1 / 40

Meghan V. Huff September 20, 2013 Linguistics Department Colloquium

Teaching tools and tools to teach : Activities and tools for engaging students at the university level. Meghan V. Huff September 20, 2013 Linguistics Department Colloquium. Why tools and not activities ?. Tools/ structures v. activities. Tools and Structures. Activities.

rozene
Télécharger la présentation

Meghan V. Huff September 20, 2013 Linguistics Department Colloquium

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Teachingtools and toolstoteach: Activities and toolsforengagingstudents at theuniversitylevel Meghan V. Huff September 20, 2013 LinguisticsDepartmentColloquium

  2. Whytools and notactivities?

  3. Tools/structures v. activities Tools and Structures Activities • usable many, many times • not content specific, but outcome specific • can be reused with new content continually • once students are used to the tool, instructions can be very short • used once • contentspecific • haveto be foundorcreatedforeachlesson • haveto be explainedevery time

  4. Communicative and interactiveclassrooms

  5. student-centered • wearen’tteachers, we are guides and facilitators • notteaching, butcreatingtheopportunityforlearning • “don’t be a sageonthestage, be a guide ontheside” • spendyour time withtheclass, not in front of it • (walk and talk, correct and confirm) • think of itthisway – youdon’tneedthepractice! • be empathetictothelearningprocess and celebrateerrors – afterall, they are requiredforlearning • how do weflip a classroomlikethis? - tools

  6. engaging • classroomenvironment • non-threatening, laid-back, funny, real, willingto be wrong and ‘check’, giveskills, allowindividuality, encourageexploration • music, jokes, dictionaries, teaching of slang, technology, flexibility, accountability • affectivefilter (Krashen, 1985) • toohigh – no learningbecausethey are stressed • toolow – no learningbecausetheydon’tcare • in themiddle – learningoccursout of trust and comfort

  7. motivating • givepromptfeedback • givereal-world, concrete examples • relate thecontenttostudents’ lives • be a cheerleader • celebratevictories and supportstudentswhentheystruggle

  8. productive • assisteachstudent in acquiringthecontent • givethemtoolsforsuccessfullearning • givethemlifeskillsforthefuture

  9. playingtothemultipleintelligences • everyone has multipleways in whichthey can learn, but a few are usuallydominant (Gardner & Hatch, 1989) • musical-rhythmic • visual-spatial • verbal-linguistic • logical-mathmatical • bodily-kinesthetic • interpersonal • intrapersonal • naturalistic • existential

  10. automatization of explicitknowledge • DeKeyser (2001) commentson 3 types of knowledge… • implicitknowledge – nativespeakers/acquiredskills • explicitknowledge – L2 speakers/learnedskills • automatizedexplicitknowledge – advanced L2 speakers/learnedskillsthatone no longerconsciouslythinkabout • sometimes, wehavetomemorizeconceptsorworkwithexplicitinformation (even in a communicativelanguageclassroom!) • structured and engagingactivitiesprovidecontext • wherewecan’tcreateimplicitknowledge, we can aimtoautomatizethatwhichisexplicit

  11. educationaltools the ‘how’ withthe ‘what’

  12. implementingtools • 4 steps • giveclear, levelappropriate, instructions • modeltheactivity • facilitate • walk, talk, correct, and confirm • recap • give a realistic time limit, and remindthemwhen time isalmost up • havefilleractivitiesorextensionsreadyforspeedystudents

  13. no techtools no computers thebody smallobjects paper

  14. simple tools • flipbooks • flashcardgames • whiteboards • give me 5, thumbs up/down

  15. acronyms • D-dar • I-ir • S-ser • H-haber • E-estar • S-saber • DISHES – theirregulars in thesubjunctive • theyalsorhyme • dé-esté • vaya-haya • sea-sepa

  16. simple tools • flyingsaucers • hand/bodymotions • rhythms/songs

  17. snowballfightel subjuntivo con frases adverbiales… • a menos (de) que • antes (de) que • con tal (de) que • para que • sin que • Escribo esta frase para que ustedes entiendan. • unless • before • providedthat • in orderthat/so that • without • I writethissentence so youunderstand.

  18. blindquiz • Persona 1 • una mesa • una cama • un refrigerador • una alfombra • Persona 2 • un sofá • unas cortinas • un microondas • una ventana

  19. dice games dado 1 dado 2 • 1-yo • 2-tú • 3-ella • 4-nosotros • 5-ellos • 6-ustedes • 1-comer • 2-hablar • 3-ir • 4-llevar • 5-vivir • 6-ser

  20. t-charts/mixers

  21. timelines • point of reference • linear perspectiveto a movingpoint in time • greatforidentifyingorderamongcomplexconcepts ¿? el pasado perfecto el presente perfecto el presente el futuro el pasado

  22. simple tools • vocabpictures • battleship • findsomeonewho…

  23. lowtechtools computer (withconnectionwires) websites

  24. online books • clipart • activities • read-alouds

  25. verbpractice • https://conjuguemos.com

  26. textbooktools • http://wps.prenhall.com/ml_castells_mosaicosCW_5/

  27. simple lists

  28. quia.com • gameslike ‘Whowantsto be a millionaire?” • multiplechoice, fill in theblank, etc…

  29. el imperfecto del subjuntivo • si necesitas el subjuntivo en el pasado… • http://www.quia.com/cz/10839.html?AP_rand=1240551092

  30. Sol y Viento - videos • http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073513121/student_view0/grammar_tutorials.html

  31. http://www.polleverywhere.com/free_text_polls/TVjFdgQdV1aBhcahttp://www.polleverywhere.com/free_text_polls/TVjFdgQdV1aBhca

  32. hightechtools iPad apps iPhone

  33. iPads • importantapps • SlideShark (pptpresenter) • iPhone acts as a remotevia Bluetooth • Blackboard (referencetomaterialsthat are there) • Dropbox (everythingisaccessibleonthego) • TeacherKit (attendance, learningnames) • eTexts (addanactivityduringthelesson) • Kindle (pdfsorelectronicbooks) • QuickOffice (createdocumentsonthego) • WordReference (dictionaryonthego) • PDF-notes (research and zooming in ontables, etc…)

  34. Conclusions

  35. youcan’tpossibly do all of these, right? • correct. • incorporating 2-3 can changestudentattitudes • studentsstayengaged and learn more • yougettoenjoyyourclass and stress outless – youhavetoolstouse and lessworkoverall • you inspire studentstofindthewaystheylearnbest, whichhelpsthem in thefuture

  36. Thanksforcoming! • Ifyouhaveanyquestions, comments, orconcerns, orifyou’dlikehelpin creatinganactivitywithone of thesetools… • send me an email at mvh9@pitt.edu

  37. workscited • DeKeyser, R. M. (2001). Automaticityand automatization. In P. Robinson (ed.), Cognition and secondlanguageinstruction. New York: Cambridge UniversityPress, 125-151.  • Gardner, H., & Hatch, T. (1989). Multipleintelligencesgotoschool: Educationalimplications of thetheory of multipleintelligences. EducationalResearcher, 4-10. • Krashen, S.D. (1985), The Input Hypothesis: Issues and Implications, New York: Longman.

More Related