Wednesday 7 October 2015

Teaching Listening

Strategies for Developing Listening Skills

Language learning depends on listening. Listening provides the aural input that serves as

the basis for language acquisition and enables learners to interact in spoken communication.
Effective language instructors show students how they can adjust their listening behavior to deal with a variety of situations, types of input, and listening purposes. They help students develop a set of listening strategies and match appropriate strategies to each listening situation.

Listening Strategies

Listening strategies are techniques or activities that contribute directly to the comprehension and recall of listening input. Listening strategies can be classified by how the listener processes the input.

Sunday 22 March 2015

When is a board not a board?




Classes differ in terms of location, status and amount of technological equipment, and in the age, level and number of students, but they all have one thing in common: a board. Teachers are always using the board, but there may be much greater potential to exploit this resource than many people think. One way of finding new possibilities is by using metaphors. This article considers a number of metaphors for the board, and suggests that creative thinking may help teachers find the full potential of this ubiquitous ‘empty space’ resource.


Tuesday 23 September 2014

English Accents


Read and listen to the information about these 11 English accents from around the world.



Tuesday 17 June 2014

Project work with teenagers



Project work is becoming an increasingly popular feature within the ELT classroom. Common projects are class magazines, group wall displays about students' countries and designs for cities of the future.

A project involves students in deciding together what they want to do to complete a project whilst the teacher plays a more supporting role.
  • Some advantages
  • Planning the project
  • Some possible drawbacks
  • Example projects
  • References

Some advantages of project work are:
  • Increased motivation - learners become personally involved in the project.
  • All four skills, reading, writing, listening and speaking are integrated.
  • Autonomous learning is promoted as learners become more responsible for their own learning.
  • There are learning outcomes -learners have an end product.
  • Authentic tasks and therefore the language input are more authentic.
  • Interpersonal relations are developed through working as a group.
  • Content and methodology can be decided between the learners and the teacher and within the group themselves so it is more learner centred.
  • Learners often get help from parents for project work thus involving the parent more in the child's learning. If the project is also displayed parents can see it at open days or when they pick the child up from the school.
  • A break from routine and the chance to do something different.
  • A context is established which balances the need for fluency and accuracy. Haines (1989)

Monday 12 August 2013

TBL and PBL: Two learner-centred approaches

Many newly qualified or inexperienced teachers tend to base their lesson planning on the traditional PPP approach (Presentation, Practice, Production) because it is reliable and it is a valid framework around which to base a series of classroom activities. It is also usually the best way of covering all the lexical areas and grammar points in the course book or syllabus.
All good and well. The problem is that PPP serves the teacher’s needs but it is debatable whether or not it fulfills the needs of the learner.
The language presented and practiced does not take into account the particular needs of each learner; the language content is almost always dictated by the coursebook and/or syllabus. For this reason, many teachers, having experimented with the PPP approach turn to more learner-centred approaches where the needs of the learner are central to the lesson content. Two such approaches are TBL (Task-Based Learning) and PBL (Project-Based Learning).

Why Pragmatics is called a wastebasket of linguistics?

Friday 5 April 2013

Sincronizar marcadores en Google Chrome


Una manera sencilla de controlar los marcadores y mucho más

Hace ya un tiempo que Google Chrome viene ofreciendo la posibilidad de sincronizar los marcadores a través de una cuenta de Google. Ahora con su última actualización amplia esta sincronización a muchos más aspectos del navegador, como extensiones, preferencias y temas.

Sincronizar chrome a una cuenta de Google está pensado para aquellos que disponen de más de un ordenador y quieren tener en todos la misma configuración, de manera que: si en uno añaden una página a favoritos, se instala una nueva extensión, se cambia el tema o la página de inicio...automáticamente aparezca en todos.

Ejemplo práctico:

En casa tienes un ordenador de sobremesa y un portátil. Navegas en ambos con Google Chrome. Si sincronizas los marcadores a tu cuenta de Google ambos ordenadores, dentro del navegador Google Chrome, dispondrán de los mismos marcadores. Pero no solo eso, sino que si añades un marcador nuevo en uno de los ordenadores, Google guarda esa información en tu cuenta y automáticamente se añadirá dicho marcador nuevo en todos los ordenadores sincronizados a esa cuenta. Lo mismo ocurre al borrar el marcador.
Esta función de Google Chrome es muy interesante para las aulas del proyecto Escuela 2.0. ya que nos permitirá (disponiendo de una cuenta de Google para la clase) proponer enlaces y controlar los marcadores de todos los equipos del alumnado de manera directa y sin la necesidad de entrar a una dirección web para acceder a los mismos.
Además nos permite no partir de cero en una instalación nueva de chrome, incorporando las preferencias, extensiones, temas...


Sunday 18 November 2012

Learning strategies for learners

We’ve all heard about learning strategies and what to do to teach them to our students. The problem which arises is how you can understand this tough puzzle: 
 
DIRECT STRATEGIES 

o I. Memory
  1. Creating mental linkages
  2. Applying images and sounds
  3. Reviewing well 
  4. Employing action

o II.Cognitive 
  1. Practising
  2. Receiving and sending messages strategies
  3. Analysing and reasoning
  4. Creating structure for input and output

o III. Compensation strategies 
  1. Guessing intelligently
  2. Overcoming limitations in speaking and writing    
  
 INDIRECT STRATEGIES

o I. Metacognitive Strategies    
  1. Centering your learning
  2. Arranging and planning your learning
  3. Evaluating your learning
 o II. Affective Strategies   
  1. Lowering your anxiety
  2. Encouraging yourself
  3. Taking your emotional temperature 
o III. Social Strategies   
  1. Asking questions
  2. Cooperating with others
  3. Empathising with others