Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

March 22, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

I Like Instalyrics

Instalyrics is a new site that shows you the lyrics to any song very, very quickly, along with a music video that goes along with it. The lay-out is very “clean” and it replaces Batlyrics as my favorite place for music videos and lyrics.

I’m adding it to:

The Best Places To Find Lyrics On The Web

The Best Websites For Learning About Bob Marley

The Best — And Easiest — Ways To Use YouTube If, Like Us, Only Teachers Have Access To It

March 22, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

New Feature: Interviews With EFL Teachers In “Hot Spots” Around The World — First Up: Japan

For the past two years I have had, and will continue to have, an Interview Of The Month with a person in the education world who I wanted to learn more about and whom I thought readers might be interested in.

A little while ago, though, I had an idea for a new regular interview series. There are always lots of “hot spots” around the world — places where there are natural disasters, political upheavals, etc. And English teachers can be found in most of those places. Why not, I thought to myself, take advantage of this kind of international network and do short, timely, interviews with these teachers?

I’m kicking-off this series of “hot spot” interviews with Barbara Hoskins Sakamoto in Japan. Two additional teachers in Japan with unique perspectives will also be contributing their thoughts in future interviews, as well as English teachers from countries experiencing revolutions in the Middle East.

I know English teachers from many parts of the world read this blog. If you are in a place that is a “hot spot” now, or in the future, and you feel safe participating in an interview, please contact me. These short interviews can also be anonymous if necessary for safety purposes.

Now, here’s my interview with Barbara:

Can you say a little about yourself — how long you’ve been in Japan, what and where do you teach, why you decided to teach English and why you came to Japan? And, of course, tell us about your blog!

I’m an English teacher in Kyushu, Japan. I started out as a high school English teacher in the US, and came to Japan in 1985 after getting my MA in TESOL. I thought I would stay for a couple of years in order to pay off student loans, and have been splitting my time between the US and Japan ever since.

My first job in Japan was in Sendai (where the earthquake hit) and I was there at the beginning of February to do a teacher training workshop with Oxford University Press. It was very strange to see places I had so recently visited during and after the quake and tsunami. In addition to teaching and teacher training, I write. I’m a co-author of Let’s Go (a series for young learners of English). I have a collaborative blog for teachers of English called Teaching Village.

Where were you when the quake hit? How close are you to the epicenter, the tsunami and the damaged nuclear plants? How did the quake feel?  And what was your immediate reaction and feeling, as well as the reactions from your neighbors?  And how has it affected you life since that time?

I would not have noticed that there was a quake if I hadn’t been looking at Twitter. Kitakyushu (where I live) is over 1000 kilometers from Sendai and nearly the same distance from Fukushima, and didn’t shake at all. While we had tsunami warnings, and the tide did rise, it was minimal. Almost immediately after seeing mentions of the quake on Twitter and Facebook, there was live TV coverage of the tsunami. It was surreal to watch the destruction of a place I know well, all happening just about 2 hours away by plane.

The immediate reaction here was to turn to Facebook since that’s where people first reported that they were okay. Landlines didn’t work, but people were able to access the internet on mobile phones. Friends in Tokyo talked about their 2-10 hour treks home to the suburbs (when trains stopped). Then people began more actively tracking down other friends who hadn’t checked in. The strong aftershocks have made everyone quite weary. Most of the aftershocks would be considered decent sized earthquakes on their own if they weren’t following a 9.0 initial quake. There have been well over 600 quakes and aftershocks in little more than a week. None of them have been felt in far western Japan, which adds to the surreal feeling we have here.

The quake and tsunami has had two main effects on life here. First, people are still very concerned about residents still in Tohoku, are all trying to find ways to help locate people still missing, and trying to get supplies to the survivors. Second, Kyushu is getting ready to house long-term evacuees in private homes and in government housing, and some companies in Tokyo that are moving operations to Fukuoka (for a time, anyway).

Like most others in Japan, I watch a lot more news now, both on TV and via the Internet. My heart soars each time I see survivors found and trucks arriving in Tohoku with supplies, it breaks every time I see survivors still waiting for help at their evacuation centers or looking for missing family members, and it swells with pride when I see how hard everyone is trying, both here and abroad, to help people in Tohoku.

How would you say people in Japan are reacting to the quake, tsunami and nuclear dangers?   Is it how you might have expected them to react, or have you had any surprises?

Japanese have earthquake safety drills beginning in kindergarten, so people generally know what to do. Public schools are in ugly, but very sturdy concrete buildings, and people know to head there during a disaster. However, Japanese and foreign residents are individuals, and reactions to the disaster are as unique here as they would be anywhere else in the world. Some people in the midst of the devastation are staying positive in the face of difficult-to-imagine hardships, and other people far away from any immediate risk are leaving the country for fear of what might happen. People have to make choices that work for them and their families.

One surprise to me has been the amount of aid donated from within the country. Japan’s economy hasn’t been so good recently, and money is tight for most families. It seems as if everyone has contributed something already, both money and goods, whether it’s anonymous donors giving 1 million yen or children donating their allowance. People have been waiting hours in line to donate blood, trying to conserve electricity and gas, and (down here, at least) sharing information about where things and money can be donated for the best effect.

Apart from the economic challenges, what you do think might be some long-term implications of the quake for the country and its people?

Some of the long-term implications are good. In some ways, it has already strengthened the bonds of people who live here (and are staying) through shared experiences and common goals. Suddenly, there are things more important than a bad economy. People finally understood the value of the mobile web after the quake. In many cases, that was the only thing working immediately after the quake. Friends who never cared are looking at smart phones, and signing up for Twitter and Facebook after seeing how effective those networks were in disseminating information and connecting people.

Japan will also probably develop a more effective warning system for tsunami–perhaps allowing people to register for alerts to come directly to mobile phones rather than depending on someone to sound an alarm. (In some cases, however, no alert system would have made a difference. The waves were simply higher than anyone had expected or prepared for.) This has probably been the best documented disaster ever–there was live video of the entire thing, and incredible monitoring of all the various bits including magnitude, tsunami, and radiation. The data over the progression of events will likely teach scientists a great deal that will help mitigate future disasters.

Some of the long-term implications are not so good. For example, Japan depends a great deal on foreign teachers to teach English in both public and private schools. Some teachers are among the missing, and others have left the country after losing homes or simply becoming fearful. It becomes a bigger problem for the long term if teachers become afraid to come to Japan (because of fears about being in an earthquake or being exposed to radiation). Additionally, Some small language school owners in the Tohoku region will struggle to keep their schools open staff and students either missing or evacuated, and with businesses relocating to other locations in Japan.

Are you committed to staying in Japan, or have you had any thoughts about leaving?

Leaving never crossed my mind, but I’m far from any damage or radiation and Japan is my home.

Is there anything I haven’t asked you about that you’d like to share?

People here have been really moved (and perhaps a little surprised) by the outpouring of concern and support from other countries. It has been truly moving. Teachers from around the world have contacted me asking how they and their students can help students here. The immediate priority is obviously to find survivors and get them urgently needed medical supplies, warm clothing, blankets, and food. Once things have settled a bit and schools are open again, I’m sure there will be plenty of opportunities for teachers to help teachers and schools in Tohoku. In the meantime, ELT News has set up a page where people can leave messages of support for teachers, students, and families here: We love Japan!

I’ve found myself moved to tears by some of the comments there, and hope that many more will be added to the collection. These comments are being seen, and appreciated, by students and teachers (both Japanese and foreign). Thank you!

Thank YOU, Barbara, and be safe!

March 21, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Today’s Collection Of Good School Reform Articles

Here are some good pieces on school reform that have appeared in the last few days:

In Performance Evaluations, Subjectivity Is Not Random is from The Shanker Blog. I’m adding it to The Best Articles For Helping To Understand Both Why Teacher Tenure Is Important & The Reasons Behind Seniority-Based Layoffs.

Teachers, Their Unions and the American Education Reform Agenda is a report just issued by National Center on Education and the Economy. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning Why Teachers Unions Are Important.

Standardized Tests and Foul Shooting: Look Out, Michael Jordan! is by John Sener. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Getting Some Perspective On International Test Comparison Demagoguery.

March 21, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Harvard Thinks Big” Is Like “TED Talks”

Harvard Thinks Big is an annual event (started last year) where invited faculty members present ten minute talks. They just posted this year’s presentations on YouTube.

And, speaking of TED Talks, I just discovered that there is a YouTube channel devoted to TEDxTalks, which are local TED-like events that take place around the world.

I’m adding both resources to The Best Teacher Resources For “TED Talks” (& Similar Presentations).

March 21, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Marzano Cooperative Learning Study

The Marzano Research Laboratory has released a study on their website that concluded:

on the average, the use of cooperative learning by teachers in the action research studies was associated with a gain in student academic achievement of 30 percentile points over what was expected when teachers did not use cooperative learning.

Not bad…

I’m adding this info to The Best Sites For Cooperative Learning Ideas.

March 21, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”

I have a huge backlog of resources that I’ve been planning to post about in this blog but, just because of time constraints, have not gotten around to doing. Instead of letting that backlog grow bigger, I regularly grab a few and list them here with a minimal description. It forces me to look through these older links, and help me organize them for my own use. I hope others will find them helpful, too. These are resources that I didn’t include in my “Best Tweets” feature because I had planned to post about them, or because I didn’t even get around to sending a tweet sharing them.

Here are This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

Counting Up Recent Reform FAILs by John Thompson

The Power of Observing and Talking to Real Humans by Bob Sutton

Interactive Cambridge ESL Games

Open Government is a new site designed to provide accessible information about state governments

Take a test to see how wasteful you are…

United Nations Refugee Agency Teacher’s Corner and Lesson Plans

Charting the Path from Engagement to Achievement: A Report on the 2009 High School Survey of Student Engagement

The Face Of Seven Billion from National Geographic

Infographic: Motivating Employees in the Workplace

5 lessons for educators from “The King’s Speech”

Here are some other regular features I post in this blog:

“The Best…” series (which are now 650 in number)

Best Tweets of The Month

The most popular posts on this blog each month

My monthly choices for the best posts on this blog each month

Each month I do an “Interview Of The Month” with a leader in education

Periodically, I post “A Look Back” highlighting older posts that I think are particularly useful

The ESL/EFL/ELL Blog Carnival

Resources that share various “most popular” lists useful to teachers

March 20, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
6 Comments

The Best Resources For Learning About What’s Happening In Libya

UPDATE: As I’m writing, Libyan rebels have entered Tripoli and developments are moving rapidly. Here, in italics, are the best sites that are providing up-to-date coverage with accessible media:

Al Jazeera Spotlight Libya

BBC Libya Crisis

The New York Times Photo Blog

Guardian — Libya

Battle For Libya — The New York Times

CNN Libyan War

Qaddafi Losing Grip on Libya is from The Atlantic.

Associated Press Interactive

Libya timeline: six months of conflict – interactive is from The Guardian

YouTube has compiled a playlist of nine videos highlighting what’s been happening in Libya over the past day. Here’s one:

Though I have several Libya-related resources on The Best Resources To See Who Might Fall Next After Mubarak…, I thought yesterday’s military intervention prompted a new “The Best…” list.

Here are my choices for The Best Resources For Learning About What’s Happening In Libya:

Map: Tracking events in Libya is a regularly updated interactive from The Washington Post that also gives background on the country.

Timeline: Colonel Muammar el-Qaddafi is a NY Times interactive.

Interactive Graphic: Libya Uprising is an Associated Press interactive, and appears slightly different from this AP interactive.

Libya: allied military assets and intial attack sites is a graphic from The Guardian.

Map of How the Rebellion Is Unfolding in Libya is a New York Times interactive.

The BBC has many multimedia features on the conflict.

Civil war in Libya is a CNN interactive.

CNN also has several videos.

Coalition attack on Gadhafi’s forces: How we got here is also from CNN.

The Wall Street Journal has a slideshow on the conflict.

Libya air strikes – in pictures is from The Guardian.

The Telegraph has many multimedia features.

Libya: allied military assets and initial attack sites is an interactive from The Guardian.

Libya: UN air strikes aid rebels is from The Boston Globe’s Big Picture.

Dispatch from Tripoli is a series of photos from TIME Magazine.

Air Strikes on Libya are photos from The Atlantic.

The Events in Libya: Using Reporting and Multimedia to Understand News is from The New York Times Learning Network.

The BBC now has a special report page on Libya that is regularly updated.

The New York Times has a massive slideshow that appears to be regularly updated.

The Telegraph has a regularly updated page on Libya.

You can see links to many updates on the right side of this Guardian webpage.

Libya Rebellion Continues is a series of photos from The Big Picture.

Three Months of Civil War in Libya is a series of photos from The Atlantic.

Additional suggestions are 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 over 600 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

March 20, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

More Resources On Tsunamis

Here are the newest additions to The Best Sites To Learn About Tsunamis (they would have to be modified to be made accessible to ELL’s):

California’s tsunami threat is from The Los Angeles Times

The Awesome Unpredictability of Tsunamis is from The Wall Street Journal.

Lesson Plan: The Science of Tsunamis: Seeking Understanding In The Wake of Tragedy is from PBS.

Tsunamis: A Primer comes from The New York Review of Books.

March 20, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

The Difference Between “Curating,” “Aggregating” & “Creating”

Earlier this week, Mashable had an post titled Why Curation Is Just as Important as Creation. It makes a number of interesting points, particularly the fact that good content that’s created isn’t much use if no one is seeing it, and “curation” of content and making it accessible to more people will be more and more important in the future as the information glut grows. The comments in that post are definitely worth reading, too.

Since I see myself as a curator with my “The Best…” lists (now at 650 and counting — you can find them all categorized here), I find this whole discussion particularly intriguing. I also produce a fair amount of original content, which I, in turn, “curate” into more “The Best..” lists. In many ways, “The Best…” lists are also another name for my “Keeping Track of Things So I Don’t Lose or Forget Them.”

In looking at the roots for these words, I found that “curate” meant “to take care of” and that aggregate meant “to bring together.” It seems to me that through this kind of care, curating can result in something with greater value than just the sum of its parts, which is what I try to do in “The Best…” lists. They offer my best judgement, descriptions, and interpretations. “Aggregation,” on the other hand, seems to me to be a “bringing together” of links that offer little cohesion.

Of course, there are many, many different ways to “curate” other than “The Best…” lists, and many, I’m sure, are even better strategies.

All this may also just be a purely intellectual argument, but I am seeing the word “curate” more and more on the Web.

Any thoughts from readers would be welcome. What do you think?

March 19, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Broadcastr Will Be A Hit With English Language Learners (& Other Students)

Broadcastr is a new site that lets you record audio for up to three minutes and then “attach” it to a map location. It also gives you the url address of your recording.

This could be a great resource for English Language Learners and all students. They could write, and then record, reflections from a field trip, describe their home countries, talk about something that happened in a particular place in a work of fiction, and then attach it to that geographical location. In addition to being there for an “authentic audience” (someone other than their teacher and classmates), the link to the recording can be posted on a student/teacher blog or website.

The site says it will soon offer the option of embedding the recording. I’ve also written to them asking if there was any chance of them adding the capability of grabbing images off the web (with its url address). Now you can upload image per recording.

I’m adding Broadcastr to to two “The Best…” lists:

The Best Sites To Practice Speaking English

The Best Places Where Students Can Create Online Learning/Teaching Objects For An “Authentic Audience”

Thanks to TechCrunch for the tip.

March 19, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

The Best Resources For Learning About Schools Providing Home Computers & Internet Access To Students

For the past several years, until it was recently curtailed because of budget issues, our school worked with parents to sponsor a successful effort providing home computers and internet access to immigrant families. They, in turn, would use the technology to improve their English skills. I thought I’d bring together posts about that project, and additional links to articles about somewhat similar efforts around the country.

I’m sure there are programs I don’t know about so, if you know of others, please leave information in the comments section of this post.

You might also be interested in two other “The Best…” lists that are related to this topic:

The Best Sites That Students Can Use Independently And Let Teachers Check On Progress, which shares some sites we’ve had students in the program use at home.

The Best Places To Find Research On Technology & Language Teaching/Learning, which shares a few of the same links on this list, and also additional ones.

Here are my choices for The Best Resources For Learning About Schools Providing Home Computers & Internet Access To Students:

I’ll start off by sharing links to a few articles I’ve written about the project we had at our school:

Online Learning Leverages Literacy to ELL Families

Family Literacy Project Update

Newest Assessment Results From Family Literacy Project

Latest Assessment Results From Family Literacy Project

Latest Results Of Our Home Computer Project

Even More Success with English Language Learning

Family Literacy, Computers, and ESL

Here are other articles and posts:

T.H.E. Journal has just published an article about a group called Computers For Youth.

$9 Million Program Gives Students Wireless Internet Access At Home, Not Just At School is about a new FCC program.

“Computers at Home: Educational Hope vs. Teenage Reality”

My “Take” On Recent Study Saying Home Computer Usage Can Lead To Lower Test Scores

The UK has, or had, a major effort called the Home Access Initiative. One site says it’s closed now, but this article indicates it’s still going on, but at a reduced level. It would be great if any UK readers could provide accurate information in the comments section.

Of course, this post would not be complete without some links to the One Laptop Per Child program. You can visit their official website, along with a positive article about it from The Guardian. The Voice of America has just run a story critical of the program, and here’s a similarly critical post. I’d love to hear comments from readers on this, too.

Computer Equity Efforts in Chicago is from Learning First. It describes an effort to provide low-cost computers and internet service to families.

Comcast Begins Program To Offer Inexpensive Internet Access & Computers To Low-Income Families

The Atlantic has published a good summary of initiatives across the United States that are designed to provide Internet access to low income families.

The Los Angeles Times writes about a new program that includes a mobile computer lab and center designed to help Latinos gain more access, and become more familiar with, the Web.
The organization sponsoring the effort, Club Digital, offers some nice and simple video computer tutorials on their site. Even better, you can choose English or Spanish versions of them.

Most Big Cable Companies Agree To Provide Low-Cost Internet To Low-Income Students

More Info On FCC’s Plan To Get Internet & Computers To Student Homes

Feedback is 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.