Mittwoch, 16. Mai 2012

Technology can sometimes be wasted on English language teaching

Computers are meant to have transformed the way language is taught and learned but in many classrooms expensive equipment is of little value and barriers to successful integration remain

computer class india
 
Bitter suite ... a computer class in Gujarat, India, but learning opportunities can be lost in such a setting. Photograph: David Gee/Alamy

Opinion

We are now 12 years into the new millennium and technology has become a prime element of almost all English language teaching (ELT) conferences and journals around the world. Yet, when we look for real improvements in student performance and effective use of technology by teachers, I think that the results are pretty disappointing.

I have spent the past 10 years doing technology-focused training work, materials writing and conference presentations and it still saddens me to see how much resistance and cynicism exists among teachers to the introduction of technology. But is it their fault? I don't think so. Even as an enthusiastic and experienced trainer, I can see that once technology gets into schools, things start to go wrong.

Investment in technology has often been equated with investment in hardware. In many ways this is the easy fix: throw money at the challenges that technology integration poses. For example, education ministries around the world have been willing to invest in expensive interactive whiteboard (IWB) technology without really considering the benefits inside classrooms. Having made the investment, teachers are often left to sort out how to use IWBs in a pedagogically effective way, often with very little training or support. Meanwhile managers can wash their hands of the problem and report back that they have done their part in integrating technology.

Read the rest of this article...

Montag, 14. Mai 2012

Become Fluent with Language Immersion for Google Chrome

Learning another language is hard when you aren’t immersed in it. Sure, you could move to Paris like you’ve always wanted to, but it’s probably more cost effective to use the Internet. Luckily, Google has released a few new tools to help you on your way.

The most fun is the Language Immersion extension for Google Chrome. Install it and all of a sudden snippets of everything you read will be in another language. Choose from 64 languages and pick an immersion level ranging from novice to fluent.



http://techland.time.com/2012/05/03/become-fluent-with-language-immersion-for-google-chrome/?iid=tl-article-mostpop1

Dunkin' Donuts Accused of Verbicide

According to a report at TODAY.com, Marc Fintz, the director of business development at Davidovich Bakery in Queens, N.Y., has filed a complaint against Dunkin' Donuts for its abuse of the word artisan.

Dunkin's Artisan Bagels, says Fintz, aren't even remotely artisanal. To label a food item artisan "creates the perception that your products are produced by hand, using traditional methods in small quantities. This is not the case."


http://grammar.about.com/b/2012/05/07/dunkin-donuts-accused-of-verbicide.htm

Donnerstag, 3. Mai 2012

'Supersizing' the College Classroom: How One Instructor Teaches 2,670 Students

In October, Myanmar's pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, got a quirky request on YouTube. A hyperactive instructor in a plaid jacket posted a video inviting her to do a Skype interview with his "World Regions" geography class at Virginia Tech.
Ms. Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate often compared to Nelson Mandela, might have ignored this plea were it not for how the video ended. The camera pivoted from the instructor, John Boyer, to an auditorium filled with some 3,000 students. They leapt from their seats, blew noisemakers, and chanted her name as if the Hokies had scored a touchdown.
It worked. On December 5, Ms. Suu Kyi, who last month won election to Parliament after spending much of the past two decades in detention, took questions from Mr. Boyer's students via Skype. "I cried a little bit," says Alex Depew, a senior. "I'm not gonna lie."
The moment marked the biggest coup yet in Mr. Boyer's experiment with supersizing the classroom. Conventional wisdom deems smaller classes superior. Mr. Boyer, a self-described "Podunk instructor," calls that "poppycock." He's exploring how technology can help engage students in face-to-face courses that enroll from 600 to nearly 3,000 students.