Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

December 12, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

All My “The Best Of 2010″ Lists In One Place!

I’ve been posting quite a few “Best Of 2010″ lists, and thought readers might find it useful if I put links to all of them into one post.

I’ve still got a few up my sleeve, though, and I’ll be posting them over the next couple of weeks. These include the best sites of the year for English Language Learners, and the best music sites.

Here are all of my “The Best of 2010″ Lists in one place:

The Best Comic Strips For Students & Teachers — 2010 (And Earlier) — September, 2010

The Best “Fun” Sites You Can Use For Learning, Too — 2010

The Best Online Learning Games — 2010 — September, 2010

The Best Science Websites — 2010 — September, 2010

The Best Infographics — 2010 — October, 2010

The Best Social Studies Websites — 2010 — October, 2010

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

The Best Theory Of Knowledge Resources — 2010

The Best Resources, Articles & Blog Posts For Teachers Of ELL’s — 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists Related To Social Studies — 2010

Part Two Of The Best Comic Strips For Students & Teachers — 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists Offering Practical Classroom Advice To Teachers — 2010

My Best Posts On Building Parent Engagement In Schools — 2010

The Best Web 2.0 Applications For Education — 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists On Technology — 2010

The Best Places To Find The Most Popular (& Useful) Resources For Educators –2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists On School Reform Issues — 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists For English Language Learners — 2010

The Best From “Interviews Of The Month” — 2010

The Best Articles & Posts On Education Policy — 2010

Best “Tweets” Of 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists Related To Science — 2010

The Best Health Sites — 2010

The Best Reflective Posts I’ve Written About My Teaching Practice — 2010

The Best “The Best…” Lists About Disasters — 2010

The Best Articles (And Blog Posts) Offering Practical Advice To Teachers — 2010

The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2010

The Best Articles I’ve Written In 2010

The Ten Best Videos For Educators — 2010

Part Two Of The Best Videos For Educators — 2010

The Best “Year In Review” Features That Aren’t Photo Collections — 2010

The Best Websites For English Language Learner Students — 2010

The Best Art & Music Sites — 2010

The Best (& Worst) Education News In 2010

The Best “Words Of The Year” Features For 2010

My Most Memorable Classroom Moments In 2010 — Please Share Your Own

The Best Education-Related Books Visitors To This Blog Read In 2010

Of course, you can find all 590 “The Best…” lists here.

December 11, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Among The Hmong”

“Among The Hmong” is a half-hour episode from the PBS children’s show “Postcards From Buster.” There’s not a direct link to it, but if you go to the PBS Kids video site and type in “Hmong” in the search box, you’ll see it and be able to watch it.

I’m adding it to The Best Websites To Learn About The Hmong, which I’ve just completely revised. The Sacramento Bee newspaper provides excellent coverage on Hmong and Hmong culture. Unfortunately, they removed articles from their website pretty quickly after they post it, so I’ve had to remove a lot of dead links.

By the way, that PBS Kids video site is pretty impressive for accessible materials on many topics.

December 11, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Feel This Day”

Nikon has created a pretty neat site called “Feel This Day.” It’s a nice multimedia interactive showing what events have happened on each day in history.

Unfortunately, though, it seems to just show what happens on the day you access the site — I don’t see anyway to access other days from throughout the year. If you can figure out that there is such a way, please let me know.

Even with that drawback, I’m adding it to The Best “Today In History” Sites — with an asterisk.

December 11, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Giving “Listening” Instructions

Most of us, I think, ask our students to show respect and give their attention to classmates when they are speaking. I generally ask students to make a point at looking at the speaker, even if it requires turning around. I tend to have a little better luck with student “compliance” on that one with my Intermediate English class than with my mainstream ones.

I’ve now just read a study that reports that:

…participants talking to smiling listeners used more interpretive, abstract language, whereas participants talking to frowning listeners stayed with the concrete and descriptive facts.

It’s not a huge surprise, but I think I’ll share what it says with my Intermediate English class. Perhaps it will make them more inclined to be conscious of what they’re doing  when their classmates are speaking.

December 11, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

My Most Popular Blog Posts Of The Year — 2010

It’s time for the annual list of my most popular blog posts of the year — determined by the number of times they’ve been visited.

You might also be interested in these previous lists:

Most Popular Posts Over The First Three Years Of This Blog

The Most Popular Posts Of The Year — 2009

The Most Popular Posts Of 2008

As usual, I’m dividing the list into two sections — “The Best….” lists and other posts.

Here are My Most Popular Blog Posts Of The Year – 2010:

MOST POPULAR “THE BEST…” LISTS:

1. The Best Web 2.0 Applications For Education — 2009

2. The Best Websites For Learning About Martin Luther King

3. The Best Sites For Learning About The World Cup

4. The Best Websites For Learning About Halloween

5. The Best Sites To Learn About The Gulf Oil Spill

6. The Best Places To Get Royalty-Free Music & Sound Effects

7. The Best Sites To Learn About The Vancouver Winter Olympics

8. The Best Sites To Learn About The Earthquake In Haiti

THE TOP POSTS THAT WERE NOT “THE BEST…” LISTS:

1. Excerpt From My Book On Teaching English Language Learners

2. Be Prepared To Laugh With Tears Flowing After Watching “Collaborative Planning” Video

3. Answers To “What Do You Do On The First Day Of School?”

4. How To Get A Discount When Ordering My Parent Engagement Book

5. When A “Good” Class Goes “Bad” (And Back To “Good” Again!)

6. A Few Simple Ways To Introduce Reluctant Colleagues To Technology

7. Have You Ever Taught A Class That Got “Out Of Control”?

8. Did You Know That THE Key To Saving American Education Is Firing Bad Teachers?

December 10, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Speak Truth To Power” Curriculum

Speak Truth To Power is a project of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights that includes a curriculum of seventeen lessons. The lessons include ones on genocide and human trafficking.

They would have to be modified for English Language Learners, but they look useful. They include videos but, unfortunately, they’re all on YouTube, which make them inaccessible (online, at least) for most students. Of course, they can be downloaded and shown.

I’m adding them to The Best Resources For Learning About Human Trafficking Today and to The Best Resources For Learning About Genocide.

December 10, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

For Email Subscribers To This Blog

Feedblitz generally does a good job providing a daily email to subscribers of this blog containing all my posts, but for the past couple of weeks they haven’t been including all of them.

So, if you subscribe to this blog by email, you might want to visit my blog directly now and and then to see if you’ve missed any, at least until Feedblitz fixes the problem.

December 10, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Can setting goals make you happier?”

I’ve written quite a bit about how I use goal-setting with students, and write even more extensively about it in my upcoming book.

In fact, I have a “The Best…” list on it — My Best Posts On Students Setting Goals.

I recently learned about a study that has concluded:

The results provide preliminary support for the view that (a) goal setting and planning skills have a causal link to subjective well-being and (b) that such skills can be learned to enhance well-being.

December 10, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

The Best Articles (And Blog Posts) Offering Practical Advice To Teachers — 2010

The title of this “The Best…” list is pretty self-explanatory. What you’ll find here are blog posts and articles this year (some written by me, some by others) that were, in my opinion, the ones that offered the best practical advice to teachers this year — suggestions that can help teachers become more effective in the classroom today or tomorrow. Some, however, might not appear on the surface to fit that criteria, but those, I think, might offer insights that could (should?) inform our teaching practice everyday.

For some, the headlines provide enough of an idea of the topic and I haven’t included any further description.

You might be interested last year’s edition:

The Best Articles (And Blog Posts) Offering Practical Advice To Teachers — 2009

Here are my choices for The Best Articles (And Blog Posts) Offering Practical Advice To Teachers — 2010 (not in order of any preference and, in fact, not in any order at all):

How to Create Nonreaders by Alfie Kohn

This Is What I Do When Students Are Late For Class…

What a good IEP looks like… is the best and most useful piece I’ve ever seen about IEP’s, the “Individualized Education Plans” that students facing learning challenges are supposed to have if they’re in the U.S. public education system. And I’m not just saying that because the author, Ira Socol, says something nice about me in it :)

What Is Your Technique For Memorizing Student Names?

Evaluating Student Athletes

I’m a big believer in the importance of developing relationships. Organizers say community organizing is just another word for relationship-building, I have a chapter on developing relationships with students in my book on teaching English Language Learners.

There’s a nice article in Middle Ground titled “The Power Of Positive Relationships” by Tara Brown that shares some more ideas on how to enhance building relationships in the classroom.

Can Providing Hand Sanitizer In The Classroom Help Student Learning?

Excellent Info On The Importance Of Reading For Pleasure

Dropbox Works Nicely

Dan Meyer, a highly regarded math teacher who uses a lot of multimedia in his lessons, has generously placed his entire curriculum for Geometry and Algebra online for people to use. Also, just a reminder that I have my entire United States History curriculum from one year ago online, too. Lastly, even though they certainly are not as complete, you might also find the lessons in my Theory of Knowledge, Ninth Grade English, and Intermediate English class blogs useful.

Edutopia has a very nice and useful “Back-to-School Guide: Jump Start Learning With New Media” available for free download. All you need to do is type in your email address here, and it’s yours.

Book Trailers

What I Do During The Final Week Of School

My Revised Final Exams (And An Important Lesson)

My Personal Responsibility Lesson For This Friday

Tom Barrett is known for his “Interesting Ways” series, which include numerous ideas on how to use Web 2.0 applications (including Wordle, iPod, Google Wave, Prezi, etc.) in the classroom. The series, however, is not only limited to technology, and also includes topics like supporting reading comprehension and spelling. He’s put them all in one place now. You definitely want to bookmark his Interesting Ways page.

Post-Test Weeks…

More Test-Prep Hints

Talking With Students About Standardized Tests

Getting Students To Talk About What They’re Reading &”Book Talks”

“Be Niiiiiicccccceeeee”

“Book Discussion Group Guidelines”

“The Amazing Web 2.0 Projects Book,” edited by Terry Freedman, is a must-read for anybody who wants to use Web 2.0 applications with their students.

Giving Students “Reflection Cards”

What to Look for in a Classroom is a nice chart developed by Alfie Kohn. It lists “Good Signs” and “Possible Reasons To Worry” for a number of categories, including furniture, “on the walls,” sounds, etc. It wouldn’t necessarily take it all as “gospel” (and nor do I believe he intended it to be). I’m not a big advocate of students seated around tables, for example. But it’s a good general guide to use and figure out which side do you tend to be on…

How Do You Think Working Hard & Learning Everything You Can In This Class Might Help You Now & In The Future?

Two Ways I’m Using Our School Library

“Should Have, Could Have: What Parents Regret About High School”

A Lesson Highlighting Community Assets — Not Deficits

Have You Ever Felt Like You & Your Students Are “Enduring” Class Instead of Enjoying It?

“Will Sleeping More Make Me Smarter?” — A Lesson I’m Trying This Week

“Point, Quote, Connect”

Student Metacognition & Instructional Strategies

The Best Number For A Small Group

“I Haven’t Been Feeling Very Respected….”

Feedback is 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 nearly 500 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

December 10, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

More On The Nobel Peace Prize

Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo will be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize today, but will be unable to accept it because he’s in prison.

Here are the newest additions to The Best Sites To Learn About The Nobel Peace Prize.

Activist Laureates is a slideshow from The Wall Street Journal.

Nobel Winners Past is a slideshow from Slate.

Why the Nobel Peace award upset China is an article from CNN with many related videos.