getting your students speaking

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Getting Your Students Speaking From From Input Input To To Uptake Uptake Harnessing the power of blended learning and new technologies Giving Students A Voice

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Getting Your Students Speaking. Harnessing the power of blended learning and new technologies. Giving Students A Voice. From Input To Uptake. Online Resources. What’s On Tap. Potential Why get students speaking online? Types of delivery options Best practices - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Getting Your Students Speaking

FromFrom

Input Input

To To

UptakeUptake

Harnessing the power of

blended learning

and new technologies

Giving Students A

Voice

Page 2: Getting Your  Students Speaking

OnlineOnline

ResourcesResources

Page 3: Getting Your  Students Speaking

What’s On Tap

• Potential• Why get students speaking online?• Types of delivery options• Best practices• Blended ideas / activities• Websites / Tools• Q and A

Overview Overview

Page 4: Getting Your  Students Speaking

New Possibilities

What What

If? If?

Page 5: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Why?

Rationale Rationale

Why the need

for students to

speak online?

Page 6: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Rationale Rationale

Output reinforces fluency by

1.Practice

2.Noticing + CF

3.Hypothesizing

4.Habituation

Merrill Swain

Page 7: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Rationale Rationale

More Reasons

Motivation

Repetition

Feedback / Monitoring

Evaluation

Self Directed Learning

Efficacy / Fairness

Low Affective Filter

Page 8: Getting Your  Students Speaking

What options are available?

OptionsOptions

What types of

blended learning

can teachers

implement ?

Page 9: Getting Your  Students Speaking

What options are available?

OptionsOptions

Synchronous

Asynchronous

Page 10: Getting Your  Students Speaking

What options are available?

OptionsOptions

Websites

Devices

Audio / Video

Video only

Audio only

Lab / Class / Home

Page 11: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Standards

Best Best

PracticesPractices

What is the

Gold standard?

Page 12: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Standards

Best Best

PracticesPractices

Make it official

Give Ss choice

Demo in class

Provide a model

Hardware

Set standards

Page 13: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Lesson Planning

ActivitiesActivities

&&

IdeasIdeas

How can teachers make

this part of their online learning?

Page 14: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Lesson Planning

ActivitiesActivities

&&

IdeasIdeas

Performances / Role plays

Record the Textbook

Reading for the class

Picture Prompts / Response

Mimicking | Singing

Skype in the Classroom

Opinions / Presentations

Student Feedback

Page 15: Getting Your  Students Speaking

OnlineOnline

ResourcesResources

Page 17: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Voicethread

Top 3 Top 3

Page 19: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Bubblejoy

VideoVideo

PostcardsPostcards

Page 20: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Eyejot

Video Video

emailemail

Page 21: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Audioboo

AudioAudio

OnlyOnly

Page 22: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Chirbit

AudioAudio

SharingSharing

Page 23: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Evoca

AudioAudio

Drop BoxDrop Box

Page 24: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Vocaroo

No FrillsNo Frills

AudioAudio

Page 25: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Fotobabble

Speaking Speaking

PhotosPhotos

Page 26: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Mailvu

VideoVideo

EmailEmail

Page 27: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Intervue

VideoVideo

ConvoConvo

Page 28: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Lingt

LMSLMS

CoursesCourses

Page 29: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Present.me

Flipped Flipped

CurriculumCurriculum

Page 30: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Screenr

WebsiteWebsite

Page 31: Getting Your  Students Speaking

SingSnap

SongsSongs

SingingSinging

Page 32: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Woices

LocationLocation

BasedBased

Page 33: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Wetoku

DuoDuo

InterviewsInterviews

Page 34: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Scribblar

Real TimeReal Time

WhiteboardWhiteboard

Page 35: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Skype in the Classroom

Real TimeReal Time

ConvoConvo

Record!

Page 36: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Tutorials

PDPD

Page 37: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Further Thoughts

Let’s Let’s

TalkTalk

Discussion

Q and A

on technology

Page 38: Getting Your  Students Speaking

ContactContact

[email protected]

http://bit.ly/h4geqP

http://eltandtech.pbworks.com

Page 39: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Further Reading

ResearchResearch

Brown, Jeremy, Noticing: Is it a valid concept? TESL-EJ, 2002

Heift, Trude, Corrective Feedback and learner uptake in CALL, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2004.

Long, M.H., Problems in SLA, 2006

Pica, T., Holliday, L., Lewis, N., & Morgenthaler, L. (1989). Comprehensible output as an outcome of linguistic demands on the learner. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 11, 63–90.

Pica, T., Lincoln-Porter, F., Paninos, D., & Linnell, J. (1996). Language learners’ interaction: How does it address the input, output, and feedback needs of language learners? TESOL Quarterly, 30, 59–84.

Swain, M. (1985). Communicative competence: Some roles of comprehensible input and comprehensible output in its development. In S. Gass & C. Madden (Eds.), Input in second language acquisition (pp. 235–253). Rowley, MA: Newbury House.

Page 40: Getting Your  Students Speaking

Further Reading

ReferencesReferences

Schmidt, R. (1983). Interaction, acculturation, and the acquisition of communicative competence. In N. Wolfson & E. Judd (Eds.), Sociolinguistics and language acquisition (pp. 137-174). Rowley, MA: Newbury House.

Swain, M. (1995). Three functions of output in second language learning. In G. Cook & B. Seidlhofer (Eds.), Principles and practice in applied linguistics (pp. 125–144). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Swain, M. (2005). The output hypothesis: Theory and research. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of research in second language teaching and learning (pp. 471–483). New York: Routledge.

Swain, M., & Lapkin, S. (1995). Problems in output and cognitive processes they generate: A step towards second language learning. Applied Linguistics, 16, 371–391.

Taddarth, Assma, Recasts, Uptakes and Learning: Effects and Relationships. 2010