Author: admin

Wear & Tear

It is the end of the first week of a new semester. The longer I teach, the grumpier I get. I am still very warm to my students, encouraging and supportive, but I have diminishing patience for students with attitude. If a student is engaged and trying to understand, my fuse is fairly long. But…

End-of-Semester Thoughts

I’ve just finished another semester at Ohlone, and my first of being half-time teaching and half-time administration. (I taught Level 4 Grammar this past summer.) Here are some things I’d like to consider before I begin another semester. Some come from what I’ve learned the past few months, and some from what I’ve read. This…

Quotations from Russ Rymer, Vanishing Languages

A last speaker with no one to talk to exists in unspeakable solitude. Increasingly, as linguists recognize the magnitude of the modern language die-off and rush to catalog and decipher the most vulnerable tongues, they are confronting underlying questions about languages’ worth and utility. Does each language have boxed up within it some irreplaceable beneficial…

Resurrection

Maybe I won’t retire this blog after all. It occurs to me that, if I am to practice what I learned at school, this would be the ideal place to “reflect” about my life as a teacher. I have just finished my third week of teaching in an intensive English program. Too much time has…

Ginnama

This is the culminating post in this blog. Ginnama.com began when my odyssey into the world of academia was just a germ and my application to SIT pending. Now I am Ginna MA, in both the senses I initially intended: Ginna with an MA, and Ginna as a ma. The latter has expanded since a…

Nothing To Do But Stay

“Hvileløs is a Norwegian word for restless. But restless doesn’t come within a mile of being as restless as hvileløs, which evokes someone who is fitty restless — as restless as a bewildered bedbug. Norwegians have a word for that, too: forvirre veggelus. Which, again, is ten times as bewildered as your average American bewildered…

Txtng

Txtng: The gr8 db8. David Crystal. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 2008. p 52 Texting is typically between people who know each other well. Language “intimate and local,” and make[s] assumptions about prior knowledge.” “It is a basic principle of discourse analysis that the meaning of words cannot be grasped in isolation, but must take into…

Outliers

Outliers: The Story of Success. Malcolm Gladwell. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2008. Chapter Seven, The Ethnic Theory of Plane Crashes pp 177–223. He analyzes an account of a 1997 plane crash of Korean Air, one of several by that airline, to show how it was caused by cultural misunderstanding. One factor was mitigated…

The Brain That Changes Itself

The Brain That Changes Itself. Norman Doidge, MD. New York, Penguin Books: 2007. Use for GATESOL Presentation p 308: “Listening to an audio book leaves a different set of memories than reading does. A newscast heard on the radio is processed differently from the same words read in a newspaper.” 298: He writes of “the…

Sandanona Self-Evaluation

Title of your presentation Extending Community: Stories, Culture & Technology in the Language Classroom Objectives of the presentation To introduce the audience to ways that the language classroom, student stories and digital technology intersect to create potential for the ESL classroom; to envision ways that, when extended to the Internet, they can build community among…

Dave Isay Interview

May 18, 2010, by telephone “The StoryCorp Method” interviews exist (about 30,000) in the Library of Congress. Different than the ones people do on their own. Interviews are [he didn’t say ‘edited’] shaped by a “facilitator” (I think he called it). There’s a DB of their stories. He’s created a National Day of Listening. One…

Bev’s Class: Assessment

Informal v. formal assessment For tests: Warm up (don’t make it instantly hard) Let Ss know how they will be assessed Let Ss check for comprehension of transactional language of test before beginning Make sure you’re assessing your goals, so Ss know what to prepare for Don’t use assessment as threat or punishment Sometimes not…

Corpora

www.americancorpus.org (Corpus of American English) Definitions First computerized in 1971 [http://iteslj.org/Articles/Krieger-Corpus.html] A corpus consists of a databank of natural texts, compiled from writing and/or a transcription of recorded speech.A concordancer is a software program which analyzes corpora and lists the results.The main focus of corpus linguistics is to discover patterns of authentic language use through…

Gerunds and Infinitives

past oriented/factual = gerunds forward oriented (can be past form, however/hypothetical = infinitives <—————-| (backward) |—————-> (forward) Infinitives are the optimistic verbs. You can’t finish or enjoy something hypothetical, so they’re in the future “Enjoy” takes only  –ing form “Do you like” versus “Would you like”: one is real, one is hypothetical “I like” (present…

Ethnography with Elizabeth Feedback

As with any group activity, my experience was colored by the people I worked with. As before, I was fortunate to work with Curtis and Joseph, whose perceptive ability and sense of humor made learning a pleasure.  I’m glad.  I kept you in your memoir groups with the hope that you had established relationships that…

Ginna Sequence with Bev Feedback

Week Reading Culture Writing Likely Grammar Points Week 1 THE FOLK STORY Aesop: Lion & the Mouse (Greek) Intro narrative storyline Identifying key words before reading (S) Sentence strips Phrasal verb collection (S) Ice-breakers Community-building Class “scrapbook” Class norms Meaning of name Paraphrasing moral of assigned story (S) Student experience: a personal moral Dialectical journal…

Ginna Scope with Bev Feedback

This is a  semester-long course for college-age and older students at an intermediate level in an American private school or college. It uses traditional folktales, legends and fables as a tool for developing reading and writing skills, and for examining cultural beliefs and experiences. The class meets twice a week for 2.5 hours each session,…

Elka Internship Evaluation w/ My Corrections

Final Internship Evaluation [my changes underlined] By Elka Todeva May 8, 2010 I supervised Ginna Allison during her winter 2010 internship in Pachuca, Mexico, where she taught young and adult learners at the ABC Escuela de Inglés, a small private language school with a long history of offering language courses.  Ginna had not had any…

Sandanona Proposal

Extending Community: Stories, Culture & Technology in the Classroom Paper How can cultural experience help to develop language skills? How can we reach beyond the classroom to create a sense of community? This session explores the spheres of personal narrative and technology and how they intersect with ESL to open rich opportunities for teaching and…

Leslie Interview

Interview with Leslie at SIT Graduate Institute, May 7. 2010 MISCOMMUNICATION Leslie: Calif Institute for Integral Studies. PhD. Many incredible benefits to being an online learning communiity. Three years. When you go online, you had to bring a quality of presence: suspend judgment. Norms of being as well as of participation. Benefits: I think just…

Widdowson on Art & Craft of TESOL

The Journal of the Imagination in Language Learning and Teaching Volume V- 2000 TESOL: Art and Craft by Henry Widdowson So TESOL practitioners, I suggest, are, as individuals in the particular circumstances of their own classrooms, acting as artists in the exercise of their craft. They are not scientists seeking to eliminate variety in the…

GATESOL application

This presentation explores three separate spheres — the ESL classroom, student stories and digital technology — to discover how they can work together to build cultural awareness, computer literacy and language skills, and to extend the student community beyond the classroom. When first-person narratives meet the realm of technology, digital storytelling is one result. Whatever…

MLK Mountaintop Speech

Last speech, day before assassination. Filled with 3rd conditionals. You know, several years ago, I was in New York City autographing the first book that I had written. And while sitting there autographing books, a demented black woman came up. The only question I heard from her was, “Are you Martin Luther King?” And I…

Sue Schardt Interview

Phone Interview with Sue Schardt, Executive Director, AIR What gives shape to whatever is created in that realm is determined in large part by if you have a platform. The classroom is the platform. The manner in which they engage: there’s a wide range of possibilities. Is there a common platform? Build idea around whatever…

Interview with Sean Conley

April 23, 2010. In person-interview with Sean Conley at SIT Graduate Institute. [Sean Conley recently became the Associate Dean of the Marlboro College Graduate School. Formerly he served as the chair of the department of English language studies at The New School University in New York City. He has designed computer labs for language teaching, integrated…

Second Conditionals

TGB Condition and result Imaginative Hypothetical (unlikely but possible — future and present) Counterfactual (impossible — present or past) Problems Inconsistent tenses Use of “were” Confusion with ___ conditional: ‘if it rains, I will…’ versus ‘if it rained, I would…’ (The former expresses more confidence in the likelihood.) If: confusion with non-conditional; also, if sometimes…

Notes from Jersey Conference

Students “out-word each other.” “Language is a vehicle to name and make real what we imagine.” April 30, 2010, Dr. Tricia Kress (U Mass, Boston) speaking at Language Learning and the Imagination Symposium, New Jersey City University Young Researchers Club, Urban HS, Boston __________ Lyn Thompson Lemaire (EFL) Not “Where did you spend your vacation?”…

Polina Interview

Polina: April 28, 2010. Phone interview. Polina Vinogradova’s dissertation is: Development of Multiliteracies and Creation of Critical Multicultural Environment Using Digital Stories in ESL Instruction. AAAL conference, Atlanta. Glynda A. Hull, Mark Evan Nelson: digital stories and community. Middle and high school in different countries: US, India, maybe China Polina is not artistic (writing, drawing)…

Michael Roberts Interview

In-person interview at SIT Graduate Institute, April 27, 2010 He uses iMovie for Mac and Window MovieMaker for PC. Comes with PC systems and available for free download. Easy. His Capstone is on digital storytelling as a tool for reentry after experience abroad, to explore these issues: affective; professional development; academic; civic. His people do…

Revised Goals for Folklore Class

Reading Develop comprehension strategies and skills that will transfer to reading activities in the future. Objectives: SWBAT… Infer meaning of vocabulary from context. Select key words that carry meaning for the story. Identify topic sentences and major supporting details. Chart a reading on a timeline to identify sequence in the narrative genre. Identify explicit meaning;…

Scope for Folklore Class

[download sequence] This is a  semester-long course for college-age and older students at an intermediate level in an American private school or college. It uses traditional folktales, legends and fables as a tool for developing reading and writing skills, and for examining cultural beliefs and experiences. The class meets twice a week for 2.5 hours…

Ethnography Reflection

As with any group activity, my experience was colored by the people I worked with. As before, I was fortunate to work with Curtis and Joseph, whose perceptive ability and sense of humor made learning a pleasure. Happenstance led to our choice of Top of the Hill Grill as our object of study. We were…

Terminology: Content Teaching

Linguistically sensitive content teaching (a) versus content based language teaching (b): (a) Teaching geography: testing what they know know about geo, but build writing skills. (b) Texts from geography, teach reading strategy, vocab bldg, ling structures: assessment more linguistic. FOCUS ON LANGUAGE. Tales are tools to get to language.

Types of Content Language Teaching

Linguistically sensitive content teaching (a) versus content-based language teaching (b). (a) Teaching geography: testing what they know know about geo, but build writing skills. (b) Texts from geography, teach reading strategy, vocab bldg, ling structures: assessment more linguistic FOCUS ON LANGUAGE. Tales are tools to get to language.

Feedback on EAL to Elka

4a.      What is working in EAL for you? I like the classes in which we gain a greater familiarity with a concept AND discuss (or practice) how that knowledge can transfer to the classroom. I thought our phrasal verb classes did that. 4b.      What isn’t working and why? Sometimes I’m frustrated that we don’t have…

Who I Am in the Classroom w/ Eliz Comments

Interview Reflections Question 4: Who I Am in the Classroom I noticed a surprising thing in one of Elizabeth’s classes last semester: that who I am in the SIT classroom is not someone my old friends would entirely recognize. In a small-group project for The Four Skills, Sarah presented a lesson in which we thought…

Barnga

I didn’t like Barnga, a game we played in ICLT last week, because it made me feel rotten. That was part of the point: not to make us feel rotten, but to get a sense of the massive challenges faced by those who enter a new culture. In our first group, four of us learned…