Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Saturday, March 14, 2015

#emf5 Day 3 Pleanary Talks


The last two plenary talks in the forum were devoted to technology in learning languages. They were coming from different places but, in my opinion, had ultimately the same message.

Alla Nazarenko started with a short history of distance learning in MSU. Back in 1990s the University had an idea of making their preparatory courses available to people outside Moscow. But they noticed a distinct disadvantage of this project right away : the students were ALONE in their learning from the start. The answer came in the form of imitation of a regular  classroom and the backbone of the new idea was DISCUSSIONS. Having other students interact with you,"seeing" your partner and teacher's involvement seemingly improved the situation.
On the other hand, students are not passive objects of the educational process and their
* responsibility
* motivation
* self - organization
are all crucial in every kind of learning. A good example of this principle is MOOCs which normally have a huge dropout rate. This led the teachers to the understanding that technology is just a vehicle for learning but not a cure. Alla then continued to demonstrate how their department successfully  developed a few blended and distance learning programs.

Gavin Dudeney comes from edtech background and he feels that this area has started getting a bad press in the world of elt. From his point of view, the numbers were the reasons for it. Any number - big/small/irrelevant and soon meaningless. Our obsession with numbers feeds in social networks (number of comments, friends, retweets), publishers and app developers use it to sell us a "new" book/technology/system (if 1000000+people use it, so should you).
Numbers take over our life and substitute the simplest things which sometimes are impossible to measure. Gavin's concern is that everything in the class will be assessed in the future. But can it help anyone? Sure some ways can be more EFFICIENT, but are they the BEST ways to go about making research into elt?
Gavin's answer is to turn our gaze to classrooms from all over the world where educators still teach face-to-face, use their students as a resource and use technology as a means of enhancing the learning process.

Resource to check out: edtech concerns podcast

Friday, March 13, 2015

Rimma Chaldymbaeva "10 reasons to use smartphones and tablets at efl classes"


Rimma has been using a tablet and a smartphone for three years now and she has 10 good reasons why you should do it too.

1. Personalization.
Idea: ask a student for a letter from an alphabet. Then search for the contact in your phone starting with this letter. Name him/her and ask students to ask you questions about this person. Then students can work in pairs 

2. Motivation
Idea: add some listening to a traditional running dictation. Record a story/text on your smartphone and make students transfer it to their notebook.
Tools: Kahoot.it for engaging quizzes

3. Organizing learning process. Ss can note down homework, a teacher can use digital notebooks like evernote to send students reminders and share the materials from the class

4. Economy. No paper involved!

5. Differentiation.
Idea: Ss choose podcasts or video they would like to watch and control the speed and number of times they will watch/listen to it. 

6. Facilitates special needs education.
Tools: Proloquo2go enables speech impaired learners communicate with a teacher in the class.

7. Evidence.
Idea: Ss can record an interview and evidence for their project/homework

8. Assessment and self assessment. In a big class with no time to spare try using the following
Tools: Socrative.com
Polleverywhere.com
Idea: ask Ss to record their voice in the lesson and check it after the lesson.

9. Reflection and self-reflection. Ss are able to record and document their progress
Tools: use whatsapp to give students feedback

10. Learning outside the classroom-> developing autonomy