2.0 Tools... and ESL
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Best tools and reflections to introduce creative and collaborative learning in our lessons... especially in ESL
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Educaplay

Educaplay | 2.0 Tools... and ESL | Scoop.it
Crea fácilmente actividades interactivas para tu clase / Easy creation of interactive activities for the classroom
Ricard Garcia's insight:

Good resource to start digging into the possibilities students creating interactive activities: Creation and collaboration in a catchy app!

Stewart Whitney's comment, December 17, 2012 8:22 AM
I love Educaplay. it's my favorite free quiz-creating site. I just wish I could understand Spanish...
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The 21st Century iPads in Education Digital Delights for Learners Learning Technology Transmedia: Storytelling for the Digital Age Technology in Education
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Label 59 : Add interaction to images.

Label 59 : Add interaction to images. | 2.0 Tools... and ESL | Scoop.it

Label 59 is an online browser based application that lets you label any image interactively. With its rich annotation toolset. The free version allows you to create upto 10 slides with interactive features. This is a nice tool for adding interactivity to images and using language to describe parts or processes.


Via Nik Peachey
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Rescooped by Ricard Garcia from TELT
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Strategies for interacting with students

Strategies for interacting with students | 2.0 Tools... and ESL | Scoop.it

Shona Whyte:

Phil Chappell has distilled this list of do's and don'ts for teachers interested in promoting learner interaction in the language classroom from Mercer and Howe's (2012) paper in Learning, Culture and Social Interaction (as he says, "publicly available for now," the link is in his blog post):

 

- use some ‘open’ questions to explore students’ ideas
- encourage students to put knowledge into their own words (while also offering them new vocabulary to accommodate new ideas)
- press students to elaborate and justify their views, e.g. ‘How did you know that?’, ‘Why?’, ‘Can you say a bit more?’
- allow students extended turns to express their thoughts and reveal their misunderstandings
- hold back demonstrations or explanations until the ideas of some students have been heard (so that explanations can be linked to what has been said and to issues raised)
- give students enough time to construct thoughtful answers to questions, rather than moving quickly on if they are hesitant
- use whole class discussion to help students see the point and purpose of their study of a topic
- at least sometimes, allow students’ comments to shift the direction of a discussion (and even, perhaps, of a lesson!)
- ‘model’ ways of using language to conduct rational arguments, so that students can learn by example. (Mercer & Howe, 2012, pp. 17-18).

 

Phil Chappell has much more to say about this in his blog post, as well as other teaching and research references.


Via Shona Whyte
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