My Dvolver comic strip: Let's go shopping
The comic strip creation for this week's mod is consistent with the photo story on Animoto. For the photo story, students should focus on the vocab and expressions that could be used in an social interaction, such as shopping. For the comic strip, students should make up a relatively social conversation with characters, plot, lines and social purposes. In real classrooms, the comic strip can be used to follow the photo story, and they both are part of one bigger module or theme. Therefore, the language performance indicator for the photo story and the comic strip should be the same.
Performance indicator - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9
Students use appropriate vocabulary, expressions, language, routines, and interaction styles for various audiences and formal and informal social or school situations, noticing how intention is realized through language.
May Include - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9.MI
Expressions and routines such as asking permission, making and responding to request, greeting, making promises, thanking and apologizing. Such situations include chatting with friends, participating in group discussions, greeting a principal or other adult, and making purchases.
Assessment:
Students work in pairs or groups and make comic strips together, following the rubric that the teacher creates. Pairs or groups make presentations about their comic strips to the class, followed by several questions they design for the class to answer. Through the questions, the presenters assess how much the class understands their comic strips and the teacher assess how well the presenters could perform in the social interactions they set.
Saturday, April 18, 2015
Animoto Video
My Animoto Video: Let's go shopping!
Background music: Pet Shop Boys, Shopping
Source of all photos: Google images
For this week's mod, I created an Animoto video with pictures and texts. It is in the setting of a social interaction: students learn words and expressions which could be used in shopping scenarios. Students may create their own photo stories with the Animoto videos. Language performance indicators and assessment are as follows:
Performance indicator - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9
Students use appropriate vocabulary, expressions, language, routines, and interaction styles for various audiences and formal and informal social or school situations, noticing how intention is realized through language.
May Include - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9.MI
Expressions and routines such as asking permission, making and responding to request, greeting, making promises, thanking and apologizing. Such situations include chatting with friends, participating in group discussions, greeting a principal or other adult, and making purchases.
Assessment:
1. I would create a rubric for students to follow before they create their own photo stories. The rubric can also be used as an assessment tool for me to identify students' strengths and weakness in their language performances. For example, the rubric may state that the photo story is set in a social interaction, involving an appropriate social conversation, or part of an appropriate social conversation. Students' followings to the rubric may be demonstrated in their choices of social settings and conversations, so they can be assessed.
2. Students may work in pairs or groups to finish photo stories together. All members shall receive the same score for one group.
3. Students may make presentations to the class, followed by a small quiz to the class. From the presentations and quizzes that students design, their use of language for social interaction purposes can be assessed.
Background music: Pet Shop Boys, Shopping
Source of all photos: Google images
For this week's mod, I created an Animoto video with pictures and texts. It is in the setting of a social interaction: students learn words and expressions which could be used in shopping scenarios. Students may create their own photo stories with the Animoto videos. Language performance indicators and assessment are as follows:
Performance indicator - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9
Students use appropriate vocabulary, expressions, language, routines, and interaction styles for various audiences and formal and informal social or school situations, noticing how intention is realized through language.
May Include - ESL.1.5-8.4.1.9.MI
Expressions and routines such as asking permission, making and responding to request, greeting, making promises, thanking and apologizing. Such situations include chatting with friends, participating in group discussions, greeting a principal or other adult, and making purchases.
Assessment:
1. I would create a rubric for students to follow before they create their own photo stories. The rubric can also be used as an assessment tool for me to identify students' strengths and weakness in their language performances. For example, the rubric may state that the photo story is set in a social interaction, involving an appropriate social conversation, or part of an appropriate social conversation. Students' followings to the rubric may be demonstrated in their choices of social settings and conversations, so they can be assessed.
2. Students may work in pairs or groups to finish photo stories together. All members shall receive the same score for one group.
3. Students may make presentations to the class, followed by a small quiz to the class. From the presentations and quizzes that students design, their use of language for social interaction purposes can be assessed.
Saturday, April 11, 2015
My First TED Lesson & Reflections
Behold! My first Ted Lesson:)
William Shakespeare: Mini Biography
William Shakespeare: Mini Biography
Objectives
|
Assessments
|
Students should be able to
--Identify some basic facts
about Shakespeare: including his personal information, experiences, as well
as historical and cultural roles and so on.
|
In-classroom assessment:
--Students answer
multiple-choice questions correctly after self-study at home and in-class
group discussion;
--Each group indicates
evidences of their choices in the video, and the teacher goes around the
classroom and takes notes on how many correct evidences they can find in the
video.
|
--Name some of his great
works and identify in which periods they were finished
|
In-classroom Assessment:
--Students answer the second
question correctly in the lesson.
After-class Assessment:
--Students organize a given
list of some of Shakespeare’s great works in a chronicle order, early, middle
and later periods.
|
--Mainly understand how
Shakespeare influenced the development of English language and literature
|
In-classroom Assessment:
--Students discuss
Shakespeare’s influences on English Language in groups, and the teacher go
around the classroom, observe and assess individually. The group comes up
with a list of the influences and share with the class. The teacher grades
the list for each group.
After-class Assessment:
--Students post responses
to discussion board online. One response should be at least two paragraphs,
describing explicitly on one of Shakespeare’s main legacies on English
language. The teacher should design a rubric for students to refer to.
|
Reflections on
flipping a class:
1. I was concerned
about how to make flipped classes aligned over a period of time. After creating
a lesson myself, I changed my mind. I think flipped classes are not to be adopted
for a whole semester or a certain period. They can be an integral part of a
complete course. For example, in one course, there can be two or three flipped
classes involved, with materials echoing the knowledge being taught at that
time in a course. If we should try to make the entire course a flipped style,
it would be extremely hard for teachers to find materials from the internet
which are consistent and sequential in syllabus.
2. I was concerned
about the quality of teaching materials for students to work on at home. My
concern is solved now, since I have tried TED-Ed and realized that it can be
used as a format or a rubric itself to make sure the teaching materials wouldn't
fail to meet the demands for effective teaching outcomes. I am not saying that
TED-Ed is the ultimate answer, but it is a good start to build up my confidence
in solving the problem with the help of technologies.
3. I was concerned
about the lack of supervision over students at home. With specific assessments
in-classroom and after-class, the concern is gone. We can never supervise our students all the time, right? We should give them
credits and give them the power, the power of learning and the power of
self-regulating. Online learning is still not popular in China not because
families can’t afford computers but because parents don't believe that their
kids would use computers to study instead of playing games. If I keep thinking
about how to control rather than how to trust, I would never be a good teacher.
I was wrong, and I have learned from my own lesson.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Flipping your class
To flip a class is
like to shuffle the order of teaching a course. The traditional order: the
teacher teaches in class, students go back home and do homework and the teacher
assesses students’ understandings and skills from students’ assignments and classroom
performances. However, the flipped class order puts the homework-doing part
ahead of the in-classroom teaching. The problem would be: how could students be
able to finish the assignments before the teacher even teaches them the
knowledge? The key point here is that the teacher must prepare students with
sufficient and effective teaching materials for students to learn from at home.
Therefore, the order of a flipped class is: students work at home (with
teaching materials and home assignments), students work with peers and the
teacher in class, and students continue to work after class. (references: Flipping Your EL Classroom: A Primer and Three Reasons to Flip Your Classroom
I haven’t flipped
a class yet. But here are some concerns of mine:
1. How can we as
teachers make sure that materials (video, audio and texts) we create for
students to work at home before class are guiding them in the right way? Unlike
teaching in class when we can see students’ responses while teaching, teaching
a flipped class may cause extra time and energy at students’ costs if they couldn't
make the most use of the materials if the materials are not designed
to-the-point. The students may spend lots of time trying to figure out
something on their own, only to find that they are thinking in the wrong way
when they are communicating with the teacher in class. It is possible because
for some knowledge, it could be hard to be explained in materials rather than
teacher’s in-person instruction. Flipping a class relies hugely on the quality
of materials given by the teacher, yet the materials are hard to be designed
and aligned through a period of time.
2. Since students
work on their own at home, it is hard for the teacher to supervise the process.
If in a large class, it is hard for the teacher to assess the learning outcome
of each student in class. If a student doesn't study at home and the teacher
fails to assess that in class, the teacher would lose the control of tracking
the learning of the student. How can we make sure that all students would go
through all materials and study on their own at home?
3. How does the
teacher assess the outcomes of students’ learning at home in class observations
and after-class assignments?
4. Time is a big
concern, too. The teacher may have to commit a lot of time to preparing the
materials, not only keeping in mind the learning habits of his/her students but
also taking into account the different proficiency levels of the students. Is
there a rubric for designing materials for a flipped class?
I hope I can
answer these questions after I have flipped a lesion myself with TED.
Sunday, April 5, 2015
Toronto 2015
April, 2015, Toronto. With dresses and high heels in my suitcase, I had to wear the long jacket during my entire stay in the city which was boldly colder than Buffalo. You thought it would be a perfect season for some lady look...but NO! You were being naive.
For three days, we had to run quickly between two buildings which were connected by a long bridge and eight escalators. The schedule for the convention was so tight that there was only 15 minutes for us to shuttle between sessions. I felt like a journalist, trying to dig as deep as I could in the shortest period of time. Computer, iPad, iPhone, notepad... I used everything that I could fit into my backpack to record, take notes and make the most of the session time.
The convention was impressive in two ways. First, at the speech by the end of the Master Students' Forum, some student asked Dr. Nieto how she managed to balance her life and work, she said that she didn't have a personal life to balance with. She didn't like night clubs or parties, and she worked like a dog. I suddenly realized that for all the days I had been struggling, I wasted my time by neglecting one simple truth: we choose our own life, and the result will always be "win some and lose some". I had been going back and forth on whether I should go on and spend another 4 or 5 years in academia, and I had so many concerns, family, money and friends. I tried to find the best path to solve all problems once and for all. But it was not the way that life was supposed to be. Life is like, make the choice and take all the consequences. If I really want to do something, I should be strong enough to take all the shadow parts of it. During the convention, I saw so many scholars enjoying every session: it was their choice for life. Maybe they had their own problems back home, but at the convention, they made everything worth it. We don't have to balance; we just need to make the choice and take everything that comes along with it.
The convention taught me a lot for my professional development. Equally importantly, I learned a lot from the academic sessions. There were so many sessions everyday, and we got to choose whichever interested us personally. I was attracted to sessions concerning writing and technology. I was extremely amazed by how technology was being used in writing teaching, like MOOC and some other tools that teachers introduced, e.g. Crocodoc. They were both eye-opening tools. Writing is being taught to students in a totally new way. Teachers and students are interacting with a variety of online tools and making writing a fun job. Teachers may find technology extremely helpful in giving feedback and even pre and after writing. I am totally confident that I may be able to establish my own online writing center some day.
Teaching is becoming not only a career but also a life to me. I am really glad that I made the decision. I will move ahead until the day when students don't need me any more. Toronto is my starting point.
Good night, Toronto. Tomorrow is gonna be great!
For three days, we had to run quickly between two buildings which were connected by a long bridge and eight escalators. The schedule for the convention was so tight that there was only 15 minutes for us to shuttle between sessions. I felt like a journalist, trying to dig as deep as I could in the shortest period of time. Computer, iPad, iPhone, notepad... I used everything that I could fit into my backpack to record, take notes and make the most of the session time.
The convention was impressive in two ways. First, at the speech by the end of the Master Students' Forum, some student asked Dr. Nieto how she managed to balance her life and work, she said that she didn't have a personal life to balance with. She didn't like night clubs or parties, and she worked like a dog. I suddenly realized that for all the days I had been struggling, I wasted my time by neglecting one simple truth: we choose our own life, and the result will always be "win some and lose some". I had been going back and forth on whether I should go on and spend another 4 or 5 years in academia, and I had so many concerns, family, money and friends. I tried to find the best path to solve all problems once and for all. But it was not the way that life was supposed to be. Life is like, make the choice and take all the consequences. If I really want to do something, I should be strong enough to take all the shadow parts of it. During the convention, I saw so many scholars enjoying every session: it was their choice for life. Maybe they had their own problems back home, but at the convention, they made everything worth it. We don't have to balance; we just need to make the choice and take everything that comes along with it.
The convention taught me a lot for my professional development. Equally importantly, I learned a lot from the academic sessions. There were so many sessions everyday, and we got to choose whichever interested us personally. I was attracted to sessions concerning writing and technology. I was extremely amazed by how technology was being used in writing teaching, like MOOC and some other tools that teachers introduced, e.g. Crocodoc. They were both eye-opening tools. Writing is being taught to students in a totally new way. Teachers and students are interacting with a variety of online tools and making writing a fun job. Teachers may find technology extremely helpful in giving feedback and even pre and after writing. I am totally confident that I may be able to establish my own online writing center some day.
Teaching is becoming not only a career but also a life to me. I am really glad that I made the decision. I will move ahead until the day when students don't need me any more. Toronto is my starting point.
Good night, Toronto. Tomorrow is gonna be great!
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