Lumen5 is a great tool I learned about from one of J. Wagner's tweets. It automatically creates a video in the form of a summary for a blog post. After you paste the url of your blog post, you choose the template you like. Then you click on the plus button to add content from the blog script that appears for you. You may need to edit the content you have added in each section by limiting it to 140 characters or by modifying it in the way you like. Here's an example of a Lumen5 video created from one of my blog posts.
Wednesday, 9 August 2017
Wednesday, 19 July 2017
Random Name Picker
Here's another tip I liked while I was watching Tony Vincent's periscope. You can create a random name picker with flippity.net. You can also have the options of having your students automatically divided into groups or getting a random seating chart.
Here is a summary of the steps you should follow to make your own name picker adapted from http://www.flippity.net/RandomNamePicker.asp
Here's the link to the Name Picker I created for one of my classes MY RANDOM NAME PICKER.
Here is a summary of the steps you should follow to make your own name picker adapted from http://www.flippity.net/RandomNamePicker.asp
- Make a copy of the template provided by flippity.net. The link to the template is here: https://goo.gl/ckauML. Edit the names and label your class by changing the name of the worksheet at the bottom.
- Publish your spreadsheet to the web.
- Get your flippity.net link at the bottom
- Bookmark your link. Make use of the options provided at the top bar.
Animating an image with google slides
Yesterday I stumbled upon one of Tony Vincent's periscopes on twitter. I was impressed by one of the presenters, Kasey Bell, who explained how you can create animation using google slides. I had read about this hack somewhere else as well, but yesterday I consolidated the way you can achieve this effect. And as the title of my blog suggests it is designed for my tech notes; thus, I would like to post this tip here so that I can remember it in the future!
To start with, I inserted a free creative commons image on a google slide and a butterfly png (an image without a background). Then I duplicated the slide (Ctrl+D) and I dragged the butterfly a little farther than its original position. I duplicated the new slide and moved the butterfly a little bit again. I followed the same process creating eight slides - I absolutely believe the result will be much better if you create more slides, though! After this, I published the google slides (File- Publish to the web). I changed the auto-advance slides to 'every second' both for the link and the embed code options and here I embed the result:
Monday, 10 July 2017
Saturday, 25 February 2017
ListeningEVO17
Having been a participant in the ListeningEVO course, I feel the desire to express my deepest gratitude to all the organizers and especially to our moderator, Ms Olya Sergeeva. All the input material we were exposed to was highly interesting and enormously useful for a listening teacher. The course lasted five weeks, from January 8 to February 12, 2017. Below I'm recording some of the takeaways from my participation in this MOOC based either on new knowledge or high interest of content to me.
To start with, reinforcing autonomous listening through an out-of-school listening scheme was stressed during our first week of the course. Technology integration can obviously facilitate this scheme. Some stimulating suggestions for learners include listening to radio stations (e.g. http://www.listenlive.eu/uk.html, podcasts (e.g. https://independentenglish.wordpress.com/2012/02/14/podcasts/, favourite songs (e.g. https://lyricstraining.com/), audiobooks (e.g. http://www.loyalbooks.com/), youtube videos, web tools with audio features (e.g. https://quizlet.com/) and many more online resources curated by the course participants on a shared google spreadsheet (https://goo.gl/FQZbYz).
Something additional that particularly struck me during week1 was the shadowing technique as a useful approach to encourage autonomous listening and speaking practice. Shadowing requires EFL learners to listen to a short audio text many times. The short audio text should be saved on each learner’s device so that they can listen to it outside class as regularly as possible; an accompanying transcript should also be provided to the students. The practice stage of this technique encourages students to repeat and copy, as precisely as possible, the speaker’s pronunciation, rhythm, pace and other speech features. As a subsequent step, the students record themselves on an audio recording tool such as Audacity when they feel they sound similar to the speaker on their audio text.
In week 2 I enjoyed Elena Wilkinson's neat presentation on the structure of a traditional listening lesson which can be enhanced through the use of authentic materials and real-life tasks. Here are my notes on E. Wilkinson's live session.
ListeningEVO, wk2 by anthiharou
Week 3 focused on the importance of 21st-century skills, critical thinking and HOTS (higher order thinking tasks) in the design of listening tasks to engage learners.
Weeks 4 and 5 proved to be a gem for me as I acquired valuable knowledge shared by outstanding experts on the topic such as R. Cauldwell, S. Thorn, and O. Sergeeva. Listening is quite troublesome for ELLs because words have a variety of soundshapes and are not visible as they are in reading. Therefore, we need to prepare learners to cope with the jungle-type situations of messy speech they will face in real life. Exposing learners to authentic listening texts with a variety of unruly sounds, and providing them with decoding tasks to train them to recognize individual words are means which enable ELLs to reach the ultimate goal which is meaning. Gap-fills and dictations can be effective activities in raising learners' awareness of phonological and other speech features such as word or sentence stress, elision, glottal stop, schwa, assimilation, intrusive sounds in a stream of authentic speech.
Weeks 4 and 5 proved to be a gem for me as I acquired valuable knowledge shared by outstanding experts on the topic such as R. Cauldwell, S. Thorn, and O. Sergeeva. Listening is quite troublesome for ELLs because words have a variety of soundshapes and are not visible as they are in reading. Therefore, we need to prepare learners to cope with the jungle-type situations of messy speech they will face in real life. Exposing learners to authentic listening texts with a variety of unruly sounds, and providing them with decoding tasks to train them to recognize individual words are means which enable ELLs to reach the ultimate goal which is meaning. Gap-fills and dictations can be effective activities in raising learners' awareness of phonological and other speech features such as word or sentence stress, elision, glottal stop, schwa, assimilation, intrusive sounds in a stream of authentic speech.
To conclude, I enjoyed an amazing course on how to teach listening. I liked the well-organized structure of the MOOC, the wealth of interesting input materials such as videos, articles, lesson plans and presentations, my interaction with other participants, the badges I earned, Ms O. Sergeeva's enthusiasm and encouragement as a moderator, the facebook page, the twitter posts and, of course, the new knowledge I acquired.
Written by Anthippi Harou
Thursday, 2 February 2017
Reviewing the Alphabet with Augmented Reality
Have you finished with teaching your young learners the alphabet letters and you need some sort of exciting review activities?
Songs, rhymes, games and other similar activities can provide fun ways for young learners to revise and consolidate the alphabet. Another even more appealing way to engage them in learning is to invite them to review the letters through Augmented Reality.
'AR flashcards - Animal Alphabet' is an amazing app which will offer your students an unforgettably enriched experience of learning and playing. This free augmented reality app is available on the app store here or google play here. Teachers or parents download the aphabet flashcards here, print them out in colour or just display them on another device.
'AR flashcards - Animal Alphabet' is an amazing app which will offer your students an unforgettably enriched experience of learning and playing. This free augmented reality app is available on the app store here or google play here. Teachers or parents download the aphabet flashcards here, print them out in colour or just display them on another device.
The words that accompany the alphabet flashcards of the specific app are related to animals:
alligator, beaver, cat, dog, elephant, frog, gorilla, horse, iguana, jellyfish, kangaroo, lion, monkey, newt, owl, penguin, quail, rabbit, snake, turtle, urchin, vulture, walrus, oxen, yak, zebra
| ˈælɪɡeɪtə | ˈbiːvə | kæt | dɒɡ | ˈelɪfənt | frɒɡ | ɡəˈrɪlə | hɔːs | ɪˈɡwɑːnə | ˈdʒelɪfɪʃ | ˌkæŋɡəˈruː | ˈlaɪən | ˈmʌŋki | njuːt | aʊl | ˈpeŋɡwɪn | kweɪl | ˈræbɪt | sneɪk | ˈtɜːtl̩ | ˈɜːtʃɪn | ˈvʌltʃə | ˈwɔːlrəs | ˈɒksn̩ | jæk | ˈzebrə |
Students point their device at each flashcard and a 3D animal pops up on the screen. When they tap the animal on their device, they can hear the letter and the animal name. They can also easily take screenshots of their augmented flashcards by tapping on the camera icon when the app has started. Below you can see screenshots taken for each of the letters.
'AR flashcards- Animal Alphabet' will definitely provide young learners with an enhanced experience they will never forget. Young learners will have the opportunity to review, recycle, practice the alphabet and the names of the corresponding animals on each flashcard in an 'eye-popping' way!
Saturday, 21 January 2017
A Listening Lesson Plan
Listening Lesson Plan
by Anthippi Harou
Topic: Non-traditional fairystories: ‘Princess
Smartypants’ by Babette Cole (story read aloud in a video)
Materials and resources:
A.
video of the story
Princess Smartypants by Babette Cole
B.
Audio
of the story
C.
One/more laptop(s) and a projector
OR If there is internet access – My school
has ten laptops with wifi access and an IWB- I am going to use the digital
worksheet I created https://app.wizer.me/preview/TVQA7R (there are some modifications in the
follow-up stage). My Sts work in pairs to accompish tasks bc of the nb of
laptops.
Level:
A1-2, year 6, age: 11-12
Time:
one teaching session of 90 minutes
Stage
|
Notes
|
Timing
|
Lead-in
|
1.
Ask students to discuss in pairs:
What fairy
stories did you listen to when you were younger? What usually happens in a
traditional fairy story? (discuss the characters, the setting, typical
events, the end). Then tell each pair to report their answers to the class
and write titles of fairytales on the board)
2.
Show students two pictures of the storytale and ask them:
Does the story princess look
like a typical princess? Why or why
not?
3.
What do you think this story is going to be about?
|
15 mnts
|
Pre-teaching vocabulary
|
Smartypants, marry, toad
|
5 mnts
|
Listening for gist
|
Watch the story and
1.
Discuss with your partner how far your predictions
about the plot of the story were true.
2.
Take down at least five elements that make this fairy
story different from a traditional one. Compare your answers with your
partners’.
Each pair
reports to the whole class
|
25 mts
|
Listening for specific information
|
Listen to the story
and
match the princes in the right column with the tasks in the left column (handout 1). Check answers with a partner then
as a whole class.
|
10 mnts
|
Listening for detail
|
Listen again to
the story and:
|
10 mts
|
Follow-up
|
Classwork
1.
Provide an alternative title for the story.
2. Why did the princess set difficult
tasks for the princes?
3. Choose any two of the following
tasks you like to do (if you have free time you can do some more):
A. Watch this section of the video
0:48-1.57 and discuss with your
partner how the princes felt when
they arrived at Smartypants’ castle, how they felt while trying to accomplish
their set tasks and when they failed?
B. Watch this segment of the video 2.09- 3.01; observe facial expression and
the tools Prince Swashbuckle used to achieve all the challenges how would he describe his personality? How did he
feel at the beginning, while doing his tasks at the end? Use as many personality adjectives as you
can (Use Grammar box of Unit 3- coursebook)
C. Prepare ten True/False sentences based on the story and exchange them with
your partners.
D.
Work
with your partner to design a new set
of challenges (at least two) the princess may set for some more princes
who might want to marry her. Create a new illustration for each of them to
accompany them in a new the book. Upload your illustrated challenges on
edmodo/padlet wall. Your teacher will compile them into a new class book.
Homework
1.
Create a comic strip
Instructions: Select two
characters of the story. Draw them and add some speech bubbles to make a dialogue between the two characters.
and try to imitate the
pronunciation of the words, intonation and the rest of the speech features.
Record your voice on your mobile
and upload it on our padlet wall/edmodo platform/extra work on our wizer
quiz.
|
25 mts
(+Extra time for H/W)
|
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