Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

June 23, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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There May Be Fewer Posts Here This Summer…

My “job” this summer is writing my third book.

It doesn’t have a title yet, but here is how I’m describing it:

It’s focused on instructional and classroom management strategies geared towards developing student autonomy and personal responsibility (as opposed to student obedience or student rebellion); and on professional development strategies focused on a consistent ethic of improving one’s craft and maintaining one’s sanity.

It will also relate to all types of students and teachers — and all grade levels — and will not be limited to English Language Learners.

It will share a variety of strategies to deal with what seems to me to be fifty common challenges facing teachers in the classroom. Assuming I meet the manuscript deadline :) , Eye On Education will publish it in mid-2011.

I’ve found that when I’m writing a book, I look for any opportunity to procrastinate. So, in an effort to combat that tendency, I’ve dramatically reduced the number of blogs in my RSS Reader, and anticipate not writing as much here over the next two months (though I’m sure there will be at least daily posts).

I also anticipate inviting blog readers to contribute to the book, as I began doing earlier this year (Let’s Write A Book Together!).

Wish me luck!  I’ll need it to get this thing done by the time school begins again….

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Critical Past Has 57,000 Historic Videos

Critical Past is a new site that has 57,000 “historic” videos from 1893 to the 1990′s — many of them appear to be old newsreels.

It seems to be designed to sell them for download, but anyone can view them online for free. It has a very nice search feature.

I’m adding it to The Best Sites For News & History Videos That Won’t Get Blocked By Content Filters (At Least, Not By Ours!).

I’ve also added it to The Best “Today In History” Sites because it has another feature to easily find out what happened on any date in history.

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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How Much Time Do People Spend At Work And At Play?

The Wall Street Journal has published a very accessible infographic titled At Work And At Play.

It shows, by ethnicity, how Americans spend their work and leisure time. The data comes from the U.S. Department of Labor.

The New York Times published a somewhat similar infographic last year, which I named number one on the The Best Interactive Infographics — 2009. They used a different source for their data, though. It would be interesting to compare the two.

Here’s what I wrote about The Times’ infographic:

The New York Times  published a fascinating infographic titled How Different Groups Spend Their Day.  Here’s how they describe it: “The American Time Use Survey asks thousands of American residents to recall every minute of a day. Here is how people over age 15 spent their time in 2008.” It actually shows what people did  every hour of everyday — sleeping, watching TV, eating, etc.  And the numbers are divided by ethnicity, age, education-background and more.  I could easily see having my students first do a similar analysis of their days and then comparing it to this infographic.

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Merit Pay Studies

Regular readers know I’m not a supporter of merit pay for teachers. The best piece I’ve seen outlining the reasons why it isn’t a good idea is a short piece titled What’s Wrong With Merit Pay by Diana Ravitch.

A new, short, report has just been published by the Education Commission of the States examining several studies on merit pay. How do they analyze them?

Each of the studies of the four pay-for-performance systems found no conclusive
evidence to link the new merit pay system with higher student achievement.

Thanks to the HechingerEd report for the tip.

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
5 Comments

Avoiding Goal-Setting Problems — In The Classroom & In Education Policy

Goal Setting – Pitfalls and Benefits is a useful post about goal-setting issues. It has a couple of good links within the article itself, as well.

The article, and its links, are primarily focused on goal-setting in a business environment, but a number of the points raised can be useful to educators — both in the classroom and in thinking about broader education policy.

As regular readers know, I use goal-setting a lot with my students, and you can read more about how I do so in My Best Posts On Students Setting Goals.

Here are a few items that stood out for me:

* It can be very dangerous when you set goals for others . It can result in:

a narrow focus that neglects non-goal areas, a rise in unethical behavior, distorted risk preferences, corrosion of organizational culture, and reduced intrinsic motivation. (I wonder if Education Secretary Duncan has read this study?)

I don’t set goals for my students, but neither am I a “potted plant” when we discuss them. When I work with students on helping them develop their goals, I certainly share what the “average” academic assessments are (in cloze, fluency, and state test assessments). They then make their own determination of what they want to achieve in relation to their existing scores. I also share with students what research says are the qualities of a good learner and good leader, and then they decide which — if any — they want to improve on. In goal-setting decisions — which all occur weekly, quarterly, semester, and yearly — they make their other two or three goals based on what they think they want to focus on. I also ask them to write why they picked those goals — what do they see as the pay-off for them?

To adapt an old community organizing saying, if I set their goals I’m sending the message that their meeting the goals are more important to me than to them. If that’s the case, their investment in meeting them is reduced considerably.

* Another study reinforced what I do in my classroom — having students primarily focus on setting “learning goals” (learning how to categorize information better, to work better in groups, be more disciplined about reading a book for a half-hour each night or to read a more challenging book), with a lesser priority (though we definitely include them) on “performance goals” (increased assessment scores). The study says that M.B.A. students who focused more on learning goals ultimately ended-up with a higher G.P.A. than those students who had only set a G.P.A. goal.

It’s similar to my community organizing experience. Our organizations were often more effective in building affordable housing than groups that just focused on affordable housing development and in getting people into jobs that paid a living wage with benefits than job training agencies. The primary reason for that success was that we were focused on helping people learn to become leaders, and then used housing and jobs campaigns as tools to help people develop leadership skills.

The idea is to help people become life-long learners, and then the performance outcomes will come. In our organizing campaigns, though we were more effective in the long-run, our ultimately very successful efforts did take what some might consider too long of a time to bear fruition. Our school emphasizes building life-long learners and not teaching to the test. We are making slow, but very steady, improvement. Nevertheless, we are in Program Improvement Status as defined by No Child Left Behind.

* The study found that performance often drops when goals are seen as a threat instead of a challenge. In the classroom, I deal with that by making sure students set their own goals and making it clear that there will be no negative consequences coming from me if they don’t meet them. However, I ask students to regularly review their goals and their progress towards making them. If they are not moving towards them, they need to think about the reasons behind that lack of progress and develop a new plan of action, and I’m available to help if they want.

Perhaps Education Secretary Duncan should this study, too….

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

The History Makers Digital Archive Is Pretty Impressive

The History Makers Digital Archive is a collection of video interviews with 400 African Americans, including Barack Obama and other well-known figures.

That’s nice, but how their presented is what makes this site extraordinarily impressive. Here’s how they describe it:

As a registered user of the new web-based archive, you will be able to:

* Search the spoken text of over 900 hours of video divided into
18,254 story segments.
* Filter searches by geography, time period, and the gender,
occupation and birth year of the interviewee.
* View your search results as 3-5 minute video story segments,
each aligned with a running transcript below a Flash video player
(compatible with most browsers).
* Save video story segments of interest and return to them through
web site bookmarking.
* Search dozens of historical topics, biographical themes and
interview qualities, newly coded to interview segments through thousands
of hours of human indexing.

It’s pretty neat.

Registration is free, though it’s a bit more cumbersome than most other sites. I still was able to finish it in a couple of minutes.

I’m definitely adding it to The Best Websites To Teach & Learn About African-American History.

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Moving English Language Learners to College- and Career-Readiness”

Moving English Language Learners to College- and Career-Readiness is an “issue brief” from The American Youth Policy Forum.

Besides having some up-to-date statistics on ELL’s, it “explores effective educational models for serving ELLs in ways that prepare them for college and careers. The brief provides background information on federal legislation affecting ELL students and an overview of the models being used in a region of Texas.” (via TESOL Connections)

June 22, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

Only A Few More Days To Answer “What Will You Do Differently Next School Year?”

July 1st is the deadline to share your response to the question “What Will You Do Differently Next School Year?”

Forty-one educators have already left their answers at my blog post “What Will You Do Differently Next School Year?”

I’ll be combining them all into a post here, and including some in an article I’m writing for Teacher Magazine.

So, please, as briefly as you can, share in the comments section of that original post one or two things you want to do differently next school year — along with sharing what is prompting you to want to make that change and why.

June 21, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

Students Can Design A Travel Guide With Explorra

Explorra is a new travel site that appears to be designed to compete with the many others that allow you to create your own travel itinerary. I’ve posted many of those similar sites at The Best Sites Where Students Can Plan Virtual Trips. I wouldn’t add Explorra to that list, though — the others seem to do a better job at that.

However, Explorra does have one feature I really, really like — the ability for users to create an online guide to anyplace in the world. After sign-up, which only takes a minute, you identify a city, country or state, and then start listing what you think are the most interesting places there. Explorra will search the Web for images of each location, and you can write descriptions.

Because of that feature, I’m adding the site to The Best Places Where Students Can Write For An “Authentic Audience.”

In addition, the site has a fun text and picture travel quiz that students might enjoy taking, and it’s accessible without registration.

June 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

Modeling Classroom Behavior With Student Video

One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned through my teaching is the importance of modeling for students before I expect them to do a particular assignment — writing, reading strategies, etc. It seems to make a huge difference. It seems, though, that since I’ve gotten a document camera, being able to either have students come-up and show their work examples — or me just grabbing them and showing them on the camera — may even have a greater impact.

I obviously also try to intentionally model appropriate behavior as well and, though I think it’s important — especially for many of my students who may not have any or few male adults in their lives — I’m not convinced that modeling is quite as effective in resulting in similar student behavior. It’s probably safe to say that peer behavior functions as a more effective model.

I started thinking more about these topics after reading Observe a Good Deed, Perform a Good Deed, a report on a study showing that students seeing videos of people performing acts of kindness were more likely to do altruistic acts themselves. Of course, this idea of seeing/replicating isn’t that new, and I’ve written about a similar study on a different topic in Self-Control Can Be Contagious.

But all this got my brain percolating. Since it appears that people might replicate behavior they see on a video, and that my students seem to take to heart cues that they get from their peers, I wondered if I should try an experiment: Why not identify specific areas of classroom behavior — for example, working in a small group and eliciting participating from everybody, and show students a video of their peers modeling that behavior? Then, telling them that one of their future projects will be to make a short video modeling appropriate classroom/learning behavior on a topic of their choosing.

I could see starting off early in the year having my IB Theory of Knowledge making a video and then showing it to my mainstream ninth-grade English class as a model.

I’m thinking it might have a positive effect. Or, at the very least, it couldn’t hurt :)

I know of a bunch of videos online designed to train teachers how to teach, but I don’t know of ones that are designed by students to help them become better learners. Maybe they’re out there. Does anyone know of examples? Have you tried doing something like this?

June 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Very Good New Immigration Interactive From The New York Times

The New York Times just published a very good interactive on immigration. It’s a timeline showing the major issues related to immigration reform that have occurred since 2004. They are short “snippets” with images. You can also see editorial responses from The Times for each event.

I’m adding the link to The Best Sites For Learning About Immigration In The United States.

June 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

More Info On Asking If You Can Achieve Your Goals (Instead of Just Setting Them)

Last month I wrote the post “Will we succeed? The science of self-motivation,” which told about a new study suggesting that it is better to ask yourself if you can achieve a goal instead of just setting it.

The study said:

By asking themselves a question, people were more likely to build their own motivation.

The results of this experiment showed that participants not only did better as a result of the question, but that asking themselves a question did indeed increase their intrinsic motivation.

I think I can how this might work. Asking yourself a question sort of requires a stronger affirmation than just stating a goal.

Today, Daniel Pink has written an article in The Telegraph elaborating on the study.

It’s worth reading, and quotes one of the researchers:

“…asking questions forces you to define if you really want something and probably think about what you want, even in the presence of obstacles.”

I’m adding this post to My Best Posts On Students Setting Goals.

June 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“The Price Of Freedom: Americans At War”

“The Price Of Freedom: Americans At War” is a Smithsonian multimedia interactive on each war in United States’ history. Videos (with transcript), images and text are included.

I’m adding the link to several “The Best..” lists, including:

The Best Websites For Teaching & Learning About U.S. History

The Best Sites For Learning About The American Civil War

The Best Resources To Learn About The Vietnam War

The Best Sites For Learning About The Korean War