Wednesday, June 18, 2014

#WorldPoetry - The #twima Project

Jon Smith is launching a great #globaled project, World Poetry. Searh for its hashtag on Twitter, #twima, and if you are interested, please join!

The idea is simple but awesome:

Jon would like to make a poetry iBook from all of the states and countries around the world.
Ambitious?  Yes. Yes, it is ambitious for sure!

Jon would like each class, from each state and country around the world, to write a poem about their state or country.  This will be combined into one HUGE iBook that will be published in Apple's iBookstore.

The project will begin as soon as you, contributors, can start.  Most schools in the states are about to go on summer vacation so for them it will be a 2014-2015 project.

For all the project international friends, it's up to us all, but I guess it will also be the 2014 - 2015 school year in Spain, as we are also breaking up very very soon.

If interested in joining, please fill out the form.

By the way, have a very poetic summer!


Koinobori - ornament of Tango no sekku. Early summer. From Wikipedia

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Have I actually got to know my students over the years?

As the facilitators from Moodle MOOC 4 proposed the "Knowing my students better" task for Week 2, I quickly wondered: 'Have I really got to know my students over all these decades dedicated to teaching?'

I looked up, let my mind think back, and as lots of good memories from the good all times filled my head and made me smile, I found myself putting my personal thoughts in writing:

After almost 30 years teaching I have had various types of students.


Back in the late 80s my students used to be teenagers who used to come to my private ESL lessons for support, either because they were failing English at school or because their parents wanted them to have extra English lessons. That was face-to-face teaching, and I knew most of them as they were basically next door neighbours; on top of that, their parents would make a full oral profile of their children when they brought them to me.


Not very motivated, I generally had to encourage them a lot, but that was the time of the record player, the tape recorder and the drilling exercises, accompanied by a lot of grammar and long lists of vocabulary (Personal computers were just coming into a few households at the time in Spain).

Soon I found out they needed encouragement and motivation. Just looking at their faces at seven in the evening, after a long school day, coming to my classroom for an extra session on ESL, exhausted after seven sessions or maybe more at regular school, one knew that the right song would do much better than a drilling activity for repetition: sort of soothing I guess...


Then there came the early 90s, and my students changed all together; they were adults that voluntarily attended ESL lessons everyday at state-run schools of languages because they wanted to learn English.

'Awesome! They are going to be motivated enough', I thought, but they came in tired, after a long day of work, and sometimes just wanted to sit down and listen.

Was I prepared to deliver the same speech day after day, year after year? No way! 

Encouragement and motivation again to the rescue! 



And there we went into overhead projectors, transparencies, stickers on magnetic white boards, roleplaying with small cards, menus, brochures, leaflets that I sometimes used to pick on my trips to UK, I must confess.

I am sorry for those petty thefts at some well known restaurants, but that was the only way at the time of presenting the students with some real material when performing mini-plays in class and trying to make them feel like in the real world. And so, they got engaged, and then, videotapes and satellite TV came along; we started to connect the classroom with the outside world, and we found some peers from other state-run schools in Spain and made the first project ever: a video letter showing our town that we sent to them, and we got theirs in return.
Such a small project like that took us weeks carrying a really heavy camera on our shoulders, filming in several rather big video tapes now that one comes to think of it, lots of editing with a video recorder, a television and a sound mixer, but an awful lot of enthusiasm!

Time went by like that for a while, with various bunches of students of the kind and a lot of evolution regarding technologies: CDs, DVDs, European projects and so forth with a single aim: improving the learning environment that the students I knew needed, making them aware of the need of speaking English well, that English was the language of communication and encouraging, motivating, bringing to my side those students, adults from all walks of life, that sometimes just seemed to be interested in getting their certificates, especially when May approached, until I could teach in a computer lab, with a coming and going RTB Internet connection, but still doing my best to show adults in search of a better life that English was real, necessary and also fun, until my teaching came into blended and online teaching, fewer face-to-face sessions and more and more virtual classrooms.


Centuries changed and so did the kind of students I had, now teachers themselves and University students that one day would become teachers, and so, I had to mix different ingredients to cook the broth as I had to teach English, in English, for English teachers or other teachers from various fields, using ICT, providing them with digital competence at the same time as helping with their language skills, but without seeing their faces most of the time, just reading their messages, forum posts, emails, tweets later on, Facebook posts, Whatsapping, Googling, and if I was lucky, viewing their virtual classroom avatars or photos, so that made it more difficult to know how they felt or what they needed in a single session sometimes; it was more complex to realize if they were stressed, tired or happy, and so we dived into interaction, e-connecting, creativity and sharing so as to figure out their needs, and that’s how I came with ICT proposals such as “Where are you doing the course from?” and so having them adding their location in a Google map, or the “Say Hello” forum where all introduce ourselves to each other and express expectations at the beginning of the course, interests and wishes, or the recent Shelly-Terrel-inspired3,2,1 Introduction” sometimes called “Your introduction in 3 steps” to gain some background information about the students and try to adapt to their learning needs, aiming at their benefiting from it all and shaping a learning community; twittering about their achievements, sharing their outcomes with others so they get in touch and establish relationships that might be become connected work.

Now that one looks back in time, once again, like almost three decades ago, one jumps into the same conclusion: it is essential to get to know one’s students, and without even realizing about it, as a teacher, that’s the first thing you do when you enter the classroom, no matter if it is face to face or online.

Helping, guiding, motivating and encouraging a student you know is easier and bound to be more successful than if it is a complete stranger, I guess, exactly as in real life: if you know others well, relationships are fluent and straight forward, everything is easier and more relaxed, you know what they need better.

So, 'why not in online life?'



Resources

Top 5 Ways to Get to Know Your Students  from Scholastic, with information, tips and resources for a better knowledge of your learners.

Your introduction in 3 steps

Step 1. Make a fun and interesting introduction using web tools of your choice.

Step 2. Make sure you include in your presentation:
o 3 things we should know about you
o 2 of your favorite activities in the world
o 1 dream occupation you would have if you weren't in the field of xxxxxx

Step 3. Be creative. Feel free about how you would like to present the activity so be imaginative and creative. You could reuse this activity to introduce yourself to your students in the future!

Outcomes:

http://stopandlearnenglish.blogspot.com.es/2014/05/accomplishing-goal-link-to-world.html

http://stopandlearnenglish.blogspot.com.es/2014/01/321-introduction-for-crafting-eperfect.html


Monday, June 9, 2014

My warmest memories from MM4: Exploring Current Learning Rituals for Better E-Learning

MM4: Exploring Current Learning Rituals for Better E-Learning: just another live session at WizIQ Moodle MOOC 4 running from 1 to 30 June 2014?

No way!

Why not? Simply because @ShellTerrell was delivering it! No need to say anything else.

I guess you must all know Shelly by now, but if you still have not heard about her, you don't know what you are missing! Just follow her Twitter handle or her Teacher Reboot Camp and get ready for having your learning and teaching life transformed, because that is what she does: a generous emotional evolution of your educational experience.


However, be careful! Shelly is addictive, yep, that's the conclusion I have jumped into after a few months absorbing her brilliant ideas, a conclusion that was confirmed after viewing her live on June 08 talking about peeragogy, citizenship, networks, connections, creativity, avatars, comics, 3,2,1 introductions and so forth.

I am not really going into further reflections on her awesome presentation, as I sincerely think it'll be more beneficial if you just view, enjoy her energy and understand the way we learn and why I am so grateful for having had the chance to meet her:



However, I'd like to focus on methodoloy, which is the key word Shelly pronounced at the live session and on how 'the focus should not be on the platforms, but on the methodology used when e-teaching and e-learning'.



And now, having said that, I cannot finish this post without sending Shelly my most sincere and humble thank you message for her #storytelling_INTEF mention and for showing the teacher participants' outcomes at the session and so help us all at @educaINTEF spreading the word.




Sunday, June 8, 2014

MM4: Resources on Moodle and Creating Video Tutorials - My impressions

As part of the #moodlemooc activities within the Wiziq Moodle MOOC 4 coordinated by Dr. Nellie Deutsch from 1 to 30 June, there are daily live sessions all participants can attend or view later and so go ahead in the MOOC collaborative learning.

Last June 2, Dr. Nellie Deutsch presented 'Resources on Moodle & Creating Video Tutorials', which I could not attend live, but viewed today, Su. June 08.

Key phrases Artifact from the session:


Thus, now I am ...

...'Reflecting on the process'


The above phrase by Dr. Nellie is a key phrase, in my opinion, as only by reflecting on proceses can one improve and grow, so that's why I've chosen it as the conductive thread for this blog post.


But, first things first, I'd like to share the live session presentation Dr. Nellie actually shared with us all along the session; by the way, that's another key reflection: 'Sharing = the beauty of e-learning'.




Now, let's get on with questions, answers and reflections:


  • As I was viewing the session and listening to our presenter, it called my attention the reference to the fact that when in Moodle, 'Content is Info, and it is around Content that we build the activities'. And so, I was asking myself: 'Is Content really that important when e-teaching and e-learning, or should the core of an elearning course focus on the design of the activities?' 

Of course, I don't have the answer, I'm just placing the question for you to keep on reflecting, and so I will!!!! 

  • 'Learning Together!' - 'Yep!' I thought, 'I'm happy with that!' 


Aren't you???

  • Later on I could read the 'Wows!' from the audience in the chat box when course badges appeared on screen. 'Oh, oh, 4 Badges!!!' - I was springing up on my spinning chair - 'More badges for my Mozilla Open Badges collection, hooray!!!!


I suppose it's just in human nature, isn't it? Awards, being tapped on one's shoulder for appraisal, showing your achievements and so forth; we are all a bit of a show-off, aren't we? Isn't that only human? I guess so, but then I came back to reflecting and ...

  • ... I faced myself with these further questions: 'If badges stand any chance of ever being regarded as the digital evidence of one's professional competence, is four too many for a single course?, is it a fair number?, is each of them actual evidence of the learning one actually gains throughout this amazing adventure, or are they just to be taken as a gamification stage in the MOOC?'


Of course, I don't have the answer for these questions either. 


What about finding them in collaboration?

Let's go on reflecting on the process for a little longer!

Thanks ever so much, Dr. Nellie Deutsch, for such an interesting session, with so much food for thought! 

And it is our turn to ...


Related posts:


Practising with Moodle Resources at MM4

Moodle Mooc 4 For Teachers is at full swing now, and so, after the opening ceremony and various live webinars all along the past eight days, today it is time for hands-on work and some practice.

First Moodle Assignment for MOOC participants is aimed at our playing at the Moodle Practice Area and adding some resources, so this is what I have been focusing on for a good part of my Sunday morning, and here are the video-sort-of-tutorial outcomes I'd like to share with you.

I have recorded them using MoveNote, one neat free tool for slide narration, suggested by the MOOC facilitators themselves.

Adding Resources to Moodle 2.6 - Part 1



Adding Resources to Moodle 2.6 - Part 2




Keeping my fingers crossed for you finding them useful and enjoyable somehow!

Related posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Moodle MOOC 4 (MM4). Starting a new massive online learning adventure

Today I have just begun a new online learning adventure: taking part in the brand new Moodle MOOC 4 (MM4) that Dr. Nellie Deutsch has just started providing at WizIQ, with the help of Thomas Hodgers, facilitator of the course.



The MOOC actually started last 1 June and will run until 30 June; it is free, and instructed in English, and I am late, I know, but I am trying to catch up and view some of the session recordings I have already missed (only 5 out of the 34 live sessions offered).

Among those missed live sessions it is the Opening Ceremony, brilliantly conducted by Dr. Nellie Deutsch, where she surfed through the learning spaces this MOOC is taking place in: Moodle 4 Teachers (Moodle 2.6) and WizIq.
The combination of these two learning spaces is very intelligent in my opinion, as the former offers you a practice area where a sandbox of resources and activities is available for MOOC participants to analyse thoroughly and actually set up, whereas the latter gives you the chance of attending various live sessions or their recordings if you are short for time, as well as having access to the whole courseware.
Besides, both spaces are linked thanks to the WizIq plugin for Moodle, which makes it quite easy to swap platforms and actively interact with other peers, MOOC providers and facilitators. On top of all that, the actual word spreading and outcome sharing goes on the cloud, e. g. sites, social networks, blogs and so forth, where one is expected to show artifacts and reflection, that is, learning evidence. Thus interacting and connecting are key issues when boarding this MOOC cruise.

Dr. Nellie Deutsch gave a clear outline about the MOOC presenters, how to view presentations, attend live sessions, accomplish the tasks, gain course badges and obtain the completion certificate, making special emphasis on the active learning methodology the MOOC implies.

I am pretty sure it is going to be an engaging collaborative learning experience that will prove highly beneficial for my future Moodle course management as well as pretty motivating from the personal side, and the first show is a sweet surprise I was given just after my first MOOC day:

Right after introducing myself to the group of MOOC participants, I received a welcome SpeakPipe message through this system I have embedded in my blog long ago.
It was a message by David F., a peer MOOC participant that audio-introduced himself in Spanish to welcome me to the course.

'How come!', I just thought, 'and how caring of him to make the effort to welcome me in my own language, without even knowing me!' And then, again, as it quite often does lately, came to mind the fact that all this would be absolutely impossible without ICT or the Internet; that is the beauty of team learning, of learning in collaboration, of sharing. Out-of-the-blue gifts like this voice message is what really makes you stop and learn, whatever it may be, but learn together.

If you are interested in Moodle, either for beginners or non beginners, you are welcome to join this new learning experience and get advantage of learning by doing while you meet over one thousand elearners from all around the world willing to be there for you.

Thanks, Nellie, for another awesome learning adventure!

Thanks, Thomas, for the support!

Warm thanks, David, for being my first MOOC peer connection!

Related posts

Monday, June 2, 2014

Ready for Breaking Science? - Question Time

How much Science do you know?

The Science Breaking team of future CLIL Primary teachers at URJC are challenging you with a quiz


Let's see how many questions you can answer correctly!



If take the quiz, @ScienceBreaking will love to hear from you. 



Comments and feedback welcome!

Cross-posted from Breaking Science