Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

January 29, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
5 Comments

Teaching Students To Teach (& What School Reformers Are Missing)

One of my favorite experiences in class each year are the two periods each week in the second semester of my IB Theory of Knowledge class when small student groups prepare and then teach a lesson to another group. We just did it for the first time this year, and it was a lot of fun and very informative.

People quote Edgar Dale’s “Cone of Experience” a lot (you know, the one that says “We learn….90% of what we teach”) and, even though the research behind it has been just about completely discredited, William Glasser quotes it lot because he says it reflects his own experience. I agree with Glasser.

I first have students read the chapter in my Helping Students Motivate Themselves book that’s titled “What Are The Best Things YOu Can Do To Maximize The Chances Of A Lesson Being Successful?” We then discuss the multiple elements of a successful lesson that I highlight there.

Then, each week, we take one of what the IB Theory of Knowledge curriculum call “The Ways Of Knowing” (emotion, language, reason, perception — the ways we “acquire” knowledge) and the “Areas Of Knowledge” (math, arts, natural science, human sciences, history, ethics — how we “categorize” the knowledge we acquire), and small groups have to complete a form and outline on how they are going to teach a short related lesson (10-15 minutes long) to another small group including at least six of the elements of a successful lesson. They have to choose one of nearly thousand Theory of Knowledge links I have saved on Delicious.

They do the preparation one day, and then the next day two groups match-up and teach each other their lesson. After one lesson is taught, each group completes an evaluation — the “teachers” evaluate themselves and their “students” evaluate them as well. Then, the groups reverse their roles.

As I mentioned earlier, it works very well (and I’m planning on making some modifications and trying it with my other classes this year, too), and in many ways it helps students gain the knowledge that so many “school reformers” don’t realize they’re missing, as Larry Cuban has described:

I draw from Mary Kennedy’s Inside Teaching to elaborate that “yet.”

“Yet children are not privy to the whole of teaching. They are unaware of the decisions teachers make, the plans they make, and the work they do outside class. Moreover, they are emotionally dependent upon teachers, so their interpretation is not likely to be based on a close analysis of events. Yet from those naive experiences, many durable values are formed about the nature of school subjects, how teachers and students should behave in classrooms, and what constitutes ‘good’ teaching…..

….Sure, reformers beliefs are often stated in sophisticated language seemingly far removed from their less articulate ideas formed when sitting 10 feet away from their teachers but should those glossy phrases be stripped away, the provenance of reform ideas can be found in the daily experiences of sitting in classroom many years ago. And those ideas, as Mary Kennedy reminds us, are distorted because children are emotionally involved with their teachers and know little about the planning, the improvisational decision-making during lessons, and work outside of school that teachers do.

I asked students to reflect on their experience and what they felt they learned about teaching.  Here are some representative comments:

“I learned that we actually need to talk about something interesting to get student attention, and also you have to interact with them — not just say what you want to say… You have to not be boring.”

“It’s really hard to keep students to not be bored for only fifteen minutes. It’s really easy for students to get bored and distracted.”

“Teaching was tough.  I had to keep getting obnoxious students’ attention with interesting facts but they irritate me.”

“I think I learned a lot about teaching.  It seems sort of easy, but it’s harder than it looks to prepare every lesson.  You have to try to explain your thoughts and put them into words and try to get others to understand what you’re trying to teach.”

I suspect — and hope — that many of my students will have a healthy respect for the work of teachers in the future…

January 29, 2012
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”:

New iPhone? Try these apps for travelers is from MSNBC. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Beginning iPhone Users Like Me.

Want To Make Your iPhone’s PIN More Secure? Repeat A Digit is from TechCrunch. I’m adding it to the same list.

Storytelling lessons from Bill Cosby is from Presentation Zen. I’m adding it to The Best Sources Of Advice For Making Good Presentations. Thanks to Karen Dietz for the tip.

Five Tips for Creating PowerPoint Slides that WON’T Bore Your Audience is from Bill Ferriter. I’m adding it to the same list.

Q&A: Publishing Your Own E-Book is from The New York Times. I’m adding it to So, You Want To Write A Book? Here’s The Best Advice….

The Texas Independence Convention Comic Maker is obviously pretty narrow in scope, but it’s great if you’re teaching U.S. History (the site has a nice movie, too, on Texas independence.) I’m adding it to The Best Ways To Make Comic Strips Online.

I recently discovered that Tweetdeck now has a Web version. It seems very comparable to the deskstop app. However, there is one important difference. When you retweet in the desktop app, you retweet in the “old” way — it shows your name as part of the tweet. The Web version retweets are in the “new” Twitter style. I’m adding this info to The Best Resources For Beginning To Learn What Twitter Is All About.

Anatomy of an Effective Blog Post is by Michael Hyatt. I’m adding it to The Best Sources Of Advice For Teachers (And Others!) On How To Be Better Bloggers.

Fifteen-Year-Old Tackles Slavery is a video from ABC News:

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Students Freeing Modern Slaves is a related website. I’m adding both the video and website to The Best Resources For Learning About Human Trafficking Today.

A Student’s Guide to Climate Change is from The Environmental Protection Agency. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Climate Change.

Common Assessments: More Details Emerge is from Education Week. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About The “Next Generation” Of State Testing.

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

“The Best…” series (which now number 835)

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.

Articles I’ve written for other publications.

Photo Galleries Of The Week

Research Studies Of The Week

Regular “round-ups” of good posts and articles about school reform

The Week In Web 2.0

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

How My ESL Intermediate/Beginner Students Evaluated Our Class & Me This Semester

This is the second in a series of recapping student evaluations of my classes this past semester. You can find all these reviews and more at My Best Posts On Students Evaluating Classes (And Teachers).

This post covers my double-period English class of Intermediate and Beginner ELL’s. Here’s a copy of the anonymous evaluation form I used.

Most of the activities we did, and my own qualities as a teacher, received high marks — most, though not all. This is just going to be a short post, and I’m going to highlight some items that stood out:

* Though “writing essays” was rated as one of the activities Intermediate students liked the least, they — impressively, I think — ranked it very high as one of the activities they learned the most from doing.

* Beginner students ranked our use of the Picture Word Inductive Model as both one of the activities they liked the most and one from which they learned the most. I was glad to see that…

* All student ranked using computers high in both categories.

* Students ranked me high in most teaching qualities. However, I was surprised to see that the qualities where I received the lowest (though still relatively high) marks were in “patience” and “is organized and prepared.” Since I think those are two of my strongest areas, I’m not sure what to make of it. There is such a wide range of English proficiency in the class, and this is the first year we’ve tried to do a combined Intermediate/Beginner class, things can be a little hectic trying to balance it all. I wonder if that contributes to my appearing to have less patience and being less prepared? Or, on the other hand, maybe I am just less patient and less prepared than I think I am? I’ve got to think about this a little more.

* Though four-fifths of the class ranked me at the top of the scale as a teacher they would like to have again, one-fifth gave a middle or low-ranking response to that question. Though that’s a low percentage, it’s still the biggest non-positive response I’ve every gotten for the question from a class. It would certainly be helpful to know if there is a pattern to those responders — if they are in the Intermediates or Beginners, or if it crosses both but, of course, that’s not possible to know in an anonymous survey. Everyone said that the pace of the class is “just right,” as opposed to being too slow or too fast, so I tend not to think that a lack of differentiation is the problem.

I’d love to hear other people’s analyses of these responses. At this point, my primary take-away is that I should continue to do what I’m doing, and be a little more conscious of patience and preparation.

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Speakpipe Is Super-Easy Way To Receive Audio Blog Comments

SpeakPipe provides you with a widget to install on your blog or website that lets readers send you an audio message of up to five minutes in length. The message goes to your Speakpipe inbox, and you receive an email notification that you’ve received one. More importantly, at least for teachers of English Language Learners, you also get a url address for the message that you can post so that students can use it to hear themselves.

Ronnie Burt at Edublogs told me that it would work with Edublogs, and that set-up was easy, though I didn’t initially believe him. However, the site has clear instructions on how to install it into various blogging platforms. It took me less than a minute to install it on my ESL class blog (you’ll find it on the right side saying “Send Voicemail”) so, if I can do it, you know it’s easy :)

Unfortunately, the only way others can hear the audio comments that are left is if you manually post them, so it’s not ideal. But it’s a nice tool that free — at least, for now.

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

The Best Resources On Japanese Internment In World War II

Every January 30th is officially Fred Korematsu Day in California. Here’s some background on it from YES Magazine:

In 1942, 23 year-old shipyard welder Fred Korematsu refused to join over 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans who were rounded up and taken to incarceration camps under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Executive Order No. 9066. While Korematsu’s family was at the Topaz incarceration camp in the Utah desert, Korematsu was appealing his conviction. In 1944, the Supreme Court voted in a 6-3 decision against Korematsu, claiming the incarceration was justified for military reasons. It wasn’t until Nov. 10, 1983 that his conviction was overturned.

Fred Korematsu continued to speak up for civil rights throughout his life. He believed that “If you have the feeling that something is wrong, don’t be afraid to speak up.” That message remains alive in the mission and teachings of the Fred T. Korematsu Institute for Civil Rights and Education. In 2010, the state of California established January 30 as Fred Korematsu Day.

Here are my choices for The Best Resources On Japanese Internment In World War II:

The Fred Korematsu Institute has a full, and free, online curriculum.

World War II: Internment of Japanese Americans is a photo gallery from The Atlantic.

Here is a link to my Internment Of Japanese-Americans lesson on my older United States History class blog, which includes many resources.

U.S. official cites misconduct in Japanese American internment cases is a fascinating article in The Los Angeles Times discussing how the present United States Solicitor General is apologizing for the misconduct of one of his predecessors for his role in defending Japanese-American internment camps during World War II. During the war, he chose not to reveal a government study concluding that Japanese-Americans were not a risk to U.S. security.

Watch this video and do the three activities under “Explore.”

Look at these pictures from one of the camps.

Fairness Fighters is from PBS.

Life In A Japanese Internment Camp is from The Smithsonian.

A More Perfect Union is another resource from The Smithsonian.

These resources are from The University of California.

Digital History has a feature on the internment.

This video is from The History Channel:

Feedback, as always, is welcome.

If you found this post useful, you might want to look at the 850 other “The Best…” lists and consider subscribing to this blog for free.

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

I’ll Be Presenting At The CCIRA Conference In Denver This Week

My wife and I are headed to Denver later this week where I’ll be leading a couple of workshops at the Colorado Council International Reading Association Conference.

I’ve set up a simple wiki with resources for the workshops.

According to The Weather Channel, my worst fears about Denver in February don’t appear ready to materialize — Hooray!

I hope to meet readers, and non-readers, of my blog there!

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

January’s Best Posts

I regularly highlight my picks for the most useful posts for each month — not including “The Best…” lists. I also use some of them in a more extensive monthly newsletter I send-out. You can see my previous Best Posts of the Month at Websites Of The Month.

These posts are different from the ones I list under the monthly “Most Popular Blog Posts.” Those are the posts the largest numbers of readers “clicked-on” to read. I have to admit, I’ve been a bit lax about writing those posts, though.

Here are some of the posts I personally think are the best, and most helpful, ones I’ve written during this past month (not in any order of preference):

 

 

 

 

 

January 28, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Research Studies Of The Week

I often write about research studies from various field and how they can be applied to the classroom. I write individual posts about ones that I think are especially significant, and will continue to do so. However, so many studies are published that it’s hard to keep up. So I’ve started writing a “round-up” of some of them each week or every other week as a regular feature:

Physicists Seek To Lose The Lecture As Teaching Tool is an NPR Report about the successes of a professor who has stopped lecturing and, and instead, has begun using small groups. American Radio Works has a more extensive feature on the results. I’m adding this to The Best Sites For Cooperative Learning Ideas.

Changing our Minds discusses a study and other ideas that suggest “fiction helps us understand ourselves and others.” I’m adding it to The Best Resources On “Becoming What We Read.”

Learning From Brilliant Mistakes and Finding Opportunity in Failures are both articles and videos related to Paul J.H. Schoemaker’s book, ‘Brilliant Mistakes.’ I’m adding them to The Best Posts, Articles & Videos About Learning From Mistakes & Failures.

V is for Visualization at Scott Thornbury’s blog is a discussion of research, and teacher’s experiences, of using visualization with language learners. I’m adding it to My Best Posts On Helping Students “Visualize Success.”

January 27, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

January’s “The Best” Lists — There Are Now 853 Of Them

Here’s my monthly round-up of new “The Best…” lists I posted in late December and January (you can see all 853 of them categorized here):

The Best Summify & Paper.li’s On ESL/EFL/ELL — January, 2012

The Best Online “Explainer” Tools For Current Events — January, 2012

The Best Resources For Learning About Protests In Russia — January, 2012

The Best Commentaries On The President’s Proposal For Students To Stay In School Until They’re Eighteen — January, 2012

The Best Critiques Of Ruby Payne — January, 2012

The Best Posts On The Gates’ Funded Measures Of Effective Teaching Report — January, 2012

The Best Social Emotional Learning (SEL) Resources — January, 2012

The Bests Posts & Articles About Why We Like Lists — January, 2012

The Best Articles I’ve Written In 2011

The Best Resources On Differentiating Instruction — January, 2012

The Best Posts On The NY Times-Featured Teacher Effectiveness Study — January, 2012

The Best Education-Related Books Visitors To This Blog Read In 2011 — January, 2012

All My “Best Of 2011″ Lists In One Place — January, 2012

The Best Resources On Teacher/Student Use Of Social Media — January, 2012

The Best Guides To Figuring Out Pinterest — January, 2012

The Best — And Easiest –Tools To Use For Embedding A Document — January, 2012

The Best Resources For Beginning iPad Users — January, 2012

Part Sixty-Three Of The Best Ways To Create Online Content Easily & Quickly — January, 2012

January 27, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

New Online U.S. History Game Goes Online Today

Flight To Freedom is a new online game about the Underground Railroad that came online today. You have to register to play (it’s easy to do so), and it’s designed in the “choose your own adventure” genre.

It’s part of Mission US, which is funded by the Corporation For Public Broadcasting and the National Endowment For The Humanities.

It’s first game, For Crown Or Colony, is also a very well designed “choose your own adventure” game. That game was on The Best Online Learning Games Of 2011 list, and I’m sure this new one will be on this year’s list.

I’ll also be adding this new game to The Best Places To Read & Write “Choose Your Own Adventure” Stories.

This new game joins a long list of “choose your own adventure” games where players take the role of an escaped slave on the Underground Railroad. Others include:

Following The Footsteps from Thinkport.

The Underground Railroad from National Geographic.

Addy’s Escape To Freedom from American Girl (which does not work sometimes).

January 27, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Photo Galleries Of The Week

Obviously, photos can be great educational tools with English Language Learners and with any students (see The Best Ways To Use Photos In Lessons). I post about many photo galleries, also called slideshows. To do it in a little more organized way, though, I recently began this weekly feature called “Photo Galleries Of The Week.” This post is a “round-up” of online slideshows I’m adding to various “The Best…” lists:

Famous animals throughout history is a slideshow from The Washington Post. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About Animals.

10 Images That Changed the Course of Science (And One That Is About To) is a pretty interesting slideshow. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To See “Photos That Changed The World.”

World’s Ugliest Public Art is a slideshow from Travel and Leisure. I’m adding it to The Best Examples Of “Unusual” Art.

The Great Barrier Reef – in pictures is a slideshow from The Guardian. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Australia.

Kwanzaa celebrations across the country is a Washington Post slideshow. I’m adding it to The Best Places To Learn About Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa.

2011 in Global development – in pictures is a slideshow from The Guardian. I’m adding it to The Best Year-End Collections Of Images — 2011.

January 26, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

I Didn’t Know That “The Language Guide” Had Interactive Exercises

Many teachers of English Language Learners know about The Language Guide, which is an excellent picture dictionary on the Web that has audio, too (it also has versions for other languages).

I’ve used it for years, but didn’t realize until a student pointed it out to me this month that each page has an “options” feature which provides listening and speaking quizzes. I’m not sure how long that option has been there — perhaps I’ve just missed it for years…

It’s just another reason why it’s on The Best Beginner, Intermediate & Advanced English Language Learner Sites list.

January 26, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
4 Comments

The Best — And Easiest –Tools To Use For Embedding A Document

(NOTE: Great additional suggestions are being left in the comments section of this post)

It can sometimes be useful to be able to embed a document so it can be easily read and shared on a blog or website. There are many simple tools that make this possible, and I thought I’d create a quick list of them. I’m sure I’m missing some obvious choices, so I hope you’ll help me and others out by sharing suggestions in the comments section.

Here are my choices for The Best Tools To Use For Embedding A Document:

I was prompted to write this list after I learned about a new site called Group Docs today.

Scribd

embedit.in

DocStoc

How to Embed a PDF Document Into Your Website is a post from Make Use of that shares other ideas.

What simple tools am I missing, and I mean simple, please…

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the 850 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

January 26, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Let’s Play ‘History As A List’” Is A Fascinating Idea

Let’s Play ‘History As A List’ by Robert Krulwich is a very interesting post over at NPR.

In it, he gives various examples of describing history as a…list. Here is one example:

* stone
* bronze
* iron
* plastic
* bits

He has lots of other great models. Looking for patterns and categories is definitely an indication of higher-order thinking, so I’m going to try having students do something like this as a project. I’ll show them some examples, and then see what they can come up with.

What do you think?