Friday, August 26, 2011

Week 10: Each end is a new beginning


Dear friends,

It is unbelievable, but it is week number ten and our course is coming to its end. I must say that I did not think that our training would be so diverse and dense. I have not read the blogs made by the participants from previous courses, so reading the title “Building Teacher Skills Through the Interactive Web” I thought that we would just learn new web resources and that would be all. I even did not imagine that the course would be so rich, that the learning material would be so well structured by the Professor and that we would practice such an efficient working and interaction approach.

I was lucky to be in a group with so active colleagues from which I learned so much. And our Professor was so careful to conduct our interactions and so prompt to answer our questions and so patient to check and evaluate our assignments.

Now, looking back I can say that I have learned a lot but I can see also some things that I would do better now if I had the chance. For some topics I would search more information and would write more comments to my colleagues’ posts. But I hope that we will not lose access to all the materials and the course wiki after the course ending and we will be able to read messages on nicenet.org.         If so, then we will be able to come back and reflect about some things later.

Well, it is probably the time to thank everybody who prepared and took part in this course and to wish success to the participants who will be implementing projects soon. It is sad because it is an end but each end is a new beginning.

Good luck!
Ion

Monday, August 22, 2011

Week 9: Learning styles


Dear colleagues,

The ninth week of our course provided discussing learning styles. I found this subject very interesting and it was a surprise for me to discover that Gardner listed 9 intelligences in his theory (I thought they were 5-6).

Although there are scholars who criticize Gardner’s ideas as lacking empirical evidence, in my opinion this does not make his approach less helpful for teachers. Knowing better our students’ interests, talents and needs will help us design activities matching their preferred learning styles and strengths and they will have better attitudes, better grades in tests- they will learn more efficiently in one word. The learners will feel motivated because they will have the occasion to demonstrate their strengths, they will act as “specialists” and this fact will increase their self-esteem.
It is true that many educational systems still focus on the linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligences nowadays because it is considered that we should be able to read, write and make calculations first of all. But if we want to have better results we will use a variety of teaching methods appealing to each intelligence to accommodate different learning styles.

These activities will challenge students to learn in different ways and using all approaches they will become more effective learners. They will be better served  by an approach where teachers use different activities to reach all students not just those who excel at linguistic and logical intelligence. 

Best regards,

Ion

Monday, August 15, 2011

Week 8:Teacher Resources Online - Going Deeper



Dear friends,

Now when the eighth week is over I can say that it was a period that besides the online tools that were not very complicated like: Hot Potatoes,  http://www.toolsforeducators.com, http://bogglesworldesl.com  introduced also Course Management Systems (ANVILL) and other web resources (www.blogger.com, www.nicenet.org ) which were not CMS but could be used as platforms for managing the teaching/learning process. About four years ago I had experienced e-learning when I took part in a distance training based on another popular CMS called MOODLE. In my opinion these are valuable tools and I know that in Scandinavian countries they implement deeply e-learning but at least in Moldova we are not ready yet to base our courses integrally on CMS because not all the students have a computer and in many schools they don’t have  multimedia labs offering free internet accesss. Instead, as our colleagues proved, this kind of tools can be efficient platforms for combining different sequences to build complex learning units.

From the list of the proposed online tools I would like to mention the Hot Potatoes software which can bring many benefits because you don’t need to know programming to easily make different types of exercises with this application and share them. Also I like that you can integrate pictures and sounds in it and receive instant feedback. A good thing is that it is very popular and there are many websites on which teachers upload ready made exercises,so you can save time just by dowloading them.
However I think that the teacher must be very creative to make these exercises interactive, to involve the students otherwise there will be too much focus on the forms and less  communication.

So, as we have already said these are just tools and their efficiency depends on how the teachers know to use them.



Best wishes,

Ion

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Week 7: “I find it’s kind of like having some candy but not enough for everyone.” (Phyllis Stallworth, a four-grade teacher from Louisiana referring to teaching in a one-computer classroom)



This week we read and analyzed the proposed resources on teaching English in one-computer classrooms and learner’s autonomy and found partners for reviewing project plans.
 The lack of equipment is a problem indeed but I think using a computer (especially a laptop) connected to a projector can be very efficient.
I used this format successfully for listening and checking comprehension (subtitled video clips + fill-in-the gaps exercises + singing karaoke), grammar (Hot Potatoes exercises), reading (text based tasks), making Power Point presentations, etc.
A good thing is that it works not only for whole-class activities. Strategies like working in stations or offering after-classes access to students according to an established schedule can allow each learner use the computer.
The conclusion I drew about implementing technology in teaching in general and  in a one-computer classroom in particular is not to use computers just for showing something and not to loose the sight of our main goal that is meaningful communication and interaction.


“I never teach my students. I simply provide the situations in which they can learn.”

                                                                                    (Albert Einstein)
Another important issue was the benefits of and the obstacles in developing learner’s autonomy.           I found it very interesting the way Dimitrios Thanasoulas approaches basically this term in his article “What is Learner Autonomy and How Can It Be Fostered?” The influence of the tradition factor, the moderator role of the teacher, the curriculum and the importance of autonomous learning for future citizens were very relevant for me taking into account the context of my native country.
Here in Moldova we made reforms in our educational system to pass from the Soviet model that we call “informative” to a “formative” educational system and my impression about this change is that perhaps the people who call the school a “conservative institution” are right because I can see how deeply rooted in the traditional teaching are our practices.
Though this doesn’t make the importance of autonomous learning less convincing. I think that in the context of globalization and information revolution we need active citizens being able to search for information and process it independently to implement the daily “projects” of which consists our life.