Thursday, December 13, 2007

Getting your students to write

The excellent teachingenglish.org.uk site has a new article on Making writing communicative (which it often isn't in a language classroom, particularly when writing is something the learner does, hands in to the teacher... and that's that).

The article mentions blogging, which is one way writing can be made more communicative, particularly if all your learners are writing on a single class blog, and writing comments on each others' work, too. Doing so, and creating something that is shared will also create "tasks that are intellectually satisfying", I would suggest.

Among the books listed in the bibliography at the end of the article is Process Writing (Arndt and White, Longman 1991), one which I can highly recommend. Getting people to write in pairs, or at least to comment on each other's work (whether or not it is via a blog) is one aspect of process writing and -- because you talk about what you are writing -- another way in which it can be made communicative.

Getting learners to write -- and read -- stories is another. Some of your learners will no doubt say that they don't like writing, but there's also fun in the process that I think even they will come to share.

Here's a fun story from Ananova.com about fish making a bolt for it from a trout farm that might make the start of a piece of (shared) creative writing. Process writing would require you to brainstorm first, before you start to write: who will the narrator be? One of the characters named in the story? Or one of the trout, perhaps?

And that's where the fun begins...

>> More on Process Writing

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Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Christmas lessons

Happy Catalan Christmas!

It must be getting round to that time of year again... Christmas! There are some Christmas lesson plans on DevelopingTeachers.com, if you are looking, and another 2 million plus on Google, it would appear.

A webquest would be one idea, and here's a Christmas webquest from OneStopEnglish.

If you have a class blog, they could post their results there, or they could write about their own Christmas traditions as well as ones they discover in a webquest (in the image, above, a Catalan Christmas tradition).

If you've got young learners, somewhere I would always look for ideas would be EnchantedLearning.com, where there are some results.

A Christmas card is always fun with kids -- you could get them to draw a nativity scene and then label the different things (shepherds, kings, donkeys, the Baby Jesus, etc) so that they learn some English too.

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Superb images (not from Google)

One of the reasons I'd suggest that you don't turn to Google-is-Evil for your images is that, chances are, they're not going to be that good.

Google has zero interest in the quality of images it steals from other sites; if you want good images, you have to go to a site with a vested interest in providing quality pictures -- a news website, for example.

Here's a good example -- the National Geographic's International Photography Contest. The National Geographic -- now there's a site with an interest in the quality of its images!

Try finding pictures as good on Google...

>> Sources of images for class

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Monday, December 03, 2007

EVO 2008 sessions

Information on the EVO 2008 sessions is now available, with enrolment beginning January 1st.

The six-week sessions (which are free), run from January 14 to February 24 and provide for online discussion and hands-on virtual workshops, and are an off-shoot of the face-to-face annual TESOL convention. TESOL membership is not required.

The 2008 sessions include:
There are also other "non-technology" sessions -- also online -- including such things as drama and music.

Run by volunteers, the sessions tend to be a little over-subscribed (expect them to fill your mailbox!) but all the ones I've attended have been truly excellent.

You want to learn more about technology for language teaching, these are highly recommended...

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