Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

April 10, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Students & Visualization

I’ve written a lot about goal-setting with students (see My Best Posts On Students Setting Goals) and about how to help students achieve them through visualization (see My Best Posts On Helping Students “Visualize Success”).

As I’ve written in those previous posts, students who do the daily one minute visualization we do in class do score higher on assessments, but who knows if that’s a result of “causation” or “correlation.” But, nevertheless, it does provide a nice calming period for everybody.

I recently read about another study the reinforces the importance of this kind of practice and how we apply it. It points out that it’s important to have students visualize their doing the steps to get to their goal rather than achieving the goal itself.

And, speaking of goal-setting, yet another study — this one lasting seventeen years — has found that it’s important:

… both level and growth in goal setting predicted later well-being. Moreover, goal changes both during college and in young adulthood uniquely predicted adult well-being, controlling for goal levels entering college. These findings suggest that what matters for attaining adult well-being is both how you enter adulthood and how you change in response to it.

April 10, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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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”:

African-Americans And The Civil War is a slideshow from NPR. Faces From The Civil War is a slideshow from TIME Magazine. I’m adding both to The Best Sites For Learning About The American Civil War.

Artificial Reefs Around the World is a series of photos from The Atlantic. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About The World’s Oceans.

15 Facts About U.S. Income Inequality That Everyone Should Know (CHARTS) comes from The Huffington Post. I’m adding it to The Best Resources About Wealth & Income Inequality — Help Me Create A Simple Lesson Plan Using Them.

Reflections on the Rwandan Genocide is a series of photos from TIME Magazine. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Genocide In Rwanda.

The World’s Tallest Tree Is Hiding Somewhere In California is from NPR. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Trees.

(Video) Inside Japan’s nuclear evacuation zone is from CBS News. Japan earthquake and tsunami debris floats across the Pacific toward the US west coast is a slideshow from The Telegraph. I’m adding both to The Best Sites For Learning About The Japan Earthquake & Tsunami, Part Two.

Mexico’s drug war is a series of photos from The Boston Globe’s Big Picture. Q&A: Mexico’s drug-related violence is from The BBC. Mexican Students Cope With Trauma Of Drug War comes from NPR. I’m adding all three links to The Best Sites To Learn About Mexico’s Drug War.

Quest For Money is an online game from The Mint. Unfortunately, there’s no direct link, but if you go to that page you’ll see it on the right. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning Economics & Practical Money Skills.

How Does Age Affect Web Use? is an infographic. World Internet Use by Language is another infographic. I’m adding both to The Best Sites To Learn About The Internet.

Hmong Facts is from The Minnesota Historical Society. I’m adding it to The Best Websites To Learn About The Hmong.

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

Interviews with ESL/EFL teachers in “hot spots” around the world.

April 9, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

First Chapter of My Book, Hand-Outs & Links Are Now Online For Free

Eye On Education, the publisher of my book, Helping Students Motivate Themselves: Practical Answers To Classroom Challenges, has now placed the entire first chapter on “How To Motivate Students” online. It includes several lesson plans and hand-outs.

In addition, you can access all the web resources for the whole book on a special publisher’s page.

Just to to my book’s webpage. Right below the image of the cover is a link that says “Click for PDF sample chapters.” That will take you to the sample chapter.

On my book’s webpage, if you scroll down a few inches, you’ll also see a link to “Online Resources.” That link will take you a listing of all the recommended links for each chapter of the book.

April 9, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Tunefort

Tunefort
is a new service that lets you search for pretty much any song and then plays it for you online. You can also create a playlist. It meets my “Raffi Test” of having most of Raffi’s songs available. In my experience, that usually means you can find lots of useful songs for English Language Learners.

It joins many other similar sites on Not “The Best,” But “A List” Of Music Sites list.

April 9, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Infographics

The New York Times Learning Network just published a great post, Data Visualized: More on Teaching With Infographics. Their post will certainly be on this year’s list “The Best…” list of infographics.

In addition, it prompted me to think it might be useful if I put all my infographic-related “The Best…” lists together.

So, here is A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Infographics:

The Best Infographics — 2010

The Best Interactive Infographics — 2009

The Best Sources For Interactive Infographics.

The Best Resources For Creating Infographics

The Best Resources For Learning About “Word Clouds”

Not “The Best,” But “A List” Of Mindmapping, Flow Chart Tools, & Graphic Organizers

The Best Tools To Make Simple Graphs Online

The Best Sites For Learning About Cartograms

The Best Map-Making Sites On The Web

The Best Posts To Help Understand Google’s New “Books Ngram Viewer”

The Best Infographics Of 2011

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 660 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

April 9, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Today’s Collection Of Good School Reform Articles & Posts

There have been several good school reform-related articles and posts over the past few days, including:

The beatings will continue until teacher morale improves appeared in the Christian Science Monitor and is by Walt Gardner. I’m adding it to The Best Posts & Articles About The Importance Of Teacher (& Student) Working Conditions.

I’m also adding some other pieces to that list, including:

Accountable for What? at Failing Schools

Gen Y Teachers and the Future of the Profession by Barnett Berry

The Drucker Institute had a short post about the departure of Cathie Black from the New York Schools. They suggested that Mayor Bloomberg might have made a better decision if he had seen a short animation the Institute created on the importance of “domain knowledge” prior to her appointment. It’s a similar position many of us have made about the importance of having experienced educators as Superintendents. The film makes some good points, though, after the recent revelation that GE didn’t pay any taxes last year, I wish it didn’t point to Jeffrey R. Immelt from GE as such a model person. I’m adding this video to The Best Blog Posts & Articles About Joel Klein’s (& Now Cathie Black’s) Departure & The Question Of Who Should Be Leading Our Schools list.

Finland’s Educational Success? The Anti-Tiger Mother Approach is from TIME Magazine. I’m adding it to The Best Resources To Learn About Finland’s Education System.

KIPP’s Advantages — And Drawbacks is by John Thompson at This Week In Education. I’m adding it to The Best Posts & Articles Analyzing Charter Schools.

April 8, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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“Faces Of Learning”

Faces of Learning is a new website where, among other things, anybody (including students) can share a short response to the question “What was your most powerful personal experience in a learning community – regardless of whether that experience took place inside or outside of school?”

After registering, students can both write their response and make an audio recording of it.

I’m adding the link to The Best Places Where Students Can Write For An “Authentic Audience.”

April 8, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Another Great Daily Show Video Clip

Transocean (greatly responsible for last year’s Gulf Oil Spill) just gave their executives huge bonuses because of their…safety record. Jon Stewart does a great short bit on it. It seems to me this is a good example of either Campbell’s Law, or and example of how incentives don’t work, or both.

April 7, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“What Cathie Black’s resignation means for school reform”

What Cathie Black’s resignation means for school reform is the title of Valerie Strauss’ latest piece in the Washington Post.

Black, of course, is the publisher who had zero experience with public schools when she was appointed by New York City Mayor Bloomberg as head of the New York schools a few months ago. She resigned today.

I’m adding Valerie’s post to The Best Blog Posts & Articles About Joel Klein’s Departure & The Question Of Who Should Be Leading Our Schools.

April 7, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

Many New Resources On Japan Disaster

Here are many new additions to Useful Updates On Japan Earthquake — Part Two:

Before School Starts is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

Japan Struggles to Reopen Schools is a Wall Street Journal article (to get pass its paywall, you might have to Google the headline).

Ancient People Are Still Awesome: Centuries-Old Japanese Tsunami Warning Markers Saved Lives comes from GOOD Magazine.

Japan Disaster’s Human Impact is an interactive from The Wall Street Journal.

Fukushima disaster is an interactive timeline.

Life In Japan’s Evacuation Centers is a TIME Magazine slideshow.

April 7, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Why The Start Of The School Day Might Be So Important…

I’ve previously posted about (and written more extensively in my book) research highlighting the Importance of Good Endings and offered suggestions on how to make that happen.

Now comes another study focusing on the importance of…good beginnings.

Researchers examined call center employees, but the lessons, I think, could easily apply to students (or just about anyone). It basically found that if you started the day in a positive mood, then you were likely to continue that way. And it found the opposite to be the case, tool. Here’s what one of the study’s authors said:

The results showed that when employees started the day in a good mood, they tended to rate customers more positively through the day. They also tended to feel more positively themselves as the day progressed.

“Starting off at work wearing rose-colored glasses — or gray glasses — shapes the way we perceive events the rest of the day,” Wilk said.

Sharing this info might be particularly important in middle and high schools.  Wouldn’t it be nice if all first period period teachers kept this (and the Golden Rule — “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”) in mind and did everything they could to help students start off the day positive?  It might not only have a huge impact on our students, but also make the day so much easier for colleagues.

Of course, it would be even nicer if we teachers were able to continue to have the same attitude all day…

April 7, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Middleweb Revamps & Improves Their Already Great Newsletter

I’ve written a fair amount about John Norton, who has been a mentor to many over the years.

He’s well known for many things, including his freeMiddleweb Of Particular Interest email newsletter and his Middleweb blog.

He’s just revamped his excellent email newsletter, and it looks great. He tells me he’s now using the MailChimp service, and I’m also now adding it to The Best Applications For Creating Free Email Newsletters.

April 6, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Asking “Why Not?” & “What If?” As Well As “Why?”

This morning I read two useful articles — from unlikely places — that hit similar themes and are pushing me to think a little bit more about my teaching.

The first is from The Wall Street Journal, and has the very weird headline, The Montessori Mafia. It explores recent research, lists well-known graduates of Montessori schools, and wonders if their creativity is a direct result of that system of instruction. Here’s an excerpt:

Perhaps it’s just a coincidence that Montessori alumni lead two of the world’s most innovative companies. Or perhaps the Montessori Mafia of can provide lessons for us all even though it’s too late for most of us to attend Montessori.

We can change the way we’ve been trained to think. That begins in small, achievable ways, with increased experimentation and inquisitiveness. Those who work with Mr. Bezos, for example, find his ability to ask “why not?” or “what if?” as much as “why?” to be one of his most advantageous qualities. Questions are the new answers.

An article in Newsweek raises a similar question.  Niall Ferguson, who I typically find fairly irritating, has written an article titled How to Get Smart Again: The way we teach our children history has undermined our chances for success. Here’s an excerpt:

Here are three positive suggestions to make high-school history more engaging and thereby more memorable. First, replace those phone-book-size tomes with Web-enabled content. Second, make the new stuff more interactive. (There’s solid evidence that well-designed games and simulations hugely improve learning.) And third, ask more exciting questions.

What if Washington had shared Napoleon’s appetite for imperial power? What if the British had supported the Confederacy with cash and cannons? What if Franklin Roosevelt had not been president in World War II?

In his masterly answer to that last “counterfactual” question, The Plot Against America, Philip Roth rightly suggests that it’s the sense of inevitability—whatever happened had to happen—that makes school history so dull: “What we schoolchildren studied as ‘History’ [was] harmless history, where everything unexpected in its own time is chronicled on the page as inevitable.” But when historic events are actually happening—as now in Japan and the Arab world—“the unfolding of the unforeseen [is] everything … The terror of the unforeseen is what the science of history hides.”

I think I tend to do a decent job asking “Why?” in the classroom and am getting better at asking “Why not?”  But I seldom ask “What If?” and I’m even a big fan of reading alternate history novels!

How about you — have you had much much experience asking “What If?” questions of your students?