2018年12月25日 星期二

【Over 50 Reusable Activity Sheets to Teach Any Day’s New York Times】

有在用New York Times 教英文的老師們可能會知道紐時免費提供的writing prompts. 
但除了寫作活動, 紐約時報還提供超過五十種的活動學習單,

這些活動大致分成四種類別: General Graphic Organizers, Games and Fun,
Discussion Starters, Word Play.

有的可以直接在檔案裡打字. 有的活動還有給老師們的教學指引. 
這些學習單大多是萬用學習單, 套在任何一篇紐時的新聞甚至其他英文報紙的新聞都通, 很實用!


2018年11月22日 星期四

Turkey trot

Turkey trot 是美國感恩節當天早晨舉辦的慢跑活動, 美國人當天會和家人聚會, 吃著豐盛的火雞大餐, 為了再吃大餐前消耗熱量, 才有早晨的慢跑活動! Happy Thanksgiving!

Turkey trot is a fun run or footrace, usually of the long-distance variety, that is held on or around Thanksgiving Day in the United States. Traditionally, turkey trots are held because Americans anticipate indulgent Thanksgiving feasts and run in turkey trots to burn off calories before the big meal.[citation needed] Turkey trots are also held in the United Kingdom, usually shortly before or after Christmas Day
[source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkey_trot ]

Photo credit:
https://www.active.com/running/articles/7-fun-facts-about-turkey-trots

https://runsignup.com/Race/CA/Fresno/SierraChallengeExpressTurkeyTrot

2018年11月12日 星期一

【Makebeliefscomix’s new feature: e-greeting cards】


這網站推過很多次, 有好幾款e-books 可以下載,
教學生創意寫作
(國小到大學都有適合的電子書, 除了可以印紙本,
更棒的是學生可以直接在電子書中打字).
另一個功能就是製作漫畫, 功能更新後,
從原先的三格漫畫變成了九格。
最近這幾個月又多了新功能,
就是學生或老師在做完漫畫後,
可以傳e-greeting cards, 目前總共有43 種可以選擇。
有的greetings card 就是一般的問候,
有的是針對節慶, 感恩節、聖誕節、復活節、新年….
之前分享過個功能, 但臉書有時候觸及率頗低,
所以再分享一次! 

https://www.makebeliefscomix.com/Comix/


【Wordsift.org: A great online website for learning vocabulary, reading,etc.】


l   網站特色: 免費, 幾個主要功能: word sorting (word cloud), a visual thesaurus, links to Google images and videos, and example sentences
l   還蠻推word sorting 這功能的, 可以依據使用者所選的文本產生文字雲, 幫助學生學單字外, 文字雲也可以被用來設計pre-reading activity,像是predict the main idea of a reading passage (依據雲中的文字大小和關聯,學生便可以猜測文章大意)。文字雲還可依字母順序排列或是按常見字到不常見字依序排列。
l   Visual thesaurus 則顯示文本中某個單字和其他幾個相關單字的關聯性,像bilingual 會跟bilingualist, multilingual, polyglot, linguist 連結在一起。

l   Links to Google images and videos則是將在文字雲中所選的關鍵字連結到google 的圖像或影片。根據dual coding theory相關的實證研究結果,這種設計對單字學習頗有幫助,也考量了不同學習型態(learning styles)的學習者的學習偏好。

2018年8月22日 星期三

【英語教學tools 推薦】

英語教學學習好站:

Digital storytelling: 
Storyboard 
http://www.storyboardthat.com/


Make Beliefs Comix 
http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/


Pixton 
https://www.pixton.com/collection/Pixton


做infograph    -----piktochart 

http://piktochart.com/

Flocabulary 
https://www.flocabulary.com/

Visuwords 
http://visuwords.com/

和 Visuwords 功能很像  

Visual Thesaurus!

http://www.visualthesaurus.com/trialover/


E-books for creative writing 
http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/eBooks/

Duolingo

Memrise
https://www.memrise.com/

http://motionpoems.org/

Pottermore
https://www.pottermore.com/

Learn English Teens
Gender Equality:Emma Waston

http://learnenglishteens.britishcouncil.org/

http://learnenglishteens.britishcouncil.org/study-break/video-zone/emma-watson-introduces-new-heforsheorg

Class Dojo

PingPong    你來我往, 互動學習網

迪賽腦   電腦選題, 我來答題

Sock Puppets   最佳配音

Mindmapper

iMovie

Explain Everything
活化教材的編輯利器    翻轉教室的工具  !!!!

24 Entertaining Short Stories For Middle School

http://www.teachthought.com/uncategorized/24-entertaining-short-stories-for-middle-school/?utm_campaign=trueAnthem&utm_content=56e4b14204d3010810d52b1b&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook


hip-hop song for teaching Goegraphy
http://www.businessweekly.com.tw/KBlogArticle.aspx?id=10194


小說用Youtube read aloud

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGni00tvHJWi7y_uFKIw6zw/playlists


Coggle


MakeBeliefComix
http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/ESOL-Videos-Lesson-Plans/

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/ESOL-Classroom-Activities/

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/eBooks/

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/ESOL-Printables/

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/ESOL-Classroom-Activities/

單頁 writing prompt
http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/ESOL/ESOL-Writing-Prompts/



2018年7月9日 星期一

【好書推薦: 文學與繪本融入英語教學, 批判思考與英語教學, 英語辯論教學, 活用英文 】

近幾年出版的英語教學相關書籍推薦, 都是師大教授和高中老師所著,
若有遺漏, 歡迎大家留言補充😅:


✿ 英語教學的文學觀點(莊坤良著) (http://www.books.com.tw/products/0010745735)
✿ 活學活用‧玩英文 (莊坤良著) (http://www.books.com.tw/products/0010757078)
✿ 培養思考力: 以高中階段英語文教育為例 (陳秋蘭、程玉秀主編)
( https://www.crane.com.tw/Book/Detail?bokid=0031316 )
✿ 沒在怕!第一次帶英語辯論就上手:政策性辯論指導老師教戰手冊 (常紹如著)
( https://www.crane.com.tw/Book/Detail?bokid=0041544&vtmc= )
✿ 繪本英閱會:讓英文繪本翻轉孩子的閱讀思維(戴逸群著)
(http://www.books.com.tw/products/0010756896)

2018年7月5日 星期四

【Makebeliefscomix: foster creative thinking through creative writing tasks! 】

之前分享過這網站, 有免費電子書可以下載(教創意寫作可以用, 有的適合國小學生, 有的適合國中生, 也有的高中大學生可以用). 創辦人是美國籍的 Bill Zimmerman 老先生人很好, 把漫畫製作的功能擴增, 以前只能創作3 格漫畫, 現在可以免費製作9 格漫畫, 而且介面也變得很好用! 有華語老師看了我在中文教學臉書社團的分享, 結合課程, 在課堂上給學生做了這個任務型活動教學XD, 教英文的我們也可以試試看, 製作教學素材或是給寫作任務要求學生完成都很ok 呢😍😍😍! 完成後填email, 就可以收到漫畫電子檔喔😎😎😎!
Note: 如果有老師用過後覺得網站有需要改進的地方, 可以跟Bill先生反應, 我跟他通了好幾封email, 他很樂意請programmer 把網站改的更user-friendly 呢!

✿漫畫製作網站頁面: https://www.makebeliefscomix.com/Comix/


2018年6月29日 星期五

【Rewordify.com: Simplify difficult English for faster reading comprehension】



兩個月沒貼文了, 來推薦一個網站, 叫做
Rewordify.com  (https://rewordify.com/index.php). 
這網站特別之處在於用一些較簡單的單字替換難度較高的文章或課文段落, 協助老師製作閱讀教學素材, 或學生理解閱讀的文章內容. 若是把滑鼠移到其他沒被"簡單化"的單字上, 並用滑鼠點一下, 還會出現該單字的英文定義(以former 為例, 因為可當形容詞或名詞, 就會出現兩種詞性的定義). 還可協助老師製作不同的活動學習單或考卷! 而且點選stats, 還會出現文章的難度分級(是採用國際上公認的Flesh-kincaid test 喔)~ 大推🤗🤗!

點畫面上方的Print/Learning activities 就會跳出以下文字:
Select which type of printout you want:
* Original text (no rewordification)
* Rewordified text with highlighting
(New: highlighting can print in color)
* Vocabulary list with definitions
* Vocabulary list without definitions
* Word bank quiz
* Matching sheet
(column of terms and column of definitions)
* Standard quiz
(answer choices randomly picked only from words on quiz)
* Difficult quiz
(answer choices randomly picked from over 58,000 words & phrases)
* Cloze activity
*Text with vocabulary (text on left with hard words underlined; definitions on right)
* CSV export for importing into a document or online studying program
*Generate answer key (available for starred options)
__________________________________________________
Rewordify (https://rewordify.com/), a website that allows users to simplify an entire website in addition to allowing them to copy-and-paste text into its website for adjusting the difficulty of a text to the level of learners. It is best for students who can almost read at grade-level and only need help with a limited number of words. For example, Rewordify can be used when studying current events. If students are reading an article from The New York Times, teachers can paste the article into Rewordify to define or replace difficult words. This feature allows students to read the same content as their peers, allowing them to participate in class debates, discussions, and other assignments which derive from readings (recommended by Samantha McManus, Celena Chin, and Ozge Yol, authors of idiom, a quarterly newsletter for New York State English teachers).

2018年6月24日 星期日

【Small Changes in Teaching: The First 5 Minutes of Class】




JANUARY 11, 2016

"Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice."
In a conversation I had with Ken Bain, my longtime mentor and favorite education writer, he cited that quote — the first sentence of Gabriel García Márquez’s novel One Hundred Years of Solitude — as one of the great openings in literary history. It’s hard to disagree: The sentence plunges us immediately into a drama, acquaints us with a character on the brink of death, and yet intrigues us with the reference to his long-forgotten (and curiosity-inducing) memory. That sentence makes us want to keep reading.
When I teach my writing course on creative nonfiction, we spend a lot of time analyzing the opening lines of great writers. I work frequently with students on their opening words, sentences, and paragraphs. In that very short space, I explain to them, most readers will decide whether or not to continue reading the rest of your essay. If you can’t grab and hold their attention with your opening, you are likely to lose them before they get to your hard-won insights 10 paragraphs later.
The same principle, I would argue, holds true in teaching a college course. The opening five minutes offer us a rich opportunity to capture the attention of students and prepare them for learning. They walk into our classes trailing all of the distractions of their complex lives — the many wonders of their smartphones, the arguments with roommates, the question of what to have for lunch. Their bodies may be stuck in a room with us for the required time period, but their minds may be somewhere else entirely.
It seems clear, then, that we should start class with a deliberate effort to bring students’ focus to the subject at hand. Unfortunately, based on my many observations of faculty members in action, the first five minutes of a college class often get frittered away with logistical tasks (taking attendance or setting up our technology), gathering our thoughts as we discuss homework or upcoming tests, or writing on the board.
Logistics and organization certainly matter, and may be unavoidable on some days. But on most days, we should be able to do better. In this column, the second in a series on small changes we can make to improve teaching and learning in higher education, I offer four quick suggestions for the first few minutes of class to focus the attention of students and prepare their brains for learning.
Open with a question or two. Another favorite education writer of mine, the cognitive psychologist Daniel Willingham, argues that teachers should focus more on the use of questions. "The material I want students to learn," he writes in his book Why Don’t Students Like School?, "is actually the answer to a question. On its own, the answer is almost never interesting. But if you know the question, the answer may be quite interesting."
My colleague Greg Weiner, an associate professor of political science, puts those ideas into practice. At the beginning of class, he shows four or five questions on a slide for students to consider. Class then proceeds in the usual fashion. At the end, he returns to the questions so that students can both see some potential answers and understand that they have learned something that day.
For example, in a session of his "American Government" course that focused on the separation of powers, the first question of the day might be: "What problem is the separation of powers designed to address?" And the last: "What forces have eroded the separation of powers?" Those questions are also available to the students in advance of class, to help guide their reading and homework. But having the questions visible at the start of class, and returning to them at the end, reminds students that each session has a clear purpose.
So consider opening class with one or more questions that qualify as important and fascinating. You might even let students give preliminary answers for a few moments, and then again in the closing minutes, to help them recognize how their understanding has deepened over the course period.
What did we learn last time? A favorite activity of many instructors is to spend a few minutes at the opening of class reviewing what happened in the previous session. That makes perfect sense, and is supported by the idea that we don’t learn from single exposure to material — we need to return frequently to whatever we are attempting to master.
But instead of offering a capsule review to students, why not ask them to offer one back to you?
In the teaching-and-learning world, the phenomenon known as the "testing effect" has received much ink. Put very simply, if we want to remember something, we have to practice remembering it. To that end, learning researchers have demonstrated over and over again that quizzes and tests not only measure student learning, but can actually help promote it. The more times that students have to draw information, ideas, or skills from memory, the better they learn it.
Instead of "testing effect," I prefer to use the more technical term, "retrieval practice," because testing is not required to help students practice retrieving material from their memories. Any effort they make to remember course content — without the help of notes or texts — will benefit their learning.
Take advantage of that fact in the opening few minutes of class by asking students to "remind" you of the key points from the last session. Write them on the board — editing as you go and providing feedback to ensure the responses are accurate — to set up the day’s new material. Five minutes of that at the start of every class will prepare students to succeed on the memory retrieval they will need on quizzes and exams throughout the semester.
One important caveat: Students should do all of this without notebooks, texts, or laptops. Retrieval practice only works when they are retrieving the material from memory — not when they are retrieving it from their screens or pages.
Reactivate what they learned in previous courses. Plenty of excellent evidence suggests that whatever knowledge students bring into a course has a major influence on what they take away from it. So a sure-fire technique to improve student learning is to begin class by revisiting, not just what they learned in the previous session, but what they already knew about the subject matter.
"The accuracy of students’ prior content knowledge is critical to teaching and learning," write Susan A. Ambrose and Marsha C. Lovett in an essay on the subject in a free ebook, because "it is the foundation on which new knowledge is built. If students’ prior knowledge is faulty (e.g., inaccurate facts, ideas, models, or theories), subsequent learning tends to be hindered because they ignore, discount, or resist important new evidence that conflicts with existing knowledge."
Asking students to tell you what they already know (or think they know) has two important benefits. First, it lights up the parts of their brains that connect to your course material, so when they encounter new material, they will process it in a richer knowledge context. Second, it lets you know what preconceptions students have about your course material. That way, your lecture, discussion, or whatever you plan for class that day can specifically deal with and improve upon the knowledge actually in the room, rather than the knowledge you imagine to be in the room.
Here, too, try posing simple questions at the beginning of class followed by a few minutes of discussion: "Today we are going to focus on X. What do you know about X already? What have you heard about it in the media, or learned in a previous class?" You might be surprised at the misconceptions you hear, or heartened by the state of knowledge in the room. Either way, you’ll be better prepared to shape what follows in a productive way.
Write it down. All three of the previous activities would benefit from having students spend a few minutes writing down their responses. That way, every student has the opportunity to answer the question, practice memory retrieval from the previous session, or surface their prior knowledge — and not just the students most likely to raise their hands in class.
Frequent, low-stakes writing assignments constitute one of the best methods you can use to solicit engagement and thinking in class. You don’t have to grade the responses very carefully — or at all. Count them for participation, or make them worth a tiny fraction of a student’s grade. If you don’t want to collect the papers, have students write in their notebooks or on laptops and walk around the classroom just to keep everyone honest and ensure they are doing the work. Limit writing time to three to five minutes and ask everyone to write until you call time — at which point discussion begins.
In my 15 years of full-time teaching, the only thing I have done consistently in every class is use the first few minutes for writing exercises, and I will continue to do that for as long as I am teaching. I love them not only for the learning benefits they offer, but because they have both a symbolic value and a focusing function. Starting with five minutes of writing helps students make the transition from the outside world to the classroom.
So don’t limit student-writing time to papers or exams. Let a writing exercise help you bring focus and engagement to the opening of every class session. Build it into your routine. Class has begun: time to write, time to think.
In writing, as in learning, openings matter. Don’t fritter them away.
James M. Lang is a professor of English and director of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Assumption College, in Worcester, Mass. His new book, Small Teaching: Everyday Lessons From the Science of Learning, will be published in March of 2016. Follow him on Twitter at @LangOnCourse.

https://www.chronicle.com/article/Small-Changes-in-Teaching-The/234869

Other articles written by Dr. Lang can be found in the following link: 

https://www.chronicle.com/specialreport/Small-Changes-in-Teaching/44

2018年6月20日 星期三

【25 WAYS TO USE MAKEBELIEFSCOMIX.COM IN THE CLASSROOM】

http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/How-to-Play/Educators/

Getting Ready for the New School Year
If you're a teacher or parent trying to figure out some creative activities to do with your children for the new school year, please take a look at our special page on 25 Ways to Use MakeBeliefsComix.com in the Classroom.
I promise you, you'll like the ideas, such as having the children create autobiographical comic strips introducing them to you and their fellow students. So much fun, so very valuable!
Here's the link -- http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/How-to-Play/Educators/

2018年4月25日 星期三

【從研究的角度看教學: 英語教學研討會 International English Teaching Conference in Taiwan】


研究與教學實務常是相輔相成的, 英語教學研究目的是希望能夠為教學帶來啟示(implications). 說到台灣英語教學相關的研討會, 尤以英語教學研究學會(ETRA, 台灣各頂大教授為成員)舉辦的研討會最受好評, 每年五月中由各大學輪流主辦, 今年輪到清大外文舉辦, 日期訂在5/18 和5/19, 有一些場次(國小國中高中大學英語教學, 科技融入英語教學, 跨文化視訊溝通等等)很適合參加, 也有書展, 請到的講者都是大咖! 報名費非學生價1200 元, 學生價只要600 元,報名到4/30 截止, 包兩天中餐點心還有晚宴(這次非發表者可以參加晚宴, 據說是新竹國賓大飯店的餐點, 不過這次沒在飯店請, 直接包場在研討會地點舉行,那棟旺宏企業捐贈,耗資八億元台幣的頂級學習中心, 其實中心內的圖書館應該是最大亮點XD!), 台灣研討會有科技部(原國科會)補助, CP值超級高(國外像是美國加拿大歐洲光是參加晚宴就超過非學生研討會報名費價錢, 中餐要自理) !!! 不過這次是週五週六舉行, 有課的會miss 掉一些場次. 研討會網站: http://www.fl.nthu.edu.tw/files/14-1260-126877,r5486-1.php…

✿ 另一個大型研討會是ETA-ROC, 中華民國英語文教師學會舉辦的, 每年十一月中在台北市劍潭活動中心, 相信很多人不陌生, 比較teaching-oriented, 一樣有書展也有工作坊 (沒晚宴):http://eta.org.tw/zh_tw/index.html