Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

October 16, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Why I Write This Blog

I usually post a version of this piece once or twice a year so that newer readers can see it:

This blog has gotten many new subscribers recently, and I thought it might be useful for me to give a short description of what this blog is all about.

It has several purposes. Writing this blog….

…gives me a little more incentive to be on the look-out for new resources — and pushes me to be a little more creative in my thinking about how to use them — so that I can be a better teacher with my English Language Learner and mainstream students. 

…allows me to share resources that non-techy people like me can actually use.  Many people would be surprised at how limited my technical abilities are. If I can’t figure out how to use an application in a minute or two, I won’t write about it or use it.

…helps me clarify my thinking about the role of technology in the classroom. To paraphrase an economist who was talking about the role of the free market, I believe that technology has its place, but also has to be kept in its place. I don’t think computers are a “magic bullet,” and though I believe they  offer a particular “value-added” benefit to English Language Learners, I’m less convinced about their advantages for non-ELL’s. Writing this blog provides me a forum to share my on-going classroom research to clarify this thinking. (See Results From My Year-Long U.S. History Tech Experiment)

…provides me with a forum to clarify my thinking about the on-going classroom management and instructional challenges (see What Do You Do When You’re Having A Bad Day At School?) faced by me, and many other teachers in inner-city urban schools (and probably in many other schools, too).

…helps me develop connections with a broader Personal Learning Network than I would otherwise have.  Writing the What Do You Do? series has been great, with scores of educators sharing their experiences; connecting with teachers of English Language Learners from throughout the world through our International Sister Classes Project and learning from their stories has been a gift; and it’s a privilege to virtually “meet” so many other teachers with wisdom to offer.

…gives me an arena where I can share my thoughts on a progressive vision of school reform.

…offers me additional writing opportunities on issues I have a particular passion about. These opportunities have also included two books published by Linworth Publishing, both connecting my nineteen-year community organizing career with my six-year teaching career. One is titled Building Parent Engagement in Schools and the other is titled English Language Learners: Teaching Strategies That Work. My third book will be published by Eye on Education next year.

Writing this post helped me to further clarify my purposes for writing this blog.  I hope it helped you learn a little more about the blog, and a little more about me.

October 15, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Graphic Recording of “Changing Education Paradigms”

I’ve previously posted about “graphic recordings” — ongoing visual representations of the ideas a speaker is sharing at the time (see The Best Sites For Learning About Graphic Recording).

RSA Animate, one of the key sites I write about in that “The Best….” list, has just published another incredible example of the genre, this time demonstrating graphic recording with a speech given at the RSA by Sir Ken Robinson, education expert and recipient of the RSA Benjamin Franklin award. The topic of his talk is “Changing Education Paradigms” and is not to be missed.

October 14, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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“What’s wrong with the ‘manifesto’ — point by point”

What’s wrong with the ‘manifesto’ — point by point is the title of an excellent post in The Washington Post’s “Answer Sheet” blog.

It’s an excellent critique of the appalling op-ed written by a group of school superintendents in The Post last week.

I’m adding it to The Best Posts About The Appalling Teacher-Bashing Column Superintendents Wrote In The Washington Post.

October 14, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Slideshow On Bloom’s Taxonomy Using Digital Tools

Joshua Coupal has created a very useful slideshow on the changes in Bloom’s Taxonomy and how it can be applied through digital tools.

He used Prezi, and I know it looks cool and everything, but just have to say that I find Prezi distracting and disorienting. But, perhaps I’m just an old fuddy duddy.

I’m adding the link to The Best Resources For Helping Teachers Use Bloom’s Taxonomy In The Classroom.

Thanks to Thanks to TheConsultantsE for the tip.

October 14, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Mapeas

Mapeas provides news videos from around the world. Of course, lots of sites do this.

Mapeas is different, though, because the video links are located on a Google Map — you go to the geographical area of the world you want, and you click on the links located there.

I think students will find it engaging, and am adding it to The Best News/Current Events Websites For English Language Learners.

October 14, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
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More On The Chilean Miners

Here are new additions to The Best Sites For Learning About The Trapped Miners In Chile:

Rescued From The Chilean Mine is from The Big Picture.

All 33 Miners Pulled to Safety in Chile comes from The New York Times.

Rescue of Chilean miners is a Washington Post slideshow.

Trapped miners are all rescued is from the CBBC Newsround.

Here are two articles from The New York Times that would be challenging to ELL’s, but offer excellent information. A teacher could modify them:

After Rescue, Miners Tell of Ordeals and Plot New Lives

Miners Defy Dire Predictions on Fitness and Spirit