Council of Europe 2001 Common European Framework Cambridge University Press

http://www.coe.int/T/DG4/Portfolio/documents/Common%20European%20Framework%20hyperlinked.pdf



Harmer, J. 2007 How to teach English Harlow : Pearson Longman.

UEd: PE1128.A2 Har.


Lynch, T. 1996 Communication in the language classroom Oxford : Oxford University Press

UEd: P53 Lyn.


Five-minute activities : a resource book of short activities /
  Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1992.

Ur, Penny

UED: 428.2407 UR





Nunan, D. and R. Carter 2001 Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages Cambridge University Press.

Chapter 12: SLA

Chapter 15: Computer assisted language learning (CALL)

Page 107:

” ‘Constructivism‘ involves the use of problem-solving during tasks and projects … In CALL this theory implies learning by using computer tools to explore simulated worlds, to build presentations and websites … and to undertake authentic communication with other learners around the world”.

Page 108:

“The cognitive approach addresses the need for students to be aware of their own learning processes”

Comparative studies: “the comparison of computer-enhanced classes with ‘traditional’ or conventional classes…”.

“Researchers have examined how computers enhance the instructed acquisition, e.g., pronunciation (Eskenazi 1999), grammatical structures (Collentine 2000) and lexical items…”.

Page 109

“Chapelle (2001) provides a useful overview of CALL and SLA

Motivation:

“motivation has been a pervasive theme in CALL … sometimes focusing on ‘computer phobia‘”

“how typical classroom activities can be enhanced electronically … as a tool for drill and practice in the four skills


Recent Reflection

Thoughts (mainly about learning and teaching)
which may or may not lead somewhere.

http://www.doceo.co.uk/reflection/rrr.htm

Summary:

Many “weblogs” or simply “blogs”, of which there are now millions, are simply self-indulgent. This one may be, too, but not “simply” so. It has other purposes:

  • First, it is an opportunity for me to reflect on my practice, and that of my students, as I observe it. This is a discipline I exhort them to practise, and which I have practised (on and off) since 1976. Now I am doing it for public consumption as well as my own learning.
  • So, second, it gives other people a chance to comment on my entries, although I do not imagine many of them will. This should provide come counter-balance to the self-indulgence which is an occupational hazard of reflective journals; entering into a dialogue about your reflection with a critical friend is the best way to get something useful out of it.
    • So please comment! There is provision to do so at the end of each posting.
  • Third, it provides a model of what various kinds of reflection might look like. Students who are not familiar with the practice of writing up reflections occasionally ask for examples. They are not easy to provide, because—although edited before submission for assessment—they still contain private material about the author and often about her or his students. At least mine is written with a view to being read by others. Whether that distorts it, like a politician writing a diary with a view to publication, I leave to you to decide; but:
    • Note: I have a responsibility to my students, and since much of this blog relies on my observations of them, I have disguised some details, and/or delayed writing it up to take some of the edge off it. I hope it does not adversely affect the material.
  • Fourth, it is a device to place in context some of the material elsewhere on the sites: I haven’t written this stuff up purely for the fun of it, or even because it relates to material I teach. I have written up the material on the sites because I find it useful. I hope to show how.
  • Fifth, it enables me to point you to other sites and reading which I come across which you might also find interesting (or not, of course).

ENTRIES:

  • 28 September 2008 On-line lectures

 




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