Thursday, March 15, 2012

Syllabus criteria


Hi everybody,

Here is a summary of the four basic concepts we discussed yesterday. I added some examples to facilitate understanding.

LEARNABILITY

Some structural or lexical items are easier for students to learn than others. Thus we teach easier things first and then increase the level of difficulty as students’ language level rises. This concept might tell us that, at beginner levels, it is better to teach uses of was and were immediately after teaching uses of is and are, rather than follow is and are with the third conditional. It might persuade us to teach some and any on their own rather than introduce a whole range of quantifiers (much, many, few, etc.) all at the same time.

FREQUENCY

It would make sense, especially at beginning levels, to include items which are more common in the language, than ones that are only used occasionally by native speakers. Now that corpus information can give us accurate frequency counts, we are in a position to say with some authority, for example, that SEE is used more often than UNDERSTAND, than it is to denote vision (e.g. Oh, I see). It might make sense, therefore, to teach that meaning of SEE first.

COVERAGE

Some words and structures have greater scope for use than others. Thus we might decide, on the basis of this, to introduce GOING TO future before the present continuous with the future reference, if we could show that GOING TO could be used in more situations than the present continuous.

USEFULNES

The reason that words like BOOK and PEN figure so highly in classrooms (even though they might not be that frequent in real language use) is because they are words normally used in that situation. In the same way, words for family members occur early on in a student’s learning life because of the context of what students are linguistically able to talk about.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Some pretty cool sites!


This is the list of web sites we worked with yesterday in our class and some other:

Dictionaries and thesauruses
www.wordreference.com
www.thesaurus.reference.com
www.merriam-webster.com/

Corpuses
www.natcorp.ox.ac.uk

Translator
www.babelfish.yahoo.com
www.freetranslation.com

Encyclopedias
www.britannica.com
www.encyclopedia.com

Podcast
www.podomatic.com

Power point and presentations
www.slideshare.net
www.prezi.com
www.animoto.com
www.glogster.com

Cartoon generator
www.toondo.com

News
www.englishcaster.com

Business
www.businessenglishpod.com

Happy hunting

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Team 4: Alejandra, John, Diego, Andres U.



Welcome Team 4,
Your mission should you choose to accept it is to go through the following 4 steps individually (20 minutes), then with the rest of the team discuss the use of the different tools in EFL teaching (10 minutes) and finally present your ideas to the rest of the groups (10 minutes). As always, should you or any of your team be lost surfing the internet or caught visiting other webpages, the teacher will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Good luck!!

Step 1
Visit the following site: http://prezi.com/
What is prezi? Do you think this makes a difference when presenting information to students?

Step 2
Check the following site: http://wordreference.com/
Is there anything a teacher could do with his/her students in class using this site?

Step 3
Visit the following online translator: http://www.freetranslation.com/
What are the advantages or disadvantages of using a site like this?

Step 4
Find out what a wordle is. What could teachers do with this tool?

Team 3: Andres, Luis Enrique, Carlos Andres, Carlos Alberto


Welcome team 3,
Your mission should you choose to accept it is to go through the following 4 steps individually (20 minutes), then with the rest of the team discuss the use of the different tools in EFL teaching (10 minutes) and finally present your ideas to the rest of the groups (10 minutes). As always, should you or any of your team be lost surfing the internet or caught visiting other webpages, the teacher will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Good luck!!

Step 1
Go to google and find a page that can tell you a little more about what a wiki is. Think of some ways of using this with your students

Step 2
Check the following online dictionary: http://www.merriam-webster.com/
Keeping in mind the different possibilities in the site how do you think a teacher could include a page like this in his/her lesson plan?

Step 3
Check the following translator: http://babelfish.yahoo.com/
Is a site like this of any help for a student?

Step 4
Find the name of two online encyclopedias. Take a tour of the site and make a list of advantages and disadvantages of using a site like these with your students.

Team 2: Juan Camilo, Carmen, Lucero, Sandra


Welcome team 2,
Your mission should you choose to accept it is to go through the following 4 steps individually (20 minutes), then with the rest of the team discuss the use of the different tools in EFL teaching (10 minutes) and finally present your ideas to the rest of the groups (10 minutes). As always, should you or any of your team be lost surfing the internet or caught visiting other webpages, the teacher will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Good luck!!

Step 1
Go to the following link and listen for a while:http://splendidspeaking.podomatic.com/player/web/2006-10-26T05_07_12-07_00
This is an example of podcasting. How do you think a teacher can use this tool with his/her students?

Step 2
Check the following online dictionary: http://dictionary.cambridge.org/
Take a look at the different dictionaries they have in there. How could a teacher maximize the use of a tool like this with his/her students?

Step 3
Check the following translator: http://translate.google.com/#
Do you think this is of any use for students?

Step 4
Check the following example of a webquest: http://its.guilford.k12.nc.us/webquests/harry/harry.htm
Be ready to explain to your partners advantages and disadavantages of this type of activity.

Team 1: Luz Elena, Carolina, Clara Ines, Andrea, Jennifer


Welcome team 1,

Your mission should you choose to accept it is to go through the following 4 steps individually (20 minutes), then with the rest of the team discuss the use of the different tools in EFL teaching (10 minutes) and finally present your ideas to the rest of the groups (10 minutes). As always, should you or any of your team be lost surfing the internet or caught visiting other webpages, the teacher will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Good luck!!

Step 1:
Watch the video on the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NN2I1pWXjXI
Think of what language skills a teacher could promote using blogs.

Step 2:
Check the following online dictionary: http://dictionary.reference.com/
Go over the site and its categories. What kind of activity (besides looking for vocabulary) could students do in this site?

Step 3:
Go to: http://translation.babylon.com/
How could an English teacher use or not a site like this one?

Step 4:
Find out what concordances are. Are they of any use for an English teacher or student?