Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

May 10, 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:

How Immersion Helps to Learn a Language is from The New York Times. Here’s an excerpt:

Learning a foreign language is never easy, but contrary to common wisdom, it is possible for adults to process a language the same way a native speaker does. And over time, the processing improves even when the skill goes unused, researchers are reporting….

Here’s another reason why it’s important for teachers to recognize that power is not a finite pie — if some is shared with students, that doesn’t mean that teachers have less. Instead, it makes the pie bigger by creating more possibilities for everyone. A study reports that feelings of powerlessness negatively impacts learning.

What Neuroscience Tells Us About Deepening Learning is a not a study, but a review of various research findings. It appeared in Education Week.

Students should be taught how to study. is a good review of recent study over at Daniel Willingham’s blog.

Bilingual Children Switch Tasks Faster Than Speakers of a Single Language is a report on a new study. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning The Advantages To Being Bilingual.

Being Bilingual Wards Off Symptoms of Dementia is a report on another study. I’m adding it to the same list.

May 9, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Create A Comic With “Rage Maker”

Put Your Rage Into a Cartoon and Exit Laughing is a New York Times article tonight about the Web genre of “rage comics” — people using easy online tools to vent about irritating incidents they experience.

The article particularly highlights a tool called Rage Maker and, in fact, give step-by-step instructions on how to use these easy site to create an online comic. And there’s no reason why it can’t be used to make comic strips about “non-rage” topics. No registration is required.

I don’t think it’s quite good enough to add to The Best Ways To Make Comic Strips Online, but it could be worth a look and a try…

May 9, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

British Council Unveils New Site: “Learn English Teens”

The British Council has just unveiled a new site called Learn English Teens. It’s targeting English Language Learners who are….teenagers.

Learn English Teens has some particularly good games. I’m adding that page to The Best Learning Games For Intermediate English Language Learners.

Learn English Teens also has some good vocabulary activities. I’m adding them to The Best Sites Where ELL’s Can Learn Vocabulary.

May 9, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Using A Lesson On Cognitive Dissonance To Help Students Learn To Take Responsibility

I have an extended lesson plan in my book, Helping Students Motivate Themselves, on helping students learn to take personal responsibility and blame others less.

In addition, I have a related “The Best..” list called The Best Resources For Helping Students (& The Rest Of Us) Learn The Concept Of Not Blaming Others.

Today, I got an idea for an addition to those lessons.

First, NPR ran a story titled Partisan Psychology: Why Do People Choose Political Loyalties Over Facts? It discusses a study on cognitive dissonance — holding two conflicting opinions in your head at the same time. Even though the article was talking about it in the context of politics, it certainly happens in the classroom. For example, when a student throws a wad of paper at another student and explains to the teacher that the other student “made him do it” even though the teacher points out that nobody “made him” do it but himself. They have inconsistent ideas in their head.

The NPR article points out a study that found that people tend to have cognitive dissonance because it’s painful for them if they do not. They then found that people were more likely to get past these inconsistencies if they felt more positive about themselves.

So, I’m going to develop an addendum to my lesson on personal responsibility. I’m thinking it might be worth including a short piece on cognitive dissonance where we learn what it is, I share examples from my life, and students share experiences from their own. We can review this study, and I’m hopeful that it might make student more aware of its dangers.

In addition, I’m thinking that this info could be a useful classroom management tool. When, for example, I have a paper wad throwing incident like I share earlier, I wonder what might happen if I asked a student who was reluctant to accept responsibility to take a minute and think about something positive he did in his life?

Coincidentally, Jon Stewart did a piece on cognitive dissonance last night on the Daily Show. There are a couple of inappropriate parts here, but portions of it could be useful in class. Here it is:

I’m certainly open to other ideas on how to make this point better, too!

May 9, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

This Week In Web 2.0

In yet another attempt to get at the enormous backlog I have of sites worth sharing, I’ve recently begin a regular feature called “The Week In Web 2.0.” It’ll be a short compilation of new decent sites that are worth noting, but maybe not necessarily worth a separate post:

Google+ Hangout Apps Come Out Of Hiding, Offer Games, Screensharing, Presentations & More is from TechCrunch. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning What Google+ Is All About.

Snapguide looks like an interesting iPhone app that lets anyone make a guide to just about anything. You can read about it in this New York Times article. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Beginning iPhone Users Like Me.

Screenleap “allows as many people as you like to see your computer screens at once without needing to set up an account.” I’m adding it to The Best Online Tools For Real-Time Collaboration.

Three Ways To Watch Videos and Discuss Them In Real Time is a useful post from Richard Byrne. I’m adding it to the same list.

And, speaking of Richard, he also has developed a collection of ten digital storytelling projects. I’m adding it to The Best Digital Storytelling Resources.

Bundlenut lets you collect several links — along with your comments on each one — and puts them all on one link. I’m adding it to The Best Places To Create (And Find) Internet Scavenger Hunts & Webquests, where it joins several other similar tools.

Time Rime is a timeline maker that has been around for awhile, but seems to have made some nice improvements. I’m adding it to The Best Tools For Making Online Timelines.

May 8, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Wisconsin Recall Fight Is On! (Plus Good NY Times Interactive On Battle)

Wisconsin voters today chose Tom Barrett to oppose Governor Scott Walker in the recall vote one month away.

Along with that NY Times article about the election, the Times produced a very useful Timeline: The Wisconsin Labor Fight.

I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About Attacks On Teachers & Other Public Sector Workers In Wisconsin.

May 8, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“Best and Worst Countries for Moms”

Save The Children has come out with a report, “State of the World’s Mothers 2012.” Here are several media resources highlighting its results:

Best and Worst Countries for Moms is a slideshow from the PBS News Hour.

Report: Best and Worst Places to be a Mother is from the Voice of America.

2012 Mothers’ Index Rankings is a chart from Save The Children.

I’m adding this info to The Best Sites For Learning About Mother’s Day.

I’m adding these resources to The Best Sites For Learning About Mother’s Day.

May 8, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Hot Off The Press! The Best Piece Yet Published On Teacher Evaluation

What I believe is the best piece yet published on teacher evaluation was made public this morning.

You can download Linda Darling Hammond’s Creating A Comprehensive System For Evaluating and Supporting Effective Teaching at the website of the Stanford Center For Opportunity Policy In Education.

I can’t make enough positive comments about this report. I was lucky enough to see it in draft form as a member of the California State Educator Excellence Task Force.

I’m adding this report to:

The Best Articles Describing Alternatives To High-Stakes Testing

The Best Resources For Learning About The “Value-Added” Approach Towards Teacher Evaluation

The Best Resources For Learning About Effective Student & Teacher Assessments

I’ll be sharing an excerpt in my Education Week column next week, but I’d encourage you to read it now.

May 8, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

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

(Usually, I just post a weekly version of this regular feature. However, sometimes I post an extra “Special Edition” when I have more good links than usual)

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 is a Special Edition of “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

How Americans spend money, compared with other countries is a chart from The Washington Post. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About The World’s Different Cultures.

Cartoon: PowerPoint Fever is from The New Yorker via This Week in Education. I’m adding it to The Best Sources Of Advice For Making Good Presentations.

The Gated Community Mentality is from The New York Times. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Walls That Separate Us.

The Rich Get Even Richer is from The New York Times. I’m adding it to The Best Resources About Wealth & Income Inequality.

What Makes an Answer a Great Answer? is a pretty interesting post from the Atlantic.

Who Shouldn’t Go to College? is from The New York Times. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Showing Students Why They Should Continue Their Academic Career.

iPad in Education Resources Worth Exploring is from Bill Ferriter. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Beginning iPad Users.

May 7, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

How Reading Strategies Can Increase Student Engagement

A few days ago, both Daniel Willingham and Robert Pondiscio — two thinkers and educators whose opinions I value highly — wrote posts critical of the use (or, perhaps, the over-use) of teaching reading strategies to students. They both suggest that this can result in making students feel bored by reading.

I certainly agree that teachers misusing reading strategies in class can indeed, as Dan Willingham put it, cause “collateral damage.” I’d also suggest that poor teaching of just about anything can have a similar result.

Done well, regular teaching and reinforcing of reading strategies can have the opposite result, and I see it in my classroom, and the classrooms of my colleagues, everyday.

Reading strategies are not just for comprehension — they are also for engagement.

We don’t have students explicitly apply them (or, if they do, very seldom) during their pleasure reading. But for reading text they are unfamiliar with and often, at least initially, not interested in (especially informational text in English and in content area classes) reading strategies like highlighting, visualizing, connecting, asking questions, evaluating, and summarizing provide a tool for students to extend their thinking and also a provide a system for accountability. Explicitly being challenged to ask questions, expand those questions to higher level orders of thinking, and then share them with their classmates agitates everyone to wonder and explore what the answers might be. Some reluctant readers become more engaged when they know they can draw and visualize what they are reading. Pushing students to consciously agree or disagree with what they read and provide evidence for their beliefs helps students develop needed critical thinking skills. And, yes, all that engagement reinforces comprehension, too.

I’ve invited Kelly Young, an extraordinary consultant from Pebble Creek Labs for our school (and for many others), to also comment on this issue. I’ve written often about Kelly, who I consider a mentor.

Here are his comments:

I appreciate Mr. Willingham’s spur to open a conversation about the value and weight of reading strategies in the larger milieu of reading instruction.

For openers, I cannot imagine responsible reading instruction without the teaching of reading strategies, though I too worry about appropriate balance and priority.

Just as teachers of music, dance and sports use exercises and drills to refine, expand and enhance learner skills and technique, so should reading teachers give students’ methods and means for making text more available and understandable, and thus enjoyable.

When I take a tennis lesson, I don’t expect to only play during the lesson… I expect to learn strategies through exercises that will expand my skill set. I also don’t expect to just do drills, as I need to apply my sharpened skills to the larger game.

The same holds for reading instruction. Through strategy work, in appropriate balance with general reading and free reading, we make transparent via modeling and practice varied means of engaging with text in novel and more sophisticated levels of thinking. This expansion of reader tools has the effect of broadening and strengthening students’ reading repertoire. Students are asked to read and interact with text through different lenses and points of contact. This arms students with more tools through which to connect with and enjoy reading. Done correctly, it simultaneously makes text more engaging while sharpening and expanding meaning-making competencies.

Done poorly, indeed it feels monotonous and superfluous, though not a reason to deny expanded and powerful tools from students. That is a teaching problem. Reading strategies are not to be confused with teaching methods, they are learning strategies for student to own and apply as needed with varied levels and types of text. They are also not to be confused with assessment and poorly worded multiple-choice questions testing student comprehension. Such “methods” do not teach reading skill; they only test it, weakly.

Reading strategies are an amalgam of tactics and approaches for making reading more available and understandable, more vivid and rich. As with most teaching and learning challenges, the magic is in the right mix of applied practice and inquiry. More tools, and more understanding of these tools, only enriches the reading and learning experience.

How do you use reading strategies in your classroom?

(see Robert Pondiscio’s thoughtful response in the comments)

May 7, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

“How To Get Started With Google+ Hangouts On Air”

How To Get Started With Google+ Hangouts On Air is a good “how to” post from Read Write Web.

Today, Google announced that their Hangouts on Google+ were going worldwide. These are video presentations that are automatically streamed on Google+ and on YouTube, and then are immediated posted to YouTube.

I’m adding this info to The Best Resources For Learning What Google+ Is All About.

May 7, 2012
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Everything You Wanted To Know About The Brain, But Were Afraid To Ask…

BrainFacts.org was unveiled today. It’s “a project of the Kavli Foundation, the Gatsy Charitable Foundation, and the Society for Neuroscience, which launched today. It aspires to be a comprehensive, authoritative site for information about all things related to gray matter.”

Educators might be particularly interested in these sections of the site:

Learning and Memory

Language

Resources For Educators