their product.
I also know that I am carried away with optimistic feelings and thoughts but at least it is worth trying.
When I first introduced my students to PBL, I honestly, thought they would not make it. I thought that they are never going to work after classes for an assignment that they have never done before. I thought that all the difficulties will discourage and defeat them. On the contrary, I was the one to be disappointed with my own gloomy thoughts. The first projects that they prepared were really good.
Now that I have also learned about WebQuest and how to make a project there, I am certain that my students will like it even more to work on their projects.
My only concern about project based learning is not teaching at the university level, where we are not so obliged to follow the national curriculum as long as we achieve the overall goals. The issue that I also raised on Nicenet discussions was time. The reason why I am also mentioning it here is to raise a question.
I don't know much about the other countries but in Albania if you are a teacher of a high school or elementary school, you will have to prepare every day your teaching journal (a detailed lesson plan) that is conform to the curriculum. Things are stricter at this level than at university level. So, teachers have to follow a plan that has to be according to this curriculum. Therefore, I raise my question again: Where are teachers going to find their time to work with their students on a project? Is it going to be an after class assignment. since there is no internet in class? Are we sure that it is going to be successful on regular basis?
These are some of the questions and issues that I see as drawbacks concerning the application of PBL in our classes.

Closing another fruitful week,
Best regards,
Daniela

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Developing multiskills

Hi there,

http://www.piclits.com/viewpoem.aspx?PoemId=212378

This week's reading highlighted one common advantage that technology enhanced teaching brings and that was bringing the whole process close to reality. Coursebooks do not always provide the most recent information, they do not aim to develop real-life skills.
We all should share a common goal i.e. developing higher-thinking skills among our students. The traditional way of teaching did not develop them as students were mainly asked to produce the information that the teacher gave. They were never asked to process, analyze that information and then create something of their own. We took our students far from the reality and locked them in some artificial classes.

Teaching a foreign language was even more artificial. Students just read, answered some comprehension questions, rarely discussed and never communicated or created something of their own. These classes did not accommodate their different learning styles. Some of them failed just because the environment did not allow them to develop.

Nowadays, things have changed. Technology has its word to say in every area, including here teaching. Students can write without having any fear of their mistakes. They can do their homework by simply writing to a friend. They can bring to class their own ideas and write them on personal online journal to share them later with friends. They can be part of the world by discussing the same global issues with their peers anywhere in the world.

They can watch and listen about places, culture and history of countries they have never visited. They can virtually do anything and learn while doing it.

And this is technology! So let us develop it further and make it part of our "old" classes and colleagues!

Regards,
Daniela

Friday, July 12, 2013

Week 3's reflection

Week three is coming to an end and looking back at it, there are a lot of things to reflect on.
The more I get to know the other colleagues by reading their discussion posts, the closer I get to them. We all have in common our desire to change something about the way we teach, to make teaching and learning more motivating. To motivate ourselves and our students!

This week as usual became with our reading assignments tackling on an issue that is almost neglected in my teaching context, listening. Developing listening skills never gets a priority in a teacher's plan and there are many excuses teachers use and I used to think before getting to know so many different websites that focus mainly on listening. During this year, I was part of some webinar series where one of the topic was listening. There I learned the most important thing about listening: you need to cultivate listening habits in your learners. We can cultivate a habit only if we keep doing and repeating it several times. If our students practice listening activities not only in class but outside it as well, then they can improve their listening skills and turn them into a habit. I would like to share with you some the materials of that presentation, copied from the slides as there were 38 in total.
 http://api.ning.com/files/jtJ034c97Hx9YqV9zKmR43mn7-jELTegwYl1E3RB--2haTjy5lrKuqTaLmNs66d6xvjE0DZokkRtA6NU4TGrz9-JqiwqnhtS/CultivatingHabitsofListening.pdf

Each of the slides raises some important issues that we need to take into consideration:

Features of L2 Listening
Builds on L1 listening
Requires more focus than L1 listening
Anxiety is often a factor
Products (for example, tests) are often emphasized more than the process

Cultural Dimensions of Listening
Listening behavior varies from culture to culture
Face to face
Classroom
(teacher-centered or student-centered)
Large groups
Status (older/younger; teacher/student)
Female and male

Minimizing Distractions, Maximizing Attention
Identify your distractions and ask yourself:
Can I eliminate or minimize these in any way?
What can I do to keep focused?
Keep a distraction journal
Keep note of distractions during activities that require deep attention—preferably after the activity 
Think of ways to quiet your “internal noise level”
Make an effort to lessen any negative self-talk or negative judgments of others
Visualize a peaceful place or image while listening

Another interesting and useful tool we learned about this week, was social bookmarking. I personally like the idea as my bookmarking used to be very simple on the bookmark bar and I could organize them in folders but only in one computer. And that is the computer, I usually keep at home rarely carrying it with me. It means that my links were there and sometimes I need to show my students those links, which I copied manually and saved them. Social bookmarking was a breakthrough to my manual and conventional way of saving my links.

As to the project task we have to accomplish in the end, I think that I have a better idea after having three or four project reports that Courtney shared with us to be analysed and discussed.

Bye for now,
Daniela






Sunday, July 7, 2013

21st Century Teacher

  • Collaborative work will be just as important as individual work
  • PBL ( project based learning) won't just be an acronym
  • Edit, remix, and share media with my students
  • Learn from my students
  • Expect change
  • Create my own personal learning network
  • Add students on my space in Facebook 
  • Encourage appropriate online interaction
  • I won't fear technology , I ll embrace it
  • Create positive learning environments

Another inspiring video for teachers who want some change: 

From Model 1.0 to Model 3.0

Hi,

There are a lot things to reflect after these two weeks full of new and interesting information.
I am very excited about the whole experience especially after virtually "meeting" so many experienced teachers with so many things to share.

The first thing that I would really like to share was my experience with web searching with the new list that we got from the course. While exploring with the new search engines and being interested in technology integrated teaching, I came across something I would like to share with you.

WE HAVE been educated in a 1.0 education model, we are teaching in  2.0 model but our students are living in a 3.0 model. These three models chronicle the major paradigmatic shifts that education has witnessed over the last century. They also represent, in an ironical way, the huge abyss between the actual needs of our students and what is actually being delivered to them in schools.
Below is a very interesting chart created by Dr John Moravec in which he compares between  the three models we mentioned above. Have a look and share with us what you think of it. Enjoy.

redesigned by teachbytes



Monday, June 24, 2013

I am indebted to my father for living, but to my teacher for living well. Alexander of Macedon

Most of the quotes on teaching reflect the significance and nobility of our profession. Even though demanding in terms of keeping up to date with the latest development, it still remains an enjoyable challenge.