This week too we will look carefully at different
web sites and will think about how they could be adapted in our
own teaching context. This week will be a time for self-contemplation
and reflection at our Nicenet classroom. You'll have to honestly
think about your students' Internet capabilities and, given their
limitations, how you can use the web in class. You will have to
choose an existing website or websites that you think you could
use in class. Choose a site which has relevant content to supplement
your syllabus. Something that could be used with your students.
So, I'd like you to think specifically about a course or courses
you are teaching now. Think about the textbook you use and think
it over where it could/should be supplemented. Develop your activities
specifically for that text.
This week we'll work more specifically
on lesson plans using the sites you find this week.
First of all, you don’t have to invent all your
activities. Many already exist on the Internet. It’s just a matter
of deciding how to use them in class. You can have thousands of
links, but you have to have an idea on how to use them in your specific
situation.
Activity
Begin by analyzing how you can use the Internet
in your classes. This obviously depends on the access your students
have to the Internet. Do they have computers at home? Will you be
doing the activity as homework (students could go to libraries)
or live in a computer lab? Are you thinking of a long project or
a simple homework assignment?
Once you have the general plan, you can start looking
for existing materials or activities.
There are many different kinds of sites available:
There are those made for the general public, those made for a general
school environment, those made specifically for ESL/EFL classes.
Obviously, the sites for the general public will require you to
develop the activity for the students to use. It doesn't have to
be put on-line. It can be a printed worksheet. Many of the activities
for a general school situation will require adjustments for a ESL/EFL
conditions—vocabulary, structures, etc. Even the sites developed
for our kind of teaching circumstances might require pre-teaching
and some sort of adaptation before they can be used. All of this
will have to be planned before you use the lesson in class.
Task
Visit one (or all) of these three sites to choose
a relevant website to use this week and next.
A
Hotlist on Class Activities—this is a list I
made of WebQuests and similar sites developed for schools or ESL/ESL
classes. I've grouped them by age group. If you have limited time,
this is the easiest site.
Blue
Web'n – A site that has lots of activities developed
by classroom teachers. Start browsing by content, subject level
or grade level. (Sorry, some of the links might not work.)
The
Tower of English-I mentioned this site last week.
Most of its sites were developed for the general public.
Choose a site or sites you could use in one of your
classes. Note: choose something you will be doing in a few weeks
so you can develop the activity completely.
Once you have decided on a site, POST a message.
Share your ideas with us. Include the following information:
What kind of internet interaction can your students
do? Do they have computers at home, are there any cyber cafes where
you live or can you have access to the Internet at school in a computer
lab?
What kind of activity are you thinking of developing?
A long project, a homework assignment, an in-class experience or
something else?
Briefly describe the website(s) you have chosen
and explain (in a few words) how you see yourself using it. (Don't
worry about details---that's next week.)
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