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Lessons On Movies.com. ESL lesson plan on The Hobbit. Complete with printable handout, 8 online quizzes and mp3.
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Shona Whyte
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A video converter converts one kind of video file to another. Here are several free video converter software programs and online video converters.
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Shona Whyte
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Watch how you can use student peer teaching in your classroom to help all students become experts on topics. Peer teaching is a strategy that celebrates student strengths and address student learning gaps.
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Shona Whyte
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Check out these three ways to download video from Web sites like YouTube and Vimeo. Read this article by Sharon Vaknin on CNET.
Connecting with other learners can always be a useful tool - and for language learning, connecting with native speakers of the target language is just about the best practice you can get.
Via Yuly Asencion, Shona Whyte
David Deubelbeiss of English Central and EFL Classroom 2.0 recommends this quiz maker, saying it has the "most potential of any Youtube quiz maker. It has an attractive interface, is well laid out and designed and the library is very accessible. One downside - it doesn't allow you to edit the quiz after you've produced it (usually the case with just launched sites). I'm sure they'll work things out"
Via David Deubelbeiss
"Watch videos of famous scientists, authors, movie makers and artists telling their stories and be inspired to record and share your own." Shona Whyte So many possibilities for learning and teaching languages.
Choose a topic and improve your listening skills! Shona Whyte: The California Distance Learning Project created these resources, allowing adult learners to read and listen to texts, and complete additional exercises.
Via anglaiscapes2012, Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte: Description of methodology for using technology to support and research the development of dialogic instruction in a collaboratively oriented teacher education course. Anne Heintz, Carlin Borsheim, Samantha Caughlan, & Mary M. Juzwik; Michigan State University Michael B. Sherry; Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania Abstract This article documents the curricular decisions made by a teacher educator research team whose guiding theoretical focus for intern practice is dialogic instruction. Over a 2-year sequence, teaching interns used video and Web 2.0 technologies to respond critically to and revise their teaching practices in collaboration with peers and instructors. This article describes how a focus on dialogic instruction and an adoption of a multiliteracies pedagogy guided the implementation and use of technologies within the project. Through multiple examples of curriculum, including excerpts from course materials, screencasts of the adopted networking platform, Voicethread, and video of class sessions, the authors describe how a focus on the dialogic creates spaces for interactions that allow responsive and revisionary attitudes toward not only teaching practices, but the potential and place of technologies in teacher education.
Free Video Converter designed to help you convert any video files from one format to another. All video formats are supported, conversion is fast and easily. Very useful piece of free software and there is a version for both MAC and PC.
Via Nik Peachey
Nik Peachey: "This site has a huge collection of free to view documentaries on a really wide range of topics. Great to reinforce or extend your knowledge. Also great listening parctice."
Via Nik Peachey, Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte: One or two slides from our presentation on our European project iTILT (interactive Technologies in Language Teaching http://itilt.eu) co-authored with project partners Gary Beauchamp and Emily Hillier and delivered on the final day of the EuroCALL conference in Gothenburg, Sweden. A write-up will appear in the conference proceedings scheduled for December 2012, just around the time our video clips of language teaching with the interactive whiteboard go live. After piloting at the start of the academic year, the site will be opened for free public access to our bank of some 200 classroom illustrations in different languages, contexts, and proficiency levels, allowing language teachers and trainers to see the IWB in use and read associated comments by teachers and learners, as well as download lesson plans and materials.
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Shona Whyte
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Free presentation creation, hosting. Add audio to PPT slides, docs, photos to create online videos. Use for e-learning, on-demand webinars, lead generation.
WeSpeke is a free and open global language platform and marketplace cultural exchange where users teach, learn and practice languages.
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Shona Whyte
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Audio and video resources for the classroom - all ages Young Learner to adult
"A Cleaner Internet is an extension for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox. The extension allows you to search YouTube and view YouTube videos without viewing the "related" content, advertisements, and comments that appear on YouTube."
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Shona Whyte
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"The teacher is no longer limited to school-owned cassettes or DVDs; rather, the world is at their fingertips. Learners can also access video from a number of devices, whether at school, at home or on the go."
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Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte: Useful free site for subtitling and translating videos. This link gives tips on using it to increase audience for your own videos, but there are lots of other uses for teaching and learning languages.
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Shona Whyte
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Rob Hirschel, Sojo University, Japan Craig Yamamoto, Sojo University, Japan Peter Lee, Sojo University, Japan Hirschel, R., Yamamoto, C., & Lee, P. (2012). Video self-assessment for language learners. Studies in Self-Access Learning Journal, 3 (3), 291-309. Abstract: Students were video recorded performing similar tasks at both the outset of the academic year in April and towards the year-end in December. Student participants (N=123) viewed both videos in December and completed identical questionnaires with regard to both videos. The questionnaire sought to elicit students’ (1) satisfaction with their English ability, (2) interest in speaking English, (3) ability to interact in English, (4) enjoyment of communication in English, and (5) confidence in speaking English. Mean scores for all items were higher (all statistically significant) for the December videos. In a similar survey comparing students’ perceptions of improvement during their eight months of study, learners participating in the video treatment (N=143) reported higher scores of improvement than the control group (N=107) for all items (2, 4, and 5 achieving statistical significance). Initial results appear to indicate that student videos are correlated with a positive effect upon students’ interest in, enjoyment of, and confidence in speaking English, but not with perceptions of increased general English ability or ability to interact in English. The findings are applicable to teachers and advisors of individual learners, who wish to empower their students in realizing progress for language learning endeavors that can sometimes seem tenuous.
Present.me is your slides, and a video of you presenting them, side by side on the screen at the same time. It’s the next best thing to being in a room with people you want to communicate with, and as it’s on demand, it’s available for anyone to view whenever it suits them. The potential for Present.me for Educators is endless- it is perfect for the flipped classroom, for students to submit projects, practise their presentation skills and much, much more. And Present.me is now available in a new multi-user version. As an academic institution you can sign up for a Team account which provides your school, college or university with a private portal in which you can create, view and manage presentme’s. Discover Present.me for yourself here: http://present.me/
Via Nik Peachey
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Shona Whyte
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Skype teaching resources from ELT professional Shelly Terrell.
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Shona Whyte
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Shona Whyte: Interesting 10 minute video of an EFL lesson based on critical thinking. The starting question is "which is bigger, Australia or Greenland?" and Alister Widdowson presents this lesson for what looks like a B2 young learners class. Lots of inventive use of physical props as well as technology (IWB used for voting at 7:25) and we see the learners working in groups, though no specific language work - it might have been a CLIL class. Alister Widdowson sums up: "the hook is the question, and if you've got that fascinating question, then as long as the question stays interesting, you've got the attention of the learners and I think so much of effective learning is about motivation, wanting to be there, wanting to listen, wanting to understand." Indeed.
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Mobile Learning is about self-actuated personalization.
As learning practices and technology tools change, mobile learning itself will continue to evolve. For 2013, the focus is on a variety of challenges, from how learners access content to how the idea of a “curriculum” is defined.
Technology like tablets PCs, apps, and access to broadband internet are lubricating the shift to mobile learning, but a truly immersive mobile learning environment goes beyond the tools for learning to the lives and communities valued by each individual learner.