*Eve New Tech*
Tools for Teaching Foreign Languages
Welcome!
Over here, you`re going to found some information about me and several links of some pages in foreing languages to practice them and enyoy...
ULA
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jueves, 3 de noviembre de 2011
martes, 19 de octubre de 2010
miércoles, 15 de septiembre de 2010
lunes, 6 de septiembre de 2010
Using cartoons and comic strips
Introduction
Cartoons and comic strips can be used from beginner level to advanced level for a variety of language and discussion activities.
Cartoons are powerful teaching tools and can
1. Activities for exploiting cartoons
Exploring the theme of humour
Take one cartoon which depicts absurd situations. This can be a Gary Larsen cartoon or one of those greeting cards using a black and white photo and a funny sentence which gives a strange twist.
Ask students to work in groups and get students to discuss:
Use a cartoon to introduce the idea of humour and culture. Take a selection of cartoons and ask groups to decide what each one means and if they think they are funny. Vote on the funniest cartoon. Ask the students to discuss:
Dealing with issues
Tell the story
Make a comic strip character
www.ucomics.com/comics/ This site has a huge collection of comic links. Everything from Dick Tracy to Calvin Hobbs.
www.comedyorama.com/index.html There are links here to more US based 'funnies' from the 50s.
www.marvel.com/flash.htm This site is the home of Marvel comics and has some free downloads which include Spidernam and Hulk stories.
Cartoons and comic strips can be used from beginner level to advanced level for a variety of language and discussion activities.
Cartoons are powerful teaching tools and can
- Tell a complex story in a few images
- Provide comment and provoke thought on events and issues in the news
- Give an example of vocabulary related to current trends and fads
- Provide easily identifiable characters to form the basis for sketches
- Show culture in action with the ways that men or women are behaving and are expected to behave
- Comment on and illustrate a whole range of issues like racism, teenage relationships, sexism, ageism, family relationships.
1. Activities for exploiting cartoons
Exploring the theme of humour
Take one cartoon which depicts absurd situations. This can be a Gary Larsen cartoon or one of those greeting cards using a black and white photo and a funny sentence which gives a strange twist.
Ask students to work in groups and get students to discuss:
- What does the cartoon mean?
- Why is it funny?
- What techniques are used to make it funny?
Use a cartoon to introduce the idea of humour and culture. Take a selection of cartoons and ask groups to decide what each one means and if they think they are funny. Vote on the funniest cartoon. Ask the students to discuss:
- What types of method are used to make us laugh?
- Do people laugh at ordinary situations in their country?
- Are political figures made fun of?
- Do they use satire or slap stick humour?
- What are the most popular types of humour on TV?
Dealing with issues
- Take one or more cartoons which comment on an issue in the news. A national newspaper or 'The Private Eye' are good sources. Use a cartoon like this to introduce the topic and brainstorm vocabulary
- Use a selection of cartoons to discuss the different parts of the issue. Take an issue like disciplining children or dealing with teenagers. Ask if they agree with the cartoonists opinion.
- Use a cartoon like this to end a lesson or series of lessons on a social or political issue. Ask students to write a caption for the cartoon. You can prepare them for this by a match the caption to the cartoon exercise.
Tell the story
- Cut up the pictures and get students to re order the story. Make this more difficult and challenging linguistically by giving separate frames to each student in a group and ask them to not show the pictures until they have arrived at an order through describing the pictures.
- Remove the last picture of a cartoon and ask students to think of an ending. Artistic students may like to draw the last frame. Vote for the best ending.
- Remove the sentences under each frame and either ask lower levels to match them to each frame or ask them to write the sentences that tell the story. Lower levels might need vocabulary prompts on the board.
- Give students a comic strip with a short paragraph for each frame. Ask students to reduce each paragraph to one sentence for each frame. Compare their efforts to the original. With higher levels you can discuss techniques of summarising your message.
- Give students a story. Groups confer to guess what might be missing. Give them the comic strip version. They must fill in the blanks in their written story by using the comic strip pictures. Then ask them to think of speech bubbles for the comic strip. This might also include thought bubbles for characters.
- Remove speech bubbles from a comic strip. Cut them up and give out. Ask them to order them and to imagine what the story or situation is. Groups can act out their version for the class. Then give them the comic strip and ask them to see if their speech bubbles fit the story there.
- When you use a short story with younger learners ask them to make the story into a series of 4 pictures. This can be a group effort or a whole class task with each group drawing one part. If you use a black and white comic strip allow time for younger learners to colour their versions.
- Make an information gap using a photocopied comic strip. Blank out details or change what characters are saying. Make sets which are coloured differently. Set up spot the difference activities using the comic strip and then lead in to story telling and acting out the comic strip.
Make a comic strip character
- Look at different comic strip heroes. Get suggestions from the class of names: Superman, Bart Simpson, Asterix, Tin Tin or others. Describe popular characters for their age range in the UK today. Encourage the students to tell you about local comic book characters. Ask them to describe one character in pairs.
- What makes this character special?
- What can they do? Have they got special powers?
- What are their weaknesses?
- What do they look like?
- What are their special interests or ambitions?
- Then ask each group or pair to choose a favourite character and make a simple situational dialogue which is typical for them.
- Ask students to work in pairs or groups to invent their own character. If appropriate students can draw the character. Give the character special powers, a name and a special mission.
The final stage is to tell an every day story involving the character.
- Many popular comic strips in the national press are used to challenge stereotypes and criticise discrimination. You can exploit these aspects of the stories to introduce lessons on these issues in a less formal way.
- Many comic strip characters are seen in situations based on misunderstandings. Exploit these features of communication break down to discuss how characters speak to each other and what they might say. Devise role plays based on these comic strips to challenge more advanced learners. Get them to act out the next sequence in the story.
- Choose a key situation which would involve language students might need to practice, such as agreeing with opinions, asking permission or saying you are sorry.
- Use a sequence from a cartoon with the sound off so students describe what is happening, imagine what is being said and can then use the sequence to improvise a sketch. Listen to the real sketch at the end.
www.ucomics.com/comics/ This site has a huge collection of comic links. Everything from Dick Tracy to Calvin Hobbs.
www.comedyorama.com/index.html There are links here to more US based 'funnies' from the 50s.
www.marvel.com/flash.htm This site is the home of Marvel comics and has some free downloads which include Spidernam and Hulk stories.
domingo, 5 de septiembre de 2010
domingo, 15 de agosto de 2010
martes, 10 de agosto de 2010
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Challenges for ELL Teachers
There is no doubt that having (or not having) excellent technological skills will make a major difference in the lives and futures of our students. Their careers will increasingly rely on the ability to maneuver easily in technological environments, and to learn new technology quickly. Yet there are a number of challenges that educators face when trying to help ELLs get up to speed:
- Language: In order to make the most of instructional technology, ELLs need to have the language skills and vocabulary necessary to understand how to use the technology.
- Limited access: Many ELLs may not have access to a computer or the Internet in their home. They also may not know about the services available through the school or library, or they may be unable to get to the library on a regular basis. This digital divide is explored in a story published by The Washington Post, "Without ready access to computers, students struggle".
- Different levels of experience: In one classroom, a teacher may have a student who learned to use the computer as a toddler, and another who is sitting in front of a computer for the first time. This requires that teachers develop their own ability to differentiate technology instruction for their students. The good news is that technology often can help teachers differentiate instruction, as is the case in Toniann Jeffery's classroom.
- School infrastructure: While many schools around the country have invested heavily in technical infrastructure and equipment, many have not — including numerous schools serving ELLs.
- Keeping up: It's hard for teachers to keep up with new jargon, information overload, and the latest technical tools and trends — not to mention the ways these things all relate to the the classroom!
Despite these challenges, however, there are a number of instructional strategies that teachers (even with limited technical experience) can use to help students' build technical skills and digital literacy. For ELL students learning technology, it is especially important to focus on effective teaching strategies that are commonly used in other content areas, such as academic language development and meaningful interaction with the content.