Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

December 5, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Technology — 2011

Since I have published so many “The Best…” lists, I thought it might be helpful to readers if I posted a few year-end collections.

Here is A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Technology — 2011:

The Best Web 2.0 Applications For Education In 2011

The Best Posts About The Khan Academy

The Best Posts On The NY Times Ed Tech Article

The Best Research Available On The Use Of Technology In Schools

The Best Resources For Learning What Google+ Is All About

The Best Online Teleprompters

The Best Resources For Google Earth Beginners Like Me

The Best Online Virtual “Corkboards” (or “Bulletin Boards”)

The Best (& Easiest) Ways To Record Online Video Interviews

The Best Ways To Make A Map Showing Your Facebook Friends (& Twitter Followers)

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

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

The Best Ways For English Language Learners To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly

The Best Places To Find Research On Technology & Language Teaching/Learning

The Best Tools For Printing Out Webpages

The Best Tools For Creating Fake “Stuff” For Learning

The Best Resources For Maximizing The Use Of Dropbox

The Best Resources For Beginning To Learn What Quora Is All About…

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

More Online “Choose Your Own Adventure” Games

Here are the newest additions to The Best Places To Read & Write “Choose Your Own Adventure” Stories:

Westward Trail is very similar to the famous Oregon Trail game. Its major advantage is that it’s actually online and can be easily played.

In Following The Footsteps, you are simulating an escaped slave on the Underground Railroad.

Addy’s Escape to Freedom is an American Girl adventure, also on the Underground Railroad.

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Edublog Award Nominees Announced!

Voting is now open for the 2011 Edublog Awards!

You can view the official nominations, and vote, at the Edublog Awards site. Voting will be open until December 13th.

Thank you to those who nominated this blog for The Best Individual Blog and The Best Ed Tech/Resource Sharing Blog. My Education Week Teacher blog, Classroom Q & A With Larry Ferlazzo, made the short list of nominees for The Best New Blog category.

The Edublog Awards are less important for who “wins” and, instead, are more important as an opportunity to learn more about all the great work being done by educators throughout the world.

Most, though not all, of the blogs, tools, and people I nominated have been included in the official ballot. I encourage you to support them by either regularly taking advantage of what they have to offer and/or consider voting for them. Here is a reprint of what I originally wrote about my nominees:

Best Individual Blog

I’m listing two blogs — The Shanker Blog and This Week In Education. Matthew Di Carlo at The Albert Shanker Institute provides the most accessible, even-handed, and savvy analysis of education research around — he makes that blog a “must-read.” And Alexander Russo’s scouring of mainstream and social media for the most informative news and analysis of today’s education policy issues (plus the thoughtful pieces from John Thompson, his regular contributor) ensure that he’s on the top of my RSS Reader everyday.

Best Group Blog

I have to nominate three blogs for this category: Transform Ed, Powerful Learning Practice, and InterAct. Transform Ed is comprised of posts from many educators connected to the Center For Teaching Quality (I’m a member of the Center’s Teacher Leaders Network, but don’t blog at Transform Ed). Many talented educators also blog at Powerful Learning Practice, led by Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach and Will Richardson. InterAct is the blog of Accomplished California Teachers, though its posts have national significance. David B. Cohen, Martha Infante, and Kelly Kovacic are the primary three bloggers there (I’m a member of ACT, but don’t post at its blog).

Most Influential Blog Post

The Relationship Status of Teachers and Educational Technology: It’s Complicated by Roxanna Elden is hands-down the wittiest, and certainly one of the most insightful, pieces I’ve read about the use of ed tech.

Best Teacher Blog

David Deubelbeiss’ blog, EFL 2.0 – Teacher Talk is my nominee in this category. David gives and gives and gives, and then gives some more.

Best School Administrator Blog

The Wejr Board by Chris Wejr consistently posts thoughtful commentary on issues like parent engagement and rewards, awards and incentives.

Best Free Web Tool

I’m going to nominate the top two web tools on my The Best Web 2.0 Applications For Education In 2011 list:

GeoTrio lets you create a virtual tour of just about anyplace on a map. You type in addresses or locations and easily create multiple “stops” that show the Google Street View snapshots of the area. You can also upload your own images. But that’s not all. What really makes GeoTrio stand out is the ability to easily make an audio recording for each stop on the map.

Corkboard Me is sort of a  Wallwisher-clone that is even simpler to use but has fewer features. You just paste virtual sticky-notes on a virtual bulletin board. One nice feature it has is by pasting the url address of an image link, the image will show up on the sticky note. No registration is necessary.

Best Educational Use Of A Social Network

EFL Classroom 2.0 provides a huge service to ESL/EFL/ELL teachers around the world. It’s a treasure trove of resources and relationships.

Lifetime Achievement

I would be shocked if there is anyone who has helped more educators in the social media world than Sue Waters.

Best Ed Tech/Resource Sharing Blog

I was a subscriber to John Norton’s Middleweb email newsletter long before he turned it into a blog which is now regularly filled with great resources. It’s getting better and better all the time!

Good luck to my nominees, and to everyone else who is on the ballot!.

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Even More Christmas Resources

Here are the newest additions to The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa:

Here’s a wild Christmas light show from The Telegraph:

MacMillan has a nice Christmas Advent Calendar telling about world holiday traditions. (Thanks to Michelle Henry for the tip).

Christmas trees around the world – in pictures is a slideshow from The Guardian.

The 9 Most Christmassy Towns in America is from TIME.

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

This Week’s “Round-Up” Of Good School Reform Posts & Articles

Here are some recently published good posts and articles about education policy issues:

Choking on the Common Core Standards is by Joanne Yatvin and appeared in The Washington Post. I’m adding it to The Best Articles Sharing Concerns About Common Core Standards.

What Value-Added Research Does And Does Not Show is by Matthew Di Carlo at The Shanker Blog. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About The “Value-Added” Approach Towards Teacher Evaluation.

You Khan’t Ignore How Students Learn is by Frank Noschese. I’m adding it to The Best Posts About The Khan Academy.

Repairing a Culture of Blame is by David B. Cohen. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Helping Students (& The Rest Of Us) Learn The Concept Of Not Blaming Others.

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

History Of Technology Resources

Here are the newest additions to The Best Sites For Learning About The History Of Technology:

A Before-Its-Time Machine is a diagram from The New York Times of the “first” computer design — “Researchers are planning to build a working version of the Analytical Engine, which Charles Babbage conceived of in the 1830s but never completed.” You can read more about the project here.

Check out the Museum of Obsolete Objects.

December 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Parent Engagement — 2011

Since I have published so many “The Best…” lists, I thought it might be helpful to readers if I posted a few year-end collections.

Here is A Collection Of “The Best…” Lists On Parent Engagement — 2011:

The Best Ideas On How Parents Can Help Their Kids Succeed Academically

“The Best Research Available On Parent Engagement”

The Best Reasons Why Parents Should Be Looked At As Allies & Not Targets Of Blame

The Best Overviews Of Parent Engagement

My Best Posts, Articles & Interviews On Parent Engagement

The Best Resources On Parent Engagement In Countries Other Than The U.S.

The Worst Parent Engagement Ideas

“The Best Examples Of Parent Engagement Through Community Organizing” — October, 2011

The Best Sources Of Parent Engagement Advice For Teachers

The Best Posts & Articles For Learning About Newark’s $100 Million From Facebook

The Best Resources For Learning About Teacher Home Visits

The Best Resources On Parent/Teacher Conferences

My Best Posts On Building Parent Engagement In Schools — 2011 (So Far) — July, 2011

My Best Posts On Parent Engagement Over The Past Six Months — April, 2011

The Best Resources For Learning Why The Parent Trigger Isn’t Good For Parents, Kids Or Schools

December 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2011

I’m beginning my annual “The Best…” list highlighting “year in review” images. There aren’t a whole lot right now on the date of this post, but they’ll soon be coming out of the woodwork. I figured it would be helpful for teachers to get access to at least some of them prior to Winter Break.

You might also be interested in:

The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2010

The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2009

The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2008

Here are my choices for The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2011:

The 45 Most Powerful Images Of 2011 is from BuzzFeed.

Newsweek 2011 Pictures Of The Year

Best photos of the year 2011 is from Reuters.

TIME Picks the Top 10 Photos of 2011 is from….TIME.

2011: The Year in Photos, Part 1 of 3 comes from The Atlantic.

2011: The Year in Photos, Part 2 of 3 is also from The Atlantic.

2011: The Year In Photos, Part 3 of 3 is the last Atlantic installment.

National Geographic has a ton of different “best of” photos for the year.

TIME Picks the Most Surprising Photos of 2011 is from…TIME.

Zeitgeist 2011: How the World Searched is from Google.

The Denver Post has a three part series of “2011 Best Photos of the Year”:

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

2011 in review: Arab Spring, disasters, demise of icons is from the Associated Press.

TIME Picks the Best Viral Photos of 2011 is from TIME.

2011 defining moments is from The Washington Post.

Photos Of The Year comes from The Wall Street Journal.

The Year In Pictures Part 1 comes from The Boston Globe.

The year in Pictures: Part II and Part III comes from The Boston Globe.

2011 – the year in review comes from The Guardian.

TIME’s Best Photojournalism of 2011

2011: The Year in Pictures is from The New York Times.

The Year In Review from Slate.

Year in Review: 2011 in Photos from Instagram.

Looking back at images from 2011 is from The Sacramento Bee.

Maps Of The World has a neat interactive map showing events of the year. Thanks to Richard Byrne for the tip.

The Year In Pictures 2011 comes from MSNBC.

The Year in Pictures | 2011 is from The Los Angeles Times.

The Year in Pictures 2011 is from ABC News.

2011 in Global development – in pictures is a slideshow from The Guardian.

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 over 800 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

December 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

I Love This Article! “The 5 Best Toys of All Time”

The 5 Best Toys of All Time is a must-read article from Wired by Jonathan Liu. “Stick” is ranked as number one. I’d also suggest you read his follow-up piece, Get a Kid the 6th Best Toy of All Time. (thanks to Ed Yong for the tip)

I’m adding it to The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa.

Here are some other links I’m adding to that same list:

It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas is a photo gallery from The Atlantic.

Holiday Decorations Shine at The White House is a TIME slideshow.

Infographic: The Visual History of Christmas Trees (I’m also adding this one to The Best Sites To Learn About Trees).

December 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

The Best (and Worst) Education News of 2011

(NOTE: The Huffington Post has also republished this piece)

Here’s my humble attempt to identify the best and the worst education news that occurred during the past 12 months. I hope you’ll take time to share your own choices in the comment section.

I’ll list the ones I think are the best first, followed by the worst. However, it’s too hard to rank them within those categories, so I’m not listing them in any order.

You might also be interested in my list from last year, “The Best (and Worst) Education News of 2010.”

THE BEST EDUCATION NEWS IN 2010

* A new “meta-analysis” of hundreds of studies found that “discovery learning” (inductive, inquiry, constructivist) was more effective than direct instruction methods. You want “research-based” instruction? Here it is!

* The organizing responses to attacks on teacher bargaining rights, including the approval of a referendum in Ohio to repeal a law limiting them there and the massive protests in Wisconsin resulting in partially successful state senator recalls and the recently initiated campaign to recall Governor Walker.

* The publication of Teaching 2030: What We Must Do For Our Students And Our Public Schools, an extraordinarily important book written by a group of educators laying out “a vision for what our students need and the teaching profession they deserve.”

* The hundreds of principals in New York who have signed a protest letter and are organizing opposition to the state’s new “education by humiliation” teacher evaluation system.

* The rapid demise of the poorly-designed and ineffective parent trigger effort in California, a not very veiled campaign by charters to parachute into low-income communities and take over neighborhood public schools.

* The success of the Save Our Schools March in Washington, D.C., which drew thousands of parents and educators to support a positive vision for our schools.

* The emergence of The Shanker Blog from the Albert Shanker Institute as the “go to” place for insightful, even-handed,and accessible interpretation of research data on education policy issues.

* A major new study found that — different from previous belief — teen intelligence is not “fixed” and that they can increase their IQ and cognitive abilities. Of course, many educators already knew this, but having more evidence to show children who have been given labels that make them feel like they are, as a student once told me, “born as smart or as dumb as they are going to be,” can be a huge help to changing their beliefs.

* A major effort to debunk the inflated statistics and myth of many so-called “miracle schools” that are touted by school reformers as proof their ideas work.

* Michelle Rhee’s rapid decline in public credibility as the Washington, D.C. test-cheating scandal, and how she handled it when she was Chancellor, continues to haunt her.

* Partially precipitated by an article in The New Yorker, there has been an increase in attention being paid to the idea of teaching “coaching” — outside of the official teacher evaluation process — as an important professional development strategy.

* The millions of students who had great learning experiences in their schools this year.

THE WORST EDUCATION NEWS IN 2011

* The awful Alabama immigration law, which has resulted in Latino families fleeing Alabama schools — and the state.

* A southern California high school was discovered to be giving color-coded student ID cards based on state test results.

* The pepper-spraying of students peacefully protesting in the town where I live — Davis, California — has got to be on this list.

* The Los Angeles Times expanding their public ranking of teachers based on the inaccurate “Value Added Approach” and the on-going effort in New York City by media outlets to do the same there.

* More and more states, like New York, Tennessee, and Florida are devising outrageous teacher evaluation systems with little connection to reality.

* The Atlanta testing scandal, and the “organizational misconduct” that was its primary cause.

* Bill Gates continuing in his mistaken belief that he knows what needs to happen in schools, and the millions he has at his disposal to damage educators, families and schools in the process.

* The unsurprising fact that Mark Zukerberg’s $100 million donation to Newark schools is being spent with little valued input from local parents and educators.

* The millions of students who are not getting the education they deserve.

What are your choices for the best and worst education news of the year?

December 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Special ESL/EFL/ELL Edition Of “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”

NOTE: I usually publish a list like this once or twice a week. Today, though, I’m sharing several impressive resources that might hold particular interest for ESL/EFL/ELL teachers.

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 so. 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 is A Special ESL/EFL/ELL Edition Of “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

I’ve always asked students to watch English movies or television programs as part of their weekly homework, but David Deubelbeiss writes much more thoughtfully about the idea in this post on what he calls Extensive Watching. I’m adding it to The Best Popular Movies/TV Shows For ESL/EFL.

LearnClick lets you easily create interactive cloze (gap-fill) assessments. I’m adding it to The Best Ways To Create Online Tests.

David Deubelbeiss recently revamped the music lyrics search on EFL Classroom 2.0. I’m adding the link to The Best Music Websites For Learning English.

Making Mistakes & Error Correction is from TEFL Geek. I’m adding it to The Best Resources On ESL/EFL/ELL Error Correction.

Focus On Grammar appears to provide online support to a grammar textbook. In order to access it, you just have to type in your email address. It’s not flashy at all, but I think it’s surprisingly good. I’m adding it to The Best Beginner, Intermediate & Advanced English Language Learner Sites.

Many Things has all the Voice Of America Special English broadcasts on American History organized chronologically. I’m adding it to The Best Websites For Teaching & Learning About U.S. History.

Caroline Brown Listening Lessons is a quite impressive set of interactive listening exercises. I’m adding it to The Best Listening Sites For English Language Learners.

English Grammar Secrets has many good grammar interactives. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Grammar Practice.

ESL Robot lets you practice your English with an avatar. I’m adding it to The Best Online “Chatbots” For Practicing English.

Learn A Language provides lots of interactives to learn basic words in multiple languages,including English.

December 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Additional Resources On HIV & AIDS

Today is World AIDS Day, and I’ve added many new resources to The Best Web Resources For Learning About HIV & AIDS:

World AIDS Day 2011 is a photo gallery from the Sacramento Bee.

HIV and Aids: interactive timeline of a global crisis is from The Guardian.

World AIDS Day 2011 is a slideshow from The Boston Globe.

The Graying of AIDS is a TIME slideshow.

AIDS treatment: Global leaders recommit to AIDS fight is an interactive from The Associated Press.

The Photo That Changed The Face Of AIDS is from NPR.

December 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

“What Is The Most Important Thing To Remember About Classroom Management?”

What Is The Most Important Thing To Remember About Classroom Management? is the new “question of the week” at my Education Week Teacher column. As that post explains, the response will be a three-part series.

I hope readers will offer their ideas — either over at Education Week Teacher or in the comments section of this post.

December 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Best Of TED Talks — 2011

TED has announced 18 ideas that will shape 2012: Counting down TEDTalks on Huffington Post.

This is how they describe it:

TED and The Huffington Post are launching a year-end collaboration around 18 groundbreaking ideas that premiered on TED.com in 2011 and may very well reshape the world in 2012. For 18 days, The Huffington Post will count down these big ideas from TED in a list curated by Chris Anderson, with essays from each speaker exploring the idea they came to TED (or a TEDx) to share with the world.

Check it out at The Huffington Post special TED page. It looks interesting.

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

December 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Gun-Toting Santas, Talking Coffee-Mates & Other Christmas “Delights”

Here are the newest additions to The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa (by the way, a portion of that list was temporarily missing earlier today, but it’s all back now):

Merry Christmas From Lee Friedlander is a photo gallery from TIME.

Ho Ho Hmm. Gun Club Offers Photos With Santa is from NPR.

Make your own talking Christmas Teddy Bear with this viral marketing too.

Make a talking Christmas….Coffee-Mate? As weird as it sounds, you an actually do it.