2016年7月29日 星期五

【好書推薦: Diary of a Wimpy Kid, 遜咖日記】


以前教過的學生問我之前是怎麼讀英文的,
就跟他說了幾個方法, 其中之一當然是大量閱讀.
因此依照她年紀和程度推薦了這幾年很夯的遜咖日記,
內容很有趣, 適合國高中生讀!
博客來現在79 折, 今年四月已出到第10 集了!
即使只買其中一兩集來讀, 也不會連不上劇情.
難字有中文解釋, 書後面有中文翻譯!
還可以學道地的英文!

http://search.books.com.tw/search/query/key/%E9%81%9C%E5%92%96%E6%97%A5%E8%A8%98/cat/all



  《遜咖日記》Diary of a Wimpy Kid系列 得獎紀錄
  ■ 連續四年,榮獲文化部「中小學生優良課外讀物推介」
  ■ 連續六年,長踞《紐約時報》暢銷書排行榜
  ■ 榮獲六次全美兒童票選獎「最喜愛的書」
  ■ 第五集《不願面對的真相》獲臺北市圖「好書大家讀」選書
  ■ 作者獲選《TIME》雜誌「2009全球最具影響力人物」
  ■ 美國獨立書商協會Book Sense兒童文學「年度好書」
  ■ 《出版人週刊》Publishers Weekly Best Books年度最佳圖書
  ■  Borders’ Original Voice最佳童書獎











2016年7月23日 星期六

【Augmented Reality 虛擬實境】

前幾週在西雅圖參觀了飛機博物館,裡面超大,有好幾區都是NASA的特展。
NASA 這個免費App正好可以讓孩子邊玩邊學習!
*方法:先列印出免費的PDF檔,然後拿手機鏡頭對著PDF上的圖即可
*PDF:www.jpl.nasa.gov/apps/images/3dtarget.pdf
*IOS:https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/spacecraft-3d/id541089908…
*Android:https://play.google.com/store/apps/details…



【優質閱測訓練網站 READTHEORY】

轉貼自Martin Philips T 老師
優質閱測訓練網站 READTHEORY
1. 免費
2. 教師可看到學生的測驗結果/分析
3. 學生簽入帳號後, 必須接受[ 前測 ] 來測定接下來的閱讀起點。
4. 閱測開始後, 學生可立即看到自己的進度, 和獲得的獎勵。
5. 經過數回測試後, 確認這系統給的閱測題目, 會依前測結果而變化。也確實反映學生習得理論的+1作法。
6. 可惜, 在台灣有那麼多熱心教學的老師, 卻沒有研究單位, 能提供此類的平台, 匯集教師的努力, 以供全國學子練習。這網站內容佳, 應用的教學理論和回饋系統均處上乘, 所有權也不意外的全都在外國人的手上, 台灣本地的教師和學生, 僅能被動的使用, 太可惜了。


【課堂提問籤】

課堂提問抽籤很實用! 感謝 Moji 老師分享以下教學點子!  

[提問籤]
感謝綜合領域研習的啟發,我的英語課堂也使用了「花色提問法」來引導學生思考,這也讓我發想出標點符號提問籤,以下簡單說明每支籤的意義,詳情請鎖定師德11.12月份會訊。

黑桃:(形狀就像鏟子,挖出真相)陳述事實
梅花:(形狀就像花朵,表示開花結果)我的應用
方塊:(形狀就像鑽石,表示珍貴)我學到的新知
愛心:(表示感覺)我當下的感受

問號:請提出一個疑問
冒號:請對作者/某角色說一句話
驚嘆號:對內容的認同與讚美
句號:請歸納自己的結論


2016年7月15日 星期五

【18 種方式介紹lesson topic】

http://eltplanning.com/2016/03/09/18-more-ways-to-introduce-your-lesson-topic/

18 MORE WAYS TO INTRODUCE YOUR LESSON TOPIC


This term I’ve tried out a few different ways to introduce a lesson. These ones have worked well. They might be worth reading if you’ve exhausted my previous list!
  1. Song lyric gap fill
Example: 3rd conditional, regrets
Do a short gap fill on part of a song related to your topic. Mine was on some lines from Frank Sinatra’s My Way:
Regrets, I’ve had a few… (1.19 – 1.30)
  1. Sporclenew1
Topic: Geography
Sporcle is full of great quizzes in various formats. Anyone with a log-in can make a quiz so they are not all great, but there are some good formats, especially matching and typing tasks. These are good for collaboration (with an interactive whiteboard) and for testing prior knowledge. We were learning about Africa the other day so I got my students to match the country name to the location on the map using this quiz. They had 3 goes at it, eventually getting half correct. Each go took about 4 minutes.
Don’t tell football mad students that there are an abundance of Premier League quizzes on the site – unless you’re in need of a highly motivational end of class reward!
  1. A short performance – miming
Example topic: past perfect
Students watch a teacher do a short mime at the front of class and speculate about what happened. I mimed that I was watching the football, drinking a coke, I suddenly realised that a spider had crawled into my glass! I jumped up and ran out the room. Explain what happened, board the target language and go from there…
  1. A short performance – character acting
Topic: any book/story/news article involving a character
Tell students that you will be in role as a character from the story they will read today. Sit at the front of class. Students have 5 mins to ask you any questions they want. They will have no idea who you are, so will start with simple things like ‘what’s your name’, ‘how old are you?’, etc. As they get more information, the questions will flow (especially if your manner/behaviour is interesting!). After the performance, give students a few minutes to discuss what they learnt about the character, whether they like them, etc.
Recent examples
I was a builder who had won the lottery
I was a vampire (who REALLY didn’t like the light in the classroom!)

  1. Sights and Sounds
Example topic: sports
This was an activity from the teacher’s book for English in Mind, which I adapted.
Tell students to think of their favourite sport.
Ask them:
How do you feel when you play the sport? How does the sport smell?!
How does the sport look?             How does the sport taste?
If you could ask the sport a question, what would you ask?
What would it say?
It sounds ridiculous, but you’ll be surprised how creative some students can be!

  1. Wheel decide Me/not mewheel2
Example topic: food
I mentioned me/not me in the previous post. I’ve adapted it by adding various items into Wheel Decide, spinning the wheel, and letting students have a brief 30 second discussion on if they like the food or not, and why. Could be used for any topic really. You could also make the options a choice, like ‘bread or pasta?’ Ok, so Wheel Decide is a bit gimmicky, and isn’t really necessary for this task, but it is good fun I think. Give it a go!

  1. Bespoke stop the bus
You know the game where you think of a word beginning with a certain letter for each category? Just tweak this to suit your lesson topic and reveal prior knowledge of the students
Example topic: survival
Stop the bus categories: a tool, a wild animal, a way to get attention, etc

  1. Giving gifts
Example topics: special occasions
This is my favourite lead-in ever, but it’s a bit restricted to certain topics. Give each student a piece of paper with a present written on it (I-Phone, tickets to see Arsenal, a carrot, etc). Use pictures instead if you wish. Students shouldn’t look at their present so only their classmates know what it is. Students then mingle, offering their ‘presents’ to various classmates by holding the paper in front of them and saying ‘here you are’. Classmates read what’s written on the paper, then respond to the offer (without giving away what the present is). At the end of the activity, students sit down and discuss the responses they received and what they think their present was. Finally, reveal the present and let them laugh! Note: if you restrict responses to just ‘thank you’, this is a great way to introduce the attitudinal function of intonation.

  1. Qzzr quiz / Kahoot quiz / Plickers quizplickers3
Qzzr allows you to create simple multiple choice quizzes. Kahoot allows students to log in and answer questions against each other.Plickers is explained in this post, and is well worth trialling.

  1. Which picture best represents…
Example topic: emotions
A nice way to start things off, and pretty versatile. Which of the pictures below best represents happiness? Why?
new2

  1. Know, Want, Learn
This is a good way to start a topic or module. Give students the topic title, and hand out a table like this. Get students to write down 2 or three things they already know about the topic, then a few things they want to know. At the end of the module, get students to reflect on what they’ve learnt. I’ve heard about this activity done in various ways, but thanks to Pippa Simmons for bringing it up in a recent CELTYL training course.new5
  1. Mind maps
I don’t use mind maps as often as I used to, but they’re a great way to check prior knowledge.

  1. Noughts and crosses questions
Example topic: Australia (Kangaroos)
There’s nothing like a game show style introduction to a topic. Think of nine questions on a topic. Draw a noughts and crosses board. Students work in teams, they choose a number and you ask the question. Noughts and crosses is ‘tic-tac-toe’ by the way…
Where do Kangaroos live?
What do Kangaroos eat?
How do Kangaroos move?
Etc…

  1. Real English interviews
I found this site recently, and I think the interviews give quite a good introduction to various topics. There’s a lot you can do with them as listening tasks too, so I’ll just link it and let you explore!

  1. Pictures around the room
Example topic: various
I find any task that gets my YL students up and moving straight away is always a winner. Put 12 pictures around the room related to your topic or target language. Recently, I used adventure sports. Students write down what they think the sport is. Again, assesses prior knowledge, gets them thinking and moving, gets them engaged.
There’s plenty more you can do than just naming the sports. The students could walk around and decide which sport looks the most exciting, most boring, etc. Students could write questions they have about the sports on post-it notes and stick them on the pictures. What else could you do?

  1. Quizlet scatter game
Example topic: jobs
I’ve used Quizlet a bit this term (my boss told me about it). It’s a good tool to help you review vocabulary – you make your own flashcards, writing definitions, using stock images to represent words, etc. It has a good ‘Scatter Game’ feature, where it takes the words from your list and their corresponding pictures, then randomises them on the board. You must drag the words to pictures using your interactive board pen. If the word and picture match, they disappear. The first team to make everything disappear are the winners. This is a better tool for reviewing, but I don’t see why you can’t use it as a lead-in to check/activate prior knowledge too.

  1. Degrees of separation
Example topic: the Beaufort scale
Do you remember that game where you had to link other famous actors to Kevin Bacon in no more than 6 steps? Something like that anyway. You can adapt this into a pretty good lead-in to a topic. Give learners the lesson topic and get them to think of steps that connect them to the topic. Here was a good example from my learners last week.
Last week the topic was adventure sports. In the lesson we learnt about windsurfing. You need wind to windsurf. The Beaufort scale is about wind.

  1. Where in the world?new4
Example topic: the Mayans
A good one from my boss the other week. Give students a few pictures related to the topic, in this case Mayan temples and pyramids. Allow students time to discuss the pictures, and think where in the world they might be from. Display a world map, and have students mark on the map where they think the pictures were taken. Either reveal the correct answer or let students find out for themselves later in the lesson.
So, I tried all of these this term. My favourite was Wheel Decide as both my YLs and adults found it funny. It livened up the start of class. Degrees of separation was creative but YLs took a while to get going so it wasn’t the most snappy. Sporcle and Quizlet were better at other times in the lesson as stirrers. Overall, the picture activities generated the most discussion and interest. I hope you find something new to try in the list above. Enjoy!

2016年7月12日 星期二

【幾個大推的影片或文章:結合英語課程活動】

【你敢挑戰世界上最難的工作嗎?: 母親節教學】

https://tw.voicetube.com/videos/33463?ref=hot-week


動畫影片The Present (禮物)】(Recommended by Caroline TEFL Journey) 
故事內容很簡單,一個整天沉迷於電玩的青少年,媽媽送了一隻小狗當作他的禮物,他剛看到時非常開心,但立即發現小狗只有三隻腳,原本興奮的心情轉為憤怒、嫌棄,甚至踹踢小狗,但小狗仍不放棄一直找他玩。

故事結局令人意外,也讓網友感動不已。此動畫影片的導演為Jacob Frey,這支影片近參加180多個電影節,拿到59個獎項,並將影片放在網路上和公眾分享。


What can you do at 7-11 in Taiwan?

http://taichungexpat.com/2015/09/07/what-can-you-do-at-7-11-in-taiwan/


Get Rid Of Cable Commercial Compilation - Direct Tv
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHs8OlXBFVs&feature=youtu.be


[ 4 種第四臺太爛的蝴蝶效應 ]
DirectTV 是美國的衛星電視,就是台灣俗稱的小耳朵
DirectTV 為了讓大家退訂第四台真是無所不用其極啊 XD
用來教When S+V,  S+V.  句型很適合 !!! 

D-news 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKKXQP6vehM&ebc=ANyPxKpciHBqbWc_G4MkLxT1sQI82o5lr_8BE5u2z8E63lG7ttzQy6Jju_sB6_GN9PLzL0oBOoMvH7Ub15d_whgu_tboJ4FQyw

Imagine the possibilities : Barbie 

If you were the president 

【發人深省的可口可樂廣告】
Labels and designs only for cans NOT for People.
廣告很適合放給學生看, 教導學生正確的價值觀!

看影片學英文 (內有Exercises & worksheet) 

Being a Good Listener 
https://tw.voicetube.com/videos/38287?ref=new



【Video Dubbing Task: Practice Speaking & Writing 練習英語口語和寫作】

✿ 教學步驟

1. 要學生看影片 (無文字只有音效) 看幾遍
2. 學生回家擬稿, 可以先是擬比較完整的影片情節
3. 老師批改學生稿子中的文法錯誤和提供建議
4. 學生改正, 並將稿子修正成為可以和影片速度同步進行的長度
   (唸稿速度配得上影片速度) 
5. 學生試唸兩次稿子, 熟了後即可開始用手機錄音
6. 將錄完音的檔案和影片放入 WeVideo 編輯( 將兩者混和在同一影片)  
 (default 選新手,  網站會自動設計懶人包的編輯,  摸一下就會知道如何編輯嘞!) 
7. 成品大功告成~~~  學生覺得很有趣 XD 

✿ 教學建議

** Video Dubbing Task 的簡單版就是若學生程度沒那麼好, 可以找有聲的影片, 先讓學
生聽影片內容, 並提供稿子給學生, 讓學生做閱讀, 發音和口語練習. 老師之後將原影片的聲音
去除, 並要學生照稿子錄音, 之後做成影片.  類似讀者劇場的概念!   
**分組合作學習很適合, 也可減輕老師批改文稿和觀看影片的負擔!  
**建議影片不要找太長的, 大約2-3 分鐘,  畢竟這活動有點耗時!  
**這活動的benefits 是有實證研究, 請見:  https://calico.org/html/article_132.pdf


✿ 教學配件

** 不得不推WeVideo 啊! 可用FB/ Google/ Yahoo 帳號 log in. 
    或是自己create 一帳號,  一個帳號可以免費出版 2 分鐘影片/ 月 
    影片出版可以選要公開或是只限本人或share 的幾人看!  
** WeVideo 除了可加入聲音檔, 要在影片上加字幕 (caption) 也okay 喔!  

WeVideo: Free online video editor & maker 
(https://www.wevideo.com/)  


✿ 學生成品  
範例1: https://www.wevideo.com/view/665443241

範例2: https://www.wevideo.com/view/721642314



✿範例1 學生寫的稿子 
【Easy Life】
In the dark night, Jessie is studying, and she feels tired. She yawns and sleeps on the desk. Then, the elf of the pen is called Hebe suddenly moves up and writes Jessie’s HW. In the morning, Jessie wakes up and sees Hebe is writing her HW. She is very surprised.
She says “Oh! You finished all of my HW?” 
Hebe just smiles and doesn’t reply.
Jessie is very happy, and all of the answers are correct. Then, the school bus comes, and Jessie catches the school bus.
After Jessie comes back home, she shows her report card to Hebe. The report card shows A Plus for all the school subjects.
Jessie says” Thanks so much, I got A Plus on all of the subjects! Can you continue helping me to write my HW?”
Hebe answers” Of course! I’m happy to see you got a good grade. Let me help you to win more prices!”
“Okay, then I’m going to play my video games. Thanks a lot!” Jessie replies.
Hebe finishes the HW very quickly, and Hebe grows up a little. Jessie gently touches Hebe’s head and says “Good Job! Hebe.” 
After that, Hebe always helps Jessie write her HW, and Jessie is always playing her video games. Because Hebe writes Jessie’s HW every day, her body is growing bigger and bigger.
One day, Jessie gets an award of “Excellent Progress Student” She never gets this kind of award, and she is extremely excited about this achievement. But when she gets the award, Hebe becomes as large as Jessie, and Jessie doesn’t care because she just wants Hebe to write her HW every day.
Another morning, Hebe wakes Jessie up. Jessie sees Hebe take her school bag.
Jessie says “Wow! You want to go to school? Then I can stay at home! How great it is.”
Hebe gives the video games to Jessie and says “Yes, I’m going to school. Have fun at home!” 
But the strange thing happens, Jessie’s hands starting become small and so does her body. Jessie realizes it and shouts, “Oh…I’m so stupid. That’s my retribution!” Then, Jessie becomes a pen, and Hebe goes to the school instead of Jessie…
From this short film, we can know that if we don’t work hard, bad things will happen to us. Also, if we work hard all the time, one day we will succeed and lead a great life. It is common wisdom, and everyone should follow it because that’s the only way to achieve your goal. All in all, we should never give up, and always work hard!

2016年7月10日 星期日

【 Pragmatics: When the Unwritten Rules of Language Break Down】

http://newsmanager.commpartners.com/tesolc/issues/2016-07-01/2.html

Pragmatics: When the Unwritten Rules of Language Break Down
by Kerry Louw and Yuji Abe
Think about a time when an ESL student gave you feedback—a suggestion on how to make your language class better; for example, “You should add more grammar and you should supply all the right answers.”
How did you feel? Did you feel the student was rude? Did you think the request was inappropriate? If so, did you inform the student that the request was not acceptable, or did you just keep quiet?
We call this an opportunity. There are ways to turn moments like these into pragmatic lessons: ways to explain the unwritten rules so students become successful intercultural communicators. In this article, we will share an example of giving feedback and a framework to make sense of differences in feedback styles.
We will also describe an approach (Kondo, 2010) to teaching pragmatics and include links to our free online resources including pragmatic patterns, lesson plans, learner handouts, and audio files to teach three speech acts (apologies, feedback, and complaints).
The Idea of Pragmatic Competence
Pragmatic competence is a term that is used in relation to communicative competence and is the ability to factor in the context such as the interlocutor’s age, gender, role, and status, and adjust word choices, tone, and register accordingly (Garcia, 2004).
To be good communicators requires language users to have reasonable mastery of language content, plus the ability to use language effectively and appropriately within a context. Unlike grammatical errors, “pragmatic errors can easily lead to misconstruals of speaker intentions, which can in turn lead to negative judgements about a speaker’s personality or moral character” (Vásquez & Sharpless, 2009, p. 6) and may lead listeners to negatively judge the speaker’s overall competence.
For many internationally educated professionals with documented credentials and experience in their countries of origin, one of the barriers to retention and promotion is their soft skills (professional communication skills, ability to work effectively with others, and ability to learn continuously). Without understanding the unwritten rules of pragmatic communication patterns, newcomers may not be able to identify how and why their actions in a team are unsuccessful. They are also less likely to be asked to lead teams and gain the experience that supports upward mobility within a company.
The Critical Incident Video: The Power of Suggestion
Here is an applied example of these unwritten rules of language.
In this video clip, Roger, a manager, reviewed Mariana’s report and used Microsoft Word’s Track Changes feature to highlight his comments and suggestions. He then said, “I’d say it could use a bit more work. Take a look (at my comments and suggestions) and let me know if you have any questions or if anything’s unclear. Let’s make it spotless.”
However, Mariana went ahead and sent her report without changing anything. When Roger asked what had happened, Mariana said, “I didn’t see anything in your review telling me that I had to change things.”
Why? Because Roger’s feedback included the softeners could and a bit, Mariana interpreted that the changes were only suggestions and therefore not definitely necessary. Mariana later defends her action when Roger confronts her for not making changes by saying, “I didn’t see anything in your review telling me that I had to change things. I didn’t realize your suggestions were not really suggestions.” Mariana needs to hear a more negative statement to understand a change is required. However, this type of statement would be perceived by Roger as inappropriately rude.
In summary, cross-cultural feedback (Laroche & Yang, 2014) explains how a statement can be sent with the intention of requesting a change but received as a statement that no change is necessary. Without understanding the unwritten rules of Roger’s pragmatic communication, Mariana could not act successfully.
International students also require pragmatic competency to successfully navigate both the formal and informal aspects of the school and workplace. They are expected to fit in, and may be judged negatively when they do not. However, ESL speakers cannot develop pragmatic competencies without understanding the cultural context in which everyday language use occurs (NorQuest College, 2011). It is essential for ESL instructors to provide these pragmatic lessons to their students.
Model for Teaching Pragmatics With Online Resources
One practical model for introducing pragmatics into classroom instruction using speech acts is Kondo’s approach (Kondo, 2010). She proposes:
  1. using a warm-up activity to raise awareness,
  2. teaching the speech act explicitly, 
  3. raising cross-cultural pragmatic awareness,
  4. providing authentic input, and
  5. practicing output in interaction.
Using this evidence-based instructional method, we’ve created easy-to-use lesson plans to introduce three speech acts: apologies, feedback, and complaints. We’ve also included pragmatic patterns and sample audio recordings of Canadian workplace-appropriate language for compliments and requests. You can find these lesson plans, patterns, and sample audio recordings here.
Tip
Once students gain some language and understanding of pragmatics, it can be effective to expose learners to pragmatic aspects of language and provide them with analytical tools to arrive at their own generalizations about contextually appropriate language rather than teaching every speech act specifically (Schmidt, 1993).
Key Points
ESL speakers cannot develop pragmatic competencies without understanding the cultural context in which the language is used. ESL instructors can use our lesson plans to teach three speech acts—apologies, feedback, and complaints—in context, and can also use our pragmatic patterns as analytical tools so that ESL learners can arrive at their own generalizations of culturally appropriate language use.
References
Garcia, P. (2004). Pragmatic comprehension of high and low level language learners. TESL-EJ, 8(2). Retrieved from http://tesl-ej.org/ej30/a1.html
Kondo, S. (2010). Apologies: Raising learners' cross-cultural awareness. In A. Martinez-Flor & E. Uso-Juan (Eds.), Speech acts performance: theoretical, empirical and methodological issues (pp. 145–162). Amsterdam, Netherlands: John Benjamins.
Laroche, L., & Yang, C. (2014). Danger and opportunity: Bridging cultural diversity for competitive advantage. New York, NY, and London, England: Routledge.
Schmidt, R. (1993). Conscious learning and interlanguage pragmatics. In G. Kasper & S. Blum-Kulka (Eds.), Interlanguage Pragmatics (pp. 21–42). Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
Vásquez, C., & Sharpless, D. (2009). The role of pragmatics in the master’s TESOL curriculum: Findings from a nationwide survey. TESOL Quarterly, 43, 5–28.


Kerry Louw is an English in the workplace instructor and intercultural specialist with NorQuest College’s Centre for Intercultural Education. Kerry graduated from the University of Alberta with an MEd TESL, where she designed and conducted a research project on pragmatics in the workplace. Since joining the Centre, Kerry has led innovative applied research projects to integrate pragmatic and intercultural competence within resources, and she has facilitated intercultural and workplace English language workshops for numerous classes, instructors, and corporate clients.
Yuji Abe is an English in the workplace instructor and an intercultural facilitator with NorQuest College's Centre for Intercultural Education. Yuji's passion for culture, teaching, and learning saw him in classrooms all over the world before settling in Edmonton, Canada. Yuji holds a Master's Degree from the University of Alberta and is a qualified administrator for the Intercultural Development Inventory. Yuji taught at the U of A and NorQuest's ESL programs before joining the Centre, where he has found his niche in running workplace workshops throughout the country and conducting applied research.