Posts Tagged ‘education’

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My thoughts, here and there

November 14, 2007

Nowadays many students’ best friend is their ipods instead of backpack.  I see my students take any chance they can get during class break time to listen to it.  It becomes a habit now and I am just wondering: Can they live without it?

We hear that cows can produce more milk when listening to music, but students don’t seem to produce more work in good quality when they listen to their ipods.  While we are using ipods for education purpose, I wonder if it is good or bad.  When they get tired of ipods, do we have to use other media to stimulate their interest?  What if they cannot be stimulated any more?  Most of us grew up learning many things without any help from advanced technologies.  Now when we face new technologies, we feel excited about using them and wish we could have those in the old days.  Our students are surrounded by technologies, but in the mean time, technologies are becoming a big distraction.

Good or bad, as educators, we face the challenge how to make the best use of technologies to serve the education.

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IT – 5730 App Demos

October 20, 2007

Objectives: Make a series of three application demos (ILT program).

Tutorials: Three demos on how to edit video footage in imovie.

Learners: Middle school and high school students in my Chinese class.

Hardware/Software used: video camera, Snapz Pro (exported with Sorenson 3 video setting and IMA audio setting), imovie (exported as ipod file), internal mic on Mac.

My Experience: First-time, newbie.

Only encouragement comments accepted. :)

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Video – Trailer, YouTube & Blogs

October 7, 2007

I cannot imagine that I posted my recut trailer (IT 5730) on YouTube.com and my blog! Two months ago, I knew little about them, and now it is time to find some fireworks.

What will I use it for in my teaching? I can show off a little bit for sure. Then I will let my students to show off by making their own video. It will take a while to get the project done, but isn’t it one of the current trends to go online and share things? With a little bit of pepper and salt, it might become a project students are interested in – making their own video for the Chinese program.

Current ideas:

1. Students make their own trailers to promote the Chinese program! It might not be as fun as promoting their own likes, but it is definitely more interesting to do their own video. I quite enjoy the high school TV programs and students could be very creative. I can consider this as a little spark and see how this spark turns into.

2. The dialogues and texts in the textbooks could be boring. Students can make their own dialogues or texts during the learning process.

3. Students can also make their own trailers – all in Chinese! It could be about anything (movie, TV series, or out of their own) they are interested in.

Of course, there are always blocks: time, equipment, technique skills, etc. Preparation probably takes a longer time. However, it is always good to try things out in the field of education. As long as we think it will help students learn, we should try it. We do improve and learn things through failure.

Let’s have some fun!

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Ready for your istudents?

September 30, 2007

ipodcartpdf0719071.jpg [Retrieved from apple.com]

We always think about how to integrate technologies into classrooms. However, technologies are not cheap. I visited a teacher today in her elementary school building. She was unpacking 120 brand new ipods provided to the school through a grant. These ipods will be used for students to learn a foreign language such as Chinese, Spanish.

Whoever saw the ipods lining up on the desk couldn’t help saying, “Cool. It is such a cool thing.” Yes, technologies are always cool. They appear in front of us with beautiful faces, multi-functioning skills and creative ideas.

With ipods, students can do podcasting or share their video clips during the process of learning a foreign language, thus to be further motivated to learn. Imagine playing a dialogue of their own or a situational video clip of students using the language. It brings so much interest and fun during the process. No doubt, the use of ipods can help students learn a language. Then podcasts can be shared and reused again and again for all kinds of purposes: listening, imitating, presentation, etc.

Ipods are more like toys to students nowadays, so how to use it is not a problem. These students will be great istudents, knowing how to make dialogues and videos.

While thinking how I would use ipods to help with the learning of a foreign language, a thought came to my mind. Here is the technology, an expensive one, waiting to be used for the learning of a language, or speaking, to be more specific.

Will it achieve the effect we are expecting? Is the money worth on this? It is hard to tell because a student might learn the skill to make podcast and use it for other purposes later. That is something we cannot measure.

Can we achieve the same goal without using expensive technologies? We can. We can ask students to draw comic strips to make their own dialogues. We can ask students to act out their dialogue. Traditional methods still work, however, new technologies just look better and attractive. In real life, I prefer my LCD monitor screen to my old bulky CRT monitor. They both work, but the difference is the LCD monitor is more beautiful and leaves much space on the desk. However, they do the same job. So is it worth the money to change the old monitor to a thin and flat monitor?

Will the use of ipods become similar to having a LCD monitor? We don’t know yet. But I do see the beautiful part of it: students learn from their own dialogues more effectively. To make a great podcast, students tend to practice more and speak the language better. These istudents may have the interest of using this technology for future use, which is a great thing if they can put the skill into use.

Maybe we should so some analysis on the result of using a technology before investing money. To help with istudents, we need to be iteachers first, so that we can evaluate the practical effectiveness of the technology.

I am very interested to see what role ipods are going to play in the process of learning a foreign language in the elementary school. To be or not to be, let’s test it.