Nov 26 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

The Best Sites For Learning Spanish Online

Filed under best of the year

I’m often asked for suggestions of good places online where people can learn and practice Spanish for free. In fact, I’ve been asked enough times to make me develop this short “The Best…” list of my recommendations.

Many of these sites also offer lessons in other languages, including English.

Feel free to offer additional suggestions.

I personally have found that going to a language school in a Spanish-speaking country (I went to ones in Mexico and Guatemala) and living with a family to be by far the best way to learn Spanish, but these sites can provide good initial exposure and be helpful for later development and practice.

Here are my choices for The Best Sites For Learning Spanish Online (not in order of preference):

BBC Languages Mi Vida Loca

The BBC also has several other sites for learning Spanish.

Online Spanish Help

Visual Link Spanish

Live Mocha

Busuu

Vocabulix

Lingus TV

Panfu (a virtual world for kids where they can learn Spanish)

Study Spanish

Hello World Spanish

If you found this post useful, you might want to look at previous “The Best…” lists and also consider subscribing to this blog for free.

No responses yet

Nov 26 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

“Does ‘Counting Our Blessings’ Really Help?”

Filed under teacher resources

“Does ‘Counting Our Blessings’ Really Help?” is a report from Cognitive Daily sharing research that shows having students regularly list what they are grateful for helps them develop a more positive outlook.

Doing it daily generated the greatest benefit, but it appears that doing it weekly helped, too.

I don’t plan on trying this with my students anywhere that number of times, but it sounds like a good reflective question to ask now and then.

No responses yet

Nov 26 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

“Frenchfrog’s Little English Pond”

Filed under teacher resources

“Frenchfrog’s Little English Pond” is the name of a blog written by Laurence Haquet. She creates great interactive books that are exceptional learning tools.

I’ve added her book on Thanksgiving to The Best Sites To Learn & Teach About Thanksgiving.

And I’ve added her book on Halloween to The Best Websites For Learning About Halloween.

She’s created quite a few other similar interactives,too.

I learned about her from Michelle Henry’s site, which is on The Best Sites For Teachers Of English Language Learners — 2009 list.

No responses yet

Nov 26 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

The World’s Coolest Buildings

Filed under social studies

The World’s Coolest Buildings is the name of a slideshow from “Travel & Leisure.”

I’m adding it to The Best Images Of Weird, Cool & Neat-Looking Buildings (& Ways To Design Your Own).

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Nov 26 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

A Look Back….

Filed under a look back

Each month, I publish a feature where I “look back” at posts I’ve made one and two years ago (at about this time). I share ones that I think people might still find useful.

Here are some from one year ago:

Voice Of America Special English — From China

A Good Question For Classroom Management

Incredible Website Launches Today!

The Best Tools To Make Simple Graphs Online

The Best Science & Math Sites — 2008

The Best Social Studies WebSites — 2008

“The Best…” Lists Reorganized

And here are some interesting ones from two years ago:

Browser Books Again

Maps Of The World

America’s Favorite Architecture

Neat Music Sites

The Object Of History

No responses yet

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

More On Helping Students Visualize Success

Filed under teacher resources

Last week I posted about an experiment I was doing with my mainstream and English Language Learner students using visual imagery.

In that post, I included links to research done by Zoltán Dörnyei on using visual imagery specifically with English Language Learners.

Today, I learned about another article by him that’s available for PDF download. It’s called New Ways Of Motivating Foreign Language Learners: Generating Vision.

Thanks to Barbara Sakamoto and Dayle Major for the tip.

One response so far

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

PostRank’s Top Posts For November

Filed under Post Rank

I regularly share my picks for the most useful posts of each month. I also publish a list of the month’s most popular posts, based on the number of times they are “clicked-on.”

I also share a list of Post Rank’s analysis of each month’s top posts. Post Rank uses a variety of ways to measure level of “engagement” that readers have with specific blog posts. I have a constantly updated “widget” on my blog’s sidebar that lists these posts, but I thought a monthly post would be helpful/interesting to subscribers who don’t regularly visit the blog itself.

Here are their rankings for the month of November:

The Best Reflective Posts I’ve Written About My Teaching Practice — 2009

The Best Sites For Teachers Of English Language Learners — 2009

The Best Piece Of Classroom Management Advice I’ve Ever Read

An Interesting Thing In Obama’s Speech This Week

The Best Websites For English Language Learner Students — 2009

Do Teachers REALLY Come From The Bottom Third Of Colleges? Or Is That Statistic A Bunch Of Baloney?

So This Is What Obama Was Talking About…

Another Oxford University Press Site

More Sites For Copyright or Royalty-Free Photos

The Best Online Resources For Helping Students Learn To Write Persuasive Essays

Now This Sounds Like An Essential Quality A Teacher Should Have…

A Few Simple Ways To Introduce Reluctant Colleagues To Technology

The Difference Between Praise & Acknowledgment

The Best Ways ESL/EFL/ELL Teachers Can Develop Personal Learning Networks

The Best Sites To Learn About Walls That Separate Us

The Best Online Resources For Teaching & Learning About World War II (Part One)

Neat Lincoln Memorial Interactive

The Best Resources To Learn About The Convention On The Rights Of The Child

Submit A Post To The Next ESL/EFL/ELL Blog Carnival

No responses yet

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Additions To Resources On Mumbai Terrorist Attack

Filed under social studies

This week marks the one-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks on Mumbai, India.

I’ve added resources that were published this week to The Best Resources To Teach & Learn About The Terrorist Attacks In India, including:

Remembering Mumbai’s Victims is a slideshow from The Wall Street Journal published a year after the attacks.

Mumbai Still Vulnerable on Anniversary of Attacks is a New York Times slideshow also published a year after the attacks.

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Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

More On Latitude & Longitude

Filed under social studies

I clicked the wrong button and inadvertently posted The Best Sites For Teaching About Latitude & Longitude a bit too soon.

Here’s an excellent online interactive that I’ve added to the list:

The Saskatoon Public Schools Online Learning Center has a nice interactive on latitude and longitude.

No responses yet

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Thumboo! For Screenshots

Filed under technology

Thumboo! seems like a very quick and easy way to take a screenshot (a picture of a webpage) and add it to your blog or website. An embed code is provided. One negative, though, is it doesn’t appear that you can adjust its size.

I’m adding it to The Best Ways To Create Simple Screenshots.

No responses yet

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

The Best Sites For Teaching About Latitude & Longitude

One of the trickiest things for me to teach (and to learn!) about Geography is keeping things straight between latitude and longitude. Because of that difficulty, I’ve decided to create another “The Best…” list. You might also be interested in The Best Websites For Learning & Teaching Geography.

Here are my choices for The Best Sites For Teaching About Latitude & Longitude (that are, of course, accessible to English Language Learners).  These are not listed in any order of preference:

The Saskatoon Public Schools Online Learning Center has a nice interactive on latitude and longitude.

The Calgary Academy has a great online interactive on the topic that provides audio support for the text. You first have to register for the site, though.  Just click “Start Activity.”

Here’s a free Brainpop movie on the topic.

Kids Geo has a fun latitude and longitude reinforcing game.

Try-out this Pearson “drag-and-drop” activity.

Here’s a game to test and practice understanding of the concept.

And here’s another simple game.

You can also find these links, and links to other map-reading activities, on my website under Introduction to Maps.

As always, feedback and additional suggestions are welcome.

If you found this post useful, you might want to look at previous “The Best…” lists and also consider subscribing to this blog for free.

No responses yet

Nov 25 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Most Popular Websites Of All Time (Measured In A Little Different Way)

Filed under popular site lists

As I’ve explained in earlier pieces, I periodically post “most popular” lists of websites (and books) that I think educators might find useful. Of course, there are a number of ways to gauge “popularity.” I just view these lists as opportunities to check-out some new sites, and find it interesting to see which ones might be particularly “popular.”

://URLFAN measures the popularity of websites by blog mentions. In fact, you can type in the url address of any website and learn how popular it is using this measurement.

It also has what it calls “All-Time Top 100 Ranked Websites Listing most mentioned websites by bloggers.” Here are it’s top ten:

#1. en.wikipedia.org

#2. youtube.com

#3. flickr.com

#4. twitter.com

#5. google.com

#6. myspace.com

#7. facebook.com

#8. imdb.com

#9. nytimes.com

#10. apple.com

Thanks to Read Write Web for the tip..

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Nov 24 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

November’s Best “Tweets”

Filed under best tweets

Every month I make a short list highlighting my choices of the best resources I shared through (and learned from) Twitter, but didn’t necessarily include them in posts here on my blog.

I’ve already shared in earlier posts this month several new resources I found on Twitter — and where I gave credit to those from whom I learned about them.  Those are not included again in this post.

If you don’t use Twitter, you can also check-out all of my “tweets” on my Twitter profile page or subscribe to their RSS feed.

Here are my picks for November’s Best Tweets (not listed in any order):

National Geographic’s International Photography Contest 2009 from the Big Picture

History of Anime, Wall St. Journal interactive & slideshow

Last week was 100th anniversary of Peter Drucker’s birth, here’s a nice review of his ideas

Let’s Slow Down & Consider Our Path Carefully, nice post by Deb Meier

2008 Poverty Estimates for all school districts in US

Looking forward to reading Dan Pink’s new book Drive:The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us (Thanks to Patrick Larkin for the tip)

Infographic on The Great Garbage Patch

Mankind’s Greatest Explorations and Adventures, from TIME Magazine

“Tips for the Admissions Test … to Kindergarten” horrifying story in NY Times

Jay Matthews: Why not junk teacher evaluations in favor of more preparation time?

Can High Tech Hype Trump School Uniforms? Larry Cuban post

Now, these are what I call cool falling dominoes

I’ve never imagined people would use a trampoline like this (you might not want to listen to the accompanying music, though)

10 Amazing Staircases Around the Globe

Over 300,000 Bangladeshis sign up to learn English by cellphone, Washington Post

Interactive map showing which countries have the most corruption

“Can I Put You On Hold?” NY Times column on “words you hate to hear”

The History of the Internet in a Nutshell

Bizarre & unusual destinations around the world , LA Times slideshow

Amazing juggling video

1920s video footage of London, in color

An Afghan Development Model: Small Is Better, NY Times article & slideshow on community organizing

Make math worksheets for free

The World of Tomorrow (If The Internet Disappeared Today)

Infographic on “How To Use An Apostrophe”

“The Problem With ‘Precious’” Newsweek review and important critique of movie

Infographic showing change in population in different countries

New study suggests that comparisons of education attainment in different countries use deeply flawed data

Amazing stuff from the NY Times Innovation Portfolio

Very interesting New Yorker article on how the Internet does not help public discourse

Street art using plastic garbage bags & subway exhaust

You might also be interested in seeing a list of favorite tweets at Shelly Terrell’s blog.

No responses yet

Nov 24 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

The Best Online Resources To Learn About Charles Darwin

Filed under best of the year, science

Since today marks the 150th anniversary of the publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, and since some of my English Language Learners students are taking science classes, I thought I’d put together a quick list of accessible resources about Darwin.

Here are my choices for The Best Online Resources To Learn About Charles Darwin (and are accessible to English Language Learners);

150 years since “The Origin of Species” published is the title of an interactive from Agence France Presse.

The life and times of Charles Darwin is an audio slideshow from the British newspaper The Guardian.

Darwin’s Brave New World looks like a fabulous resource from The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Darwin’s Footsteps is an online game where you follow his travels around the world.

Here’s a neat game about Darwin’s theories.

Happy 200th Darwin Day! is a slideshow from TIME Magazine.

ESL Holiday Lessons has a lesson on Darwin.

Evolution of Life is a series of videos on Darwin and evolution.

The New York Times has an audio slideshow about the Galapagos Islands.

Living Galapagos is an audio slideshow about the islands today.

I’d certainly be interested in hearing other suggestions, so please feel free to leave them in the comments section.

If you found this post useful, you might want to look at previous “The Best…” lists and also consider subscribing to this blog for free.

No responses yet

Nov 24 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

My Nominations For The Edublog Awards 2009

Filed under blogs

Here are my nominations for The Edublog Awards 2009 (you can go to that link to find instructions on how you can make your own nominations):

Best Individual Blog

Public School Insights by Claus von Zastrow posts excellent reports on what’s happening in schools around the country, and provides essential critical reflection on what is being done, or should be done, in the name of “school reform.”

Best Individual Tweeter

Again, I’m making two nominations.  Steven Anderson (@web20classroom) not only sends out a ton of useful tweets, but works hard to develop a sense of community among educators on Twitter. And I can same the same thing about my other nominee — Shelly Terrell.

Best New Blog

I have two nominees here, too:

David Kapuler has done a fabulous job at his blog Technology Tidbits. Not only does he share new ed tech resources, his interview series with bloggers has been very informative.

Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice has contributed a great deal of insight to what’s going on in schools today, and what should be going on there tomorrow.

Best Class Blog

I’m going to be a little self-interested here. I’m pretty impressed (if I say so myself) by the work that my colleague, Katie Hull, the students in our two Intermediate ESL classes, and I have done with our Intermediate English class blog.

Best Resource Sharing Blog

Kevin Jarrett’s Welcome To NCS-Tech may be the “Dean” of all education resource bloggers, and continues to churn-out posts about helpful resources.

I had been planning on nominating Paul Hamilton’s blog, but, unfortunately, he hasn’t been posting a lot lately.  I hope he’ll be able to get back in the groove again so I can nominated him next year!

I nominated Richard Byrne last year and, since he won, I figured it might be good to give someone else a chance this year.  Richard, of course, has continued to do excellent work.

Best Teacher Blog

I’m nominating two here:

Alice Mercer is my Sacramento colleague who writes great posts about both educational policy and the day-to-day life in a classroom. The name of her blog is Reflections On Teaching.

David Deubelbeiss has got to be one of the hardest, if not the hardest, ESL/EFL teachers in the world, and his blog has to be on my list.

Best Librarian/Library Blog

Joyce Valenza at the Never Ending Search shares incredibly useful resources and insights.

Best Educational Tech Support Blog

This is a toughie.  Sue Waters at The Edublogger would be a definite nominee here, but I know it was ruled out last year because of a “conflict of interest” (which I’m not convinced is correct since it would just be one of many in that category and people can vote for whom they want).

If that prohibition is still in effect, I’d like to nominate two blogs:

Langwitches is on many of my “The Best…” lists, and is a great source for links and practical advice. Silvia Tolisano does an exceptional job.

The other is Tom Barrett – for his “Most Interesting Ways” series

Best Educational Use Of A Social Networking Service

Here, again I’m nominating two:

EFL Classroom 2.0, which has a community of thousands of ESL/EFL teachers from all around the world.

English Companion Ning, which has also brought together thousands of teachers.

I look forward to learning about other great blogs.  Nominations are open until December 8th!

6 responses so far

Nov 24 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Hmong New Year

Filed under social studies

Hmong New Year is being celebrated in Sacramento this week, and the Sacramento Bee has a nice slideshow on the local festivals.

I’m adding it to The Best Websites To Learn About The Hmong.

No responses yet

Nov 24 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Compasses Or Road Maps?

I read, hear, and even write a lot about “techniques” that are supposed to improve schools and classroom instruction. Often times, professional development books and workshops (and teacher hand-outs at staff meetings) are filled with zillions of them — how to use multiple intelligences, technology, specific instructional strategies with students that have special needs, etc.

These techniques are obviously important.

I wonder, though, if we teachers and our students, schools, and districts might be better off if we spent a little more time focusing on — for lack of being able to come up with better terms — our “cultural orientations” or basic “ways of thinking”?

What am I talking about?

Please bear with me as share my thinking on all this. Usually, I don’t post a piece like this which is more of a “process post” — I don’t necessarily have as much clarity as I would like, and, instead, am sharing my thoughts and hoping that feedback from readers will helping move my thinking along.

Last week marked the 100th anniversary of Peter Drucker’s birth. Drucker was the renowned business and management philosopher, writer, theorist, analyst. His thinking also says a lot to community organizing (my previous career) and teaching (my present one) Someone (and I’m sorry that I can’t remember who) wrote about National Public Radio’s coverage of this anniversary, which pointed out that his most important idea was:

the importance of a company having a sense of mission or a purpose, and that that’s not identical with its strategy, it’s not identical with its business model, it’s why it exists and what social good or greater good that it’s serving. That’s a very important Drucker idea.

When I’m talking about a “cultural orientation” or “way of thinking,” I think mean something like what Drucker meant. But something more than “whatever is good for kids.”

I’d like to give three examples of what I mean — in the classroom, in a school and, in the context of schools connecting with parents.

IN A CLASSROOM

In the first part of each school year, in most of my classes I lead a discussion with students asking what they want our class to be — “A Community of Learners” or a “Classroom of Students.” I write about this more extensively in my book “Teaching English Language Learners: Strategies That Work” (which will be out next summer), but I’ll give a short description here.

I write the two columns on the overhead and give some examples of the difference between the two. In a classroom of students, a teacher does most of the talking. In a Community Of Learners, students work in small groups and are co-teachers. In a “classroom” people laugh when others make mistakes, while in a “community” people are supported when they take risks. In a “classroom” the teacher has to be always be the one to keep people focused, while in a “community” students take responsibility to keep themselves focused.

Most students say their previous classes had been more like a “Classroom of Students.” I ask students to share what other differences they might see between the two types. Here are a couple of examples students said this year:

In a “classroom” “students start a fight and end up hurting each other.” In a “community” “they don’t start a fight, they talk it out.”

In a “classroom” “the only way to succeed is doing exactly what the teacher says.” In a “community” “you have more than one choice in succeeding.”

After adding to the list, students then decide which one they’d rather have. No one has every chosen a “classroom of students.”

By starting with this basic “cultural orientation” or “way of thinking,” students developed their own ways of approaching (I guess you could almost call it their own “techniques”) how the class would operate. It provided a framework for looking at numerous issues throughout the whole school year, and respected their judgment and wants.

IN A SCHOOL:

Ted Appel has done a tremendous job working with teachers over the past few years at our school to develop a “cultural orientation” or “way of thinking.”  Basically, it’s not acceptable for students to not do well — everybody succeeds.  That way of thinking operates almost universally among the faculty, and is amazingly prevalent among students as well.

Our tutoring project, where students hire (and fire) teachers of their choice, is an example of this way of thinking. We didn’t set-up an after-school tutoring center and then blame the students for not showing-up. Ted and our staff began with the thinking that some students needed help, and looked at what were the barriers to them getting the most effective assistance they could get so they could do well and thought outside the box.

IN A PARENT ENGAGEMENT STRATEGY

In my book, Building Parent Engagement In Schools, I highlight the differences between parent involvement and parent engagement.  Some of those differences include the primary “involvement” tool schools use is their mouths to talk, while the primary “engagement” tool is their ears to listen.  Involvement is often about one-way communication, while engagement can be about two-way conversation.   The invitation to involvement is often “irritating” — challenging parents to do something the schools want them to do, while with engagement it’s often “agitation” — challenging parents to do something that they say they want to do.

Obviously a few examples are useful to illustrate each of those parent engagement elements, but if schools are committed to that kind of criteria, they can judge their own possible actions against them.  They don’t necessarily need a long laundry list of what they should or shouldn’t do.

I guess all I’m wondering is how many schools and districts are skipping looking  these big kinds of cultural orientations or ways of thinking?

I wonder if there should be more of an investment in developing our compasses instead of giving us road maps?

What do you think?

3 responses so far

Nov 23 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Just Paste It & Axess

Filed under web 2.0

Just Paste It and Axess are very, very simple ways to create websites.

They’re ideal for teachers or students who are not very tech savvy, and just want a place to add links or, for example, if students have an assignment where they might need to collect images and then describe them.

Axess has an advantage over Just Paste It because it appears that you can return to edit Axess but can’t do that for Just Paste It.

No registration is required for either one.

I’m adding both to The Best Ways For Students Or Teachers To Create A Website.

No responses yet

Nov 23 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

“Thanks For Being There”

Filed under viral marketing, web 2.0

Thanks For Being There is a simple and accessible web application from State Farm that lets you thank someone for “being there” for you.

It’s easy to use, and students can post the url of their creation on a student blog or website.

No responses yet

Nov 23 2009

Larry Ferlazzo

Send A Critter Carol

Filed under viral marketing

With the holiday season coming-up, you can send a Critter Carol — dogs singing a Christmas song, with a message you write included. Students can create on, and then post the url of their card on a website or blog.

I’m adding it to The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa.

On the same “pet” site, there’s a pretty accessible interactive that helps you decide what kind of dog is best for you. Students might enjoy trying it.

No responses yet

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