Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

October 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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“Threats to school reform … are within school reform”

Threats to school reform … are within school reform is an excellent guest post in the Washington Post’s Answer Sheet blog.

It’s by Mike Rose.

Here’s an excerpt:

As someone who has lived through several periods of educational reform and has studied schools and taught for a long time, I see characteristics of the current reform movement, as powerful as it is, that could lead to unintended and undesirable consequences. But when reform is going strong it can become a closed ideological system, deaf to the cautionary tale.

October 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Joliprint Is A Great Way To Print-Out Webpages

If you want to print out a webpage, or an article from a website, just paste the url address into Joliprint and you will get a very, very nice-looking PDF document that’s laid-out a lot cleaner and in a more accessible than anything you’ll get by just printing the piece directly.

It’s ideal for classroom use. I have to admit, though, that I have a tinge of guilt because no adds come-out with it. I understand that somebody’s got to pay to support these sites, and I do wonder — a little bit — about the ethics of getting such an ad-free copy…

October 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Will New York City Make Teacher’s “Value-Added” Scores Public On Friday?

Thanks to the Los Angeles Times’ irresponsible decision to publicize the so-called “value-added” scores of teachers (see The Best Posts About The LA Times Article On “Value-Added” Teacher Ratings), it appears that New York City is hoping to do the same thing.

According to Gotham Schools:

The city’s Department of Education plans to give the ratings, which are based solely on test scores, to reporters this week.

According to sources familiar with the discussion, city officials are debating with the teachers union over whether to release the scores with or without teachers’ names attached. The union has announced that it plans to seek an injunction in order to halt the release.

Dana Goldstein also has a report, including a link to what a NYC value-added score looks like.

A San Diego school district official recently stated:

“Trust is a component that triggers academic success”

I guess the top people in New York City schools haven’t gotten that message…

(Here are links to stories from The New York Times and The New York Daily News)

October 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

October’s Best Tweets — Part Two

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. Now and then, in order to make it a bit easier for me, I may try to break it up into mid-month and end-of-month lists.

I’ve already shared in earlier posts 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 Twitter profile page or subscribe to their RSS feed.

Here are my picks for October’s Best Tweets — Part Two(not listed in any order):

“Out My Window” is an amazing multimedia 3D online storytelling feature

The Myth of Charter Schools by Diane Ravitch | The New York Review of Books

Fixing Our Schools Requires More Than Hiring Smarter Teachers and Firing Incompetent Ones by Barnett Berry

What’s your sentence?:The movie by Daniel Pink

How Google understands language like a 10-year-old, SF Chronicle

Income Inequality: Too Big to Ignore, NY Times

Larry Cuban’s latest thoughts on school reform

Money and the Market for High Quality Schools by “School Finance 101″

“What Are The World’s Top Tunnels?” slideshow from TIME Mag

Don’t wait for Superman — focus on teachers, Boston Globe

Are you a Teacherpreneur?

McDonald’s Insists Happy Meals Can Grow Mold, The Atlantic

You might also be interested in seeing a list of favorite tweets at:

Shelly Terrell’s blog

Kalinago English

Eye On Education

October 20, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

The Best Ways To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly — 2010

This list brings together what I think are this year’s best nineteen ways to create online content easily and quickly. These web tools are excellent ways for English Language Learners, and others who might not be very tech-savvy, to have a good experience working with technology.

In order to make it on this list, web tools must be:

* accessible to English Language Learners.

* available at no-cost.

* able to be used to easily create engaging online content within minutes.

* willing to host user-created work indefinitely on the website itself.

* appropriate for classroom use.

* accessible without requiring registration.

You might also be interested in:

The Best Ways To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly — 2009

The Best Ways To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly — 2008

A very small number of the applications that have made it on this list are viral marketing tools. You can read this article about how I use these in the classroom.

Here are my ranked choices for The Best Ways To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly — 2010:

Eighteen: CREATE MORE MUSIC: The American Heart Association has unveiled a web application that lets you create a “hand symphony” and send the link of your creation to a friend or yourself. It can then be posted on a teacher website or blog. It’s designed to promote the Association’s new hands-only CPR, and the site also has a one minute video demonstrating it.

Seventeen: DESIGN A DONUT: Dunkin Donuts lets you create your very own virtual donut and share it with others. Students can describe what they made and explain why they made it that way.

Sixteen: MAKE A TALKING PERSON: The Arby’s restaurant chain will let you take any image off the Internet and then make it talk by either recording a message on a computer microphone or using the text-to-speech feature.

Fifteen: CREATE OR COMPLETE A MADLIB: There is a new site called…Madlibs that lets you easily create your own. It could be a fun little filler if you have a few minutes leftover in the computer lab some day. You can then post the links on a teacher/student blog or website for others to complete. I could see creating them, and completing ones your peers made, could be a good activity. A caveat, however, is that it appears the most recent mad libs done on the site are posted on the homepage, and some might be a little off-color. However, the site’s owner tells me he is working to develop a way to deal with that issue.

Fourteen: COMPOSE LYRICS FOR A BEAVER ON A FIDDLE: You can compose lyrics to a song being played by a beaver that fiddles, and see them displayed as captions while the music plays. You can then post your creation on a student/teacher website or blog for all the world to see — lucky them….

Thirteen: CREATE A GAME OF HANGMAN: With the Flash Hangman Challenge, you can easily write a phrase, email it to a friend, and it will automatically be turned into a Hangman game that can also be posted on a teacher/student website or blog. No registration is required. I’m also adding it to The Best Sites For Making Crossword Puzzles & Hangman Games.

Twelve: MAKE A BOOK: With Picture Book Maker, you can easily create a…picture book (including text). It can be saved online or printed out. It’s super-easy to use, plus no registration is required. The url of your creation can be posted on a student/teacher blog or website.

Eleven: DRAW ON THE WEB: Slimber is a very simple online drawing tool that requires no registration. Once you go to the website, you click on “painter” at the top, and you can begin creating. Once you’re finished, you can click “play” and it will “rerun” the artistic process you used. After clicking save, you can write a description of your image. Next, click on “gallery” where you can see your creation and get a url address or embed code.

Ten: MAKE A JACKSON POLLOCK PAINTING: Drips let you paint like Jackson Pollock, and you can save it online. And you don’t have to register for it. Even cooler, it gives you a choice of painting it with either your mouse or your webcam and computer microphone. With your webcam, you can use your cellphone light or something else as a brush and your voice to change the color.

Nine: ANNOTATE ANY WEBPAGE: Bounce is a new app to virtually annotate webpages. Just type in the url address, make notes on it (perhaps students can demonstrate their use of reading strategies like making a connection or asking questions) and then post the link on a student/teacher blog or website.

Eight: MAKE A LIST: Thinkmeter is a neat new application that offers exceptional opportunities for educators and students.  I’m going to repeat a somewhat lengthy description I wrote when I originally posted about it:

It’s designed as a survey-like tool, where you can ask a question and have people vote by clicking on the number of stars they want to give it. People can also leave comments when they vote. You can create these surveys, and vote in them, without registering. If you pick an item from Amazon, it will show an image of the item and, at least if you list a book, it will also show a description of it. In addition, if you insert the url address of an image from the Web, it will show it. You can post the link to your survey wherever you please.

Here are just two ways I will try using it:

* Having students pick their favorite books from Amazon and have other students rate them and leave comment.

* Having students use it for the same activities I list in The Best Social Bookmarking Applications For English Language Learners & Other Students, like listing their favorite games from my website and having others vote on them. In many ways, Thinkmeter can function as a super-easy bookmarking tool for students. As I mention on that “The Best…” list, students can also use a tool like this to create “picture data sets” — a collection of images they can grab off the web that fit into a specific category. On Thinkmeter, once you insert the url address of a photo, the entire photo shows-up on the list, and students can leave a description and justification about why they think it belongs into that particular category.

Seven: RECORD AN AUDIO MESSAGE: Audio Pal is a new tool that lets you easily record a message — either by using a phone, computer mike, or text-to-speech — and then add the embed code to your blog or website. Students can update it as often as they want, and get as many different ones that they want. It’s pretty neat.

Six: TURN A WORD DOCUMENT INTO A WEB PAGE: TxtBear is a new and very useful web application that allows you to easily upload and document and immediately turn it into a webpage. A site like this is one is wonderful for students and others who are not very tech savvy. All they have to do is create a document in Word (including easily copying and pasting images into it), which they might be more familiar with, and easily turn it into a website. Students can upload papers they’ve written, as well. Then, they can just copy and paste its url address into a teacher or student blog. For example, now I have students type essays in a Word Document and then copy and paste them directly into the comments section of our class blog. With TxtBear, they use Word, illustrate it if they want, and then paste the link into the class blog. It makes the document much more readable that way.

Five: MAKE A MONSTER: Grabba Beast will be a big winner in any ELL class. Students can easily and quickly create their own unique monster and then have several ways to share it. If they choose the eCard version, they can describe it and get a unique url address to post. If they choose “save to gallery,” it appears that they can get an embed code for it.

Four: CREATE SUBTITLES TO SOCCER & TV PROGRAM VIDEOS YOU CREATE: I’ve written several times about the incredibly useful and fun Bombay TV, where you can create your own videos from cheesy clips and write subtitles (it’s my number one rated app on The Best Ways For Students To Create Online Videos (Using Someone Else’s Content) list. Well, now it’s created sister sites where you can do the same with clips from old TV programs and from soccer games. They’re called Bombay TV 2, Futebol TV and Classik TV.

Three: MAKE A BABY TALK: etrade’s “Talking Baby” commercials during the Super Bowl are famous annual events. Now you and your students can create their own talking babies by either using the text-to-speech feature or recording their own voices. Their creations can be posted on a student/teacher website.

Two: ANNOTATE AND/OR UPLOAD…ANYTHING: Crocodoc is a super-simple application that allows you to annotate webpages with virtual post-it notes and drawings. You can also upload any document you create and immediate make it into a webpage.

First Place Is A Tie

One: ANNOTATE WEBPAGES SUPER-EASILY:WebKlipper lets you easily, without requiring registration, annotate any webpage with virtual post-it notes or a highlighter. You’re then given the url address of the annotated webpage. Crocodoc was formerly my favorite tool for web annotation. It’s still nice, but as they add new features they also increase its complexity. WebKlipper only does annotation, and does it very well.

One: MAKE A BOOK: Simple Booklet is a great new tool that lets you create online books and reports that can be embedded or linked to by its url address. It’s free, you can grab images and videos off the web, and extremely simple to use. No registration is required. What’s not to like?

Feedback is always welcome.

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the 500 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

October 19, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

A Pretty Darn Good Lesson — If I Say So Myself :)

My colleague Katie Hull and I co-teach an Intermediate English class, and I think we developed and effectively used a pretty darn good lesson today.

Our students have been in the process of planning to write an Autobiographical Incident essay. So, we developed a simple “cloze” (fill-in-the-blank) passage that described the actual writing process.

Students completed the cloze. Then, we took photos of students writing and uploaded them to my Flickr account. Next, students used Fotobabble to upload their photo and record themselves reading their passage describing the process they need to use tomorrow to write a draft of their essay. They then copied and pasted the url address of their image and recording onto our class blog. We showed some back at the classroom on the computer projector, and students were also able to check them out individually while we were at the computer lab.

You can see them all, along with the assignment, at this year’s class blog.

So, in a relatively short lesson (I’d say the whole thing, including showing it in the classroom, took less than an hour), we had students practice metacognition, writing, reading comprehension, speaking and pronunciation, and listening — and they loved it!

As the year progresses, students will write their own descriptions of the writing process for upcoming essays. We thought that it would be best to keep things simple the first time around.

Even though I think this is a pretty darn good lesson, there is always room for improvement. Let me know if you have any suggestions….

October 18, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

Emphasizing What Students Can Do, Instead Of What They “Can’t”

A couple of years ago, I read a short piece by classroom management author Marvin Marshall about the importance of emphasizing to students what they could do, as opposed to what they couldn’t do.

That perspective has had a strong influence on how I act in a number of classroom situations. For example, if a student asks to go the restroom, but I the timing is not right for our lesson, I’ll respond, “Yes, you can. I just need to have you wait for a few minutes” instead of just saying, “No.” Or I’ll start off field trip instructions by saying what students can do, instead of what they can’t.

I think it communicates a more positive tone.

In addition, some research has claimed that people are more likely to do something you don’t want them to do if you specifically tell them not to do so.

Today, I learned that telling people what they can’t do is called an “avoidant instruction.” A new study found mixed results from giving them, but I think this statement from the researcher saying that people can:

“…minimise their biasing influence by emphasising to participants what is to be achieved while neglecting to specify what should be avoided.”

In other words, he thinks it’s better to emphasize what you want them to do, as opposed to what you don’t want them to do.

Makes sense to me.

What about you?

October 18, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Where Children Sleep”

Where children sleep is the title of a book and a slideshow from The Telegraph showing images of children’s bedrooms from around the world — and the obviousness inequities.

When I teach Beginning ELL’s, I use the Picture Word Inductive Model as my centerpiece instructional strategy (I also describe it in my book). When we discuss bedroom vocabulary, I have students share a disposable camera and they all take photos of their rooms (as well as the rest of rooms inside their home and outside shots). We use them extensively in class.

A slideshow like this could be a very helpful addition to that series of lessons, and would also bring in broader socio-economic issues.

October 18, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Good College Prep Info For Californians

EdSource is a California-based organization with off-putting school reform policies, but it sometimes produces useful materials.

Their series of Student/Parent Guides: Beyond High School is an example of these good resources.

They are short and accessible guides — focusing on California — available in English and in Spanish on these topics:

A Guide to California’s Community Colleges
A Guide to CSU Admissions Policies
A Guide to UC’s New Admissions Policies
No high school diploma? You’ve got options!