Wednesday, 29 September 2010

Engage through storytelling

September 28, 2010 | Nancy Duarte

Story has played a significant role in all cultures but its adoption into professional cultures has been painfully slow. That’s because it’s easier to present a report instead of a well-crafted presentation that incorporates stories.

Presentations are the most persuasive tool available to us in business yet we squander them. This video explains some of the structural differences between a report (what most presentations are) and a story.


Visit Nancy Duarte's blog.

We can't change the world!

This video is a MUST for any teacher


Sir Ken Robinson

Do schools kill creativity?

"If you’re not prepared to be wrong, you will never come up with anything original."

Bore them to Death or Knock 'em Dead

"make everything as simple as possible …
but not simpler!"
Einstein





It amazes me how BADLY university students present ... and very soon they will be on the job market!!!!
So, the solution ... train them from an early age to get up and present something simple in class. As they grow older, they can learn to use powerpoint in better ways.
By using simple design principles, powerpoint slides don’t have to be the usual stuff that kills the audience with Death by Powerpoint!
Let’s start making things worth looking at!? Yeah??

Neil Mason (Porto Editora)

Visit Neil Mason's website.

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

2011, International Year of Forests


Help unchop a tree is one component of Maya Lin's What is Missing? campaign, which honours the animals, birds and plants which are in danger of becoming extinct. This short film, which was launched last month at the Friends of REDD vip event in Copenhagen, highlights the urgent need to halt the decimation of the worlds rainforests for both climate and biodiversity reasons. Mayas universal message about preventing deforestation and emotional connection to REDD make the video a unifying force among all REDD supporters.

Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) is an endeavour to create an incentive for developing forested countries to protect, better manage and wisely use their forest resources, thus contributing to the global fight against climate change. It rests on the effort to create financial value for the carbon stored in standing forests. In the long terms, payments for verified emission reductions and removals, either market or fund based, provide an incentive for REDD countries to further invest in low-carbon development and a healthier, greener tomorrow.



More about this campaign: http://whatismissing.net/

Monday, 27 September 2010

2011, International Year of Forests

United Nations General Assembly declares 2011 as International Year of Forests




Forests are an integral part of global sustainable development: forest-related economic activities affect livelihoods of 1.6 billion people worldwide; they provide socio-cultural benefits and are the foundation for indigenous knowledge; and as ecosystems, forests play a critical role in mitigating the effects of climate change and protecting biodiversity.

The International Year of Forests will raise awareness and promote global action to sustainably manage, conserve and develop all types of forests, including trees outside of forests. “This is an open invitation to the world community”, says Pekka Patosaari, Director of the United Nations Forum on Forests Secretariat, “to come together and work with Governments, international organizations and civil society, to ensure that our forests are managed sustainably for current and future generations”.

Every day, some 350 square kilometres of forest cover are lost worldwide. Conversion to agricultural land, unsustainable harvesting of timber, unsound land management practices, and creation of human settlements are the most common reasons for this loss of forested areas.

Current efforts in forest planting and restoration have helped stem some of the net loss of global forest area, but further global action is needed. “The real challenge is to move beyond raising awareness”, says Mr. Patosaari. “Member States of the United Nations Forum of Forests recently adopted four ambitious Global Objectives on Forests, which included a commitment to reverse the loss of forest cover worldwide. Taking these objectives forward, the Forum is currently in the process of creating an international instrument on forests. However, it is only through broad public participation and by harnessing the skills and practical experiences of forestry practitioners worldwide that we can realize these international objectives and effect change.”

An Internet site for the International Year of Forests has been established within the UN Forum on Forests website www.un.org/esa/forests/2011/2011.html.


Portugal em Xangai


Filme de 7 minutos feito para ser exibido no pavilhão português na Expo 2010, Exposição Mundial de Xangai.

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Formação SDPM (2º semestre de 2010)

Curso de Formação "Como avaliar a educação para a cidadania"

Formador: Professor Doutor Eusébio Andrade Machado
Local: EBS Gonçalves Zarco
Data: 29 e 30 de Outubro, 19 e 20 de Novembro (9.00 - 17.30)
Duração: 15h+15h

Oficina de Formação "Gestão da qualidade e auto-avaliação das escolas"

Formador: Dr. José Orvalho
Local: EBS Gonçalves Zarco
Data: 26 a 30 de Outubro, 29 e 30 de Novembro, e 2 de Dezembro (9.00 - 18.30)
Duração: 50h

Curso de Formação "Autonomia, gestão e responsabilidade das escolas"

Formadora: Mestre Maria de Lurdes Gomes
Local: ES Jaime Moniz
Data: 29 e 30 de Outubro, 5 e 6 de Novembro (9.00 - 18.00)
Duração: 25h


Curso de Formação "O aprendente competente e o cidadão participativo na aula de língua estrangeira (Inglês)"

Formadora: Mestre Maria de Fátima Meireles
Local: EB 2/3 Santo António
Data: 22 a 25 de Novembro (9.00 - 17.30)
Duração: 25h

Consulte a página do SDPM para outras informações sobre estas formações.

European Day of Languages 2010: Languages for Business

With a multitude of language-related events taking place on or around 26 September, the main themes for this year's European Day of Languages are business and jobs.

Languages are good for business. That's the main message from this year's Day of Languages. Staff with strong language skills are a valuable asset to employers - they make it easier to sell to other countries. And job hunters who learn a foreign language can improve their employment prospects.

European Day of Languages promotes language learning at any age. But the idea is also to raise awareness of the many different languages spoken in Europe and celebrate language in all its forms.

This year, the main events in Brussels are taking place on 23 and 24 September. In addition, each EU country is hosting events on or around 26 September - conferences on multilingualism, translation and interpreting; radio programmes; online language competitions and quizzes; poetry recitals and storytelling; films shown in their original languages; language fairs; language taster classes and workshops.

Try to do this quiz and find out how much you know about languages.

Educação Especial

O Decreto Legislativo regional nº 33/2009/M, de 31 de Dezembro, estabelece o regime jurídico da educação especial, transição para a vida adulta e reabilitação de pessoas com deficiência ou incapacidade na RAM.

Eis o resumo do referido Decreto que pode ser lido na íntegra, clicando aqui.

Tuesday, 21 September 2010

Planificação - pistas para reflexão

A interpretação e produção de texto constitui o enfoque principal do programa de Inglês - nível de continuação. Nesta perspectiva, torna-se fundamental proporcionar aos alunos oportunidades de interpretarem e produzirem textos variados em que as dimensões formal, semântica e pragmática da língua sejam trabalhadas de forma integrada.
Na selecção do tipo de texto, as seguintes questões poderão ser úteis:
- Quais são as competências de interpretação e produção dos alunos?
- Qual é a forma, função, contexto e meio de transmissão do tipo de texto escolhido?
- Que estruturas linguísticas, semânticas e discursivas estão presentes neste tipo de texto?
- O que se pretende que os alunos façam com o tipo de texto escolhido?
- Que estratégias de interpretação e produção são adequadas à tarefa pretendida?

Na selecção dos domínios de referência, deverão equacionar-se, entre outras, as seguintes questões:
- Quais são os interesses (pessoais e formativos) dos alunos?
- Que implicações tem o curso em que se encontram na exploração dos domínios de referência?
- Que áreas temáticas foram já abordadas?
- Que assuntos estão a tratar em outras disciplinas?
- Em que projectos estão envolvidos?
- Como articular os diferentes conteúdos?
Os quatro domínios de referência, propostos para cada ano, devem ser perspectivados de modo flexível e permeável.
Realça-se, por fim, que o estudo da gramática não deve ser dissociado dos processos de interpretação e produção de sentido, numa vertente pragmática.

Na avaliação, destaca-se a importância de implementar um conjunto diversificado de processos e instrumentos avaliativos que contemple as várias dimensões que estruturam a aprendizagem.
A opção por metodologias orientadas para a acção implica uma avaliação contínua, formativa e sistemática, mediante o recurso a uma variedade de técnicas, instrumentos e estratégias de avaliação, entre os quais poderão considerar journals, learning logs, questionnaires, interviews, portfolios e conferences, para além dos testes.

(Cf Programa de Inglês - continuação e Programa de Alemão- iniciação)

Monday, 20 September 2010

Classroom Rules

Olá colegas,

Aqui vai um documento com uma tarefa para as primeiras aulas.

Bjs,
Teresa May

European Day of Languages, 26 September 2010



At the initiative of the Council of Europe, Strasbourg, the European Day of Languages has been celebrated every year since 2001 on 26 September.

Throughout Europe, 800 million Europeans represented in the Council of Europe's 47 member states are encouraged to learn more languages, at any age, in and out of school. Being convinced that linguistic diversity is a tool for achieving greater intercultural understanding and a key element in the rich cultural heritage of our continent, the Council of Europe promotes plurilingualism in the whole of Europe.

On the occasion of the day, a range of events are organised across Europe: activities for and with children, television and radio programmes, language classes and conferences. National authorities and the various partners are given a free hand to organise activities. To coordinate the activities organised at national level, the Council of Europe asks participating countries to nominate "National Relay Persons" for the day.

Read more about this. Click here.

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Planificação (reflexão)

A planificação deverá ter por referência o Programa de Inglês para o Nível de Continuação e o Quadro Europeu Comum de Referência para as Línguas – QECR – (2001).

Enquadrado pelas orientações presentes no QECR, os Programas de LE preconizam uma convergência de metodologias activas assentes em actividades linguísticas, estratégias e tarefas reportadas a usos comunicativos da língua.

O Programa atribui um carácter de centralidade à interpretação e à produção de texto, definido este como «enunciado que subjaz a um acto de comunicação verbal», decorrendo dessa centralidade a organização de todas as actividades de ensino-aprendizagem, sem descurar as competências linguísticas. O Texto constitui, desta forma, o elemento nuclear e organizador das aprendizagens, sendo fixado, como «objectivo terminal, o desenvolvimento da competência comunicativa nas suas vertentes linguística, pragmática e sociolinguística».

Como sublinha o QECR, a execução de uma tarefa «envolve a activação estratégica de competências específicas, de modo a realizar um conjunto de acções significativas num determinado domínio, com uma finalidade claramente definida e um produto (output) específico» (2001: 217). Assim, a abordagem do texto deve iniciar-se pela mobilização das competências e pela activação dos conhecimentos, ao nível cognitivo, linguístico, discursivo e sociocultural, que são utilizados em contexto, quer a nível interpretativo, quer a nível produtivo.

Entende-se por tarefa «qualquer acção com uma finalidade considerada necessária pelo indivíduo para atingir um dado resultado no contexto da resolução de um problema, do cumprimento de uma obrigação ou da realização de um objectivo». Entende-se por estratégia «qualquer linha de acção organizada, regulada e com uma finalidade determinada pelo indivíduo para a realização de uma tarefa que ele escolhe ou com a qual se vê confrontado». (QECR, 2001: 30)

As actividades linguísticas «abrangem o exercício da competência comunicativa em língua num domínio específico no processamento (recepção e/ou produção) de um ou mais textos, com vista à realização de uma tarefa.»

Fase de Preparação
Mobilização de competências e activação de conhecimentos pertinentes para a realização da tarefa final.
Exemplos de actividades:
• agrupar afirmações por categorias;
• agrupar/reagrupar palavras;
• associar mensagens verbais a representações visuais e gráficas;
• criar frases a partir de palavras isoladas;
• elaborar mind-maps;
• listar itens por ordem de interesse/importância/utilidade;
• hierarquizar factos/acções;
• organizar campos semânticos;
• preencher organizadores gráficos.

Fase de Desenvolvimento
Interpretação e produção de tipos de texto variados (artigo, notícia, comentário, editorial…), que concretizam macrofunções do discurso (narração, descrição, argumentação…), a que estão associadas intenções de comunicação (relatar eventos, dar opinião, explicar, contrapor, persuadir…).
Utilização contextualizada das competências e dos conhecimentos activados previamente.
TEXTO=Comunicação em acção

Interpretação de texto (ouvir e ler)
Visa a recolha e o tratamento de informação que serve de base para a realização da actividade final.
Exemplos de actividades:
• completar frases/textos;
• dar resposta a perguntas de interpretação;
• identificar a relação directa/inferida entre afirmações e um texto;
• localizar informação num texto (scanning);
• organizar informação por tópicos;
• relacionar títulos e textos.

Produção de texto oral (falar)
Exemplos de actividades, com ou sem guião, com ou sem estímulo visual/textual, com ou sem interação:
* apresentar um tema pesquisado;
* narrar um acontecimento, facto, evento;
* descrever situações, imagens, sensações;
* opinar, discutir, argumentar, persuadir.
Produção de texto escrito (escrever)
Redacção de texto – composição extensa (150-220 palavras).
Exemplos de actividades:
• dar opinião fundamentada sobre factos ou temas;
• descrever situações, imagens, sensações;
• narrar factos, acontecimentos, experiências, com/sem guião, eventualmente com o apoio de um estímulo (visual/textual);
• redigir um texto argumentativo/persuasivo.

Fase de Avaliação
Regulação dos processos de interpretação e produção de texto com vista ao reforço, reformulação, integração e finalização.
 

Planificação - Orientações metodológicas gerais:

- diversificação dos métodos de ensino/aprendizagem
- implementação de metodologias activas, centradas  essencialmente no aluno (motivações, interesses, necessidades e ritmos de aprendizagem)
- recurso a formas diferenciadas de organização do trabalho (individual, pares, grupo, turma)
- organização dos processos de aprendizagem assente em estratégias (linhas de acção), actividades (usos comunicativos da linguagem), domínio (problemática) e tarefas ("a purposeful action considered necessary in order to achieve a given result in the context of a problem to be solved, an obligation to fulfil or an objective to be achieved")

Friday, 17 September 2010

Wallwisher

An interesting activity to get to know your students a little better!! They are asked to write about their expectations concerning the English classes. Hope you like it!

http://www.wallwisher.com/wall/expectations-10

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

Agatha Christie's 120th anniversary

September 2010 sees the 120th anniversary of the birth of Torquay's most famous literary daughter - Dame Agatha Christie. The English Riviera is preparing to welcome murder mystery fans from across the world to help the celebrations go off with a suitable "bang!"

Born in Torquay in 1890, the "Queen of Crime" penned a remarkable 80 novels and short story collections in her lifetime, as well as 19 hit plays. The Guinness Book of Records lists her as being the best-selling fiction author of all time, with an estimated two billion copies of her books in print. To put that in perspective, a mere 270 million copies of Harry Potter Books have been sold.

She is also the most-translated fiction author in the world, with her books translated into more than 70 languages, clearly demonstrating her international appeal. Perhaps most impressively of all, she is only outsold by the Bible and Shakespeare.

The annual Agatha Christie Festival runs from 12th - 19th September 2010 incorporating what would have been the writers 120th birthday on Wednesday 15th September. Organisers promise the most ambitions programme of events yet for this historic anniversary year.

Expect more than 40 events are to take place across the Bay over the week-long celebration including plays, open-air cinema screenings, tea dances, flower festivals, walks, talks, lectures, book signings, murder mystery dinners and train and boat trips.

Several very special anniversary events are also planned, but currently these remain under wraps - well we don't want to give the game away too early now, do we? We can however assure you that a large number of people will be shot, stabbed, strangled, poisoned, drowned, bludgeoned and asphyxiated - and of course that the culprits will eventually be brought to justice.

The festival is also a double birthday celebration. Miss Jane Marple made her first appearance in a full-length novel in The Murder at the Vicarage in 1930. Look out for some special events to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the popular spinster sleuth as part of the excited programme.

The Agatha Christie Mile takes people to some of the places that were inspirational in the life and works of the great author, with brand new interpretation boards to be discovered along the way. These include the Grand Hotel, where she spent her honeymoon, Princess Pier where she enjoyed roller-skating, Beacon Cove where she was a regular swimmer (and once nearly drowned) and the Imperial Hotel, which was featured in two of her books.

Along the way you will also pass Torre Abbey, home to the Agatha Christie's Potent Plant attraction, Torquay Museum with its fascinating Agatha Christie Gallery, and Palk Street Gardens, location of both the Agatha Christie Shop and Agatha Christie bust which was unveiled at the centenary celebrations 20 years ago.

The festival will also provide another fantastic opportunity for fans to visit her former summer home at Greenway, which reopened after a multi-million pound refurbishment by the National Trust. Visitors now have the opportunity to view the many personal collections and mementoes of our best-loved mystery writer and her family and will find a house that portrays the spirit of a holiday home in its 1950s heyday.

Here Agatha Christie gathered with her family and friends for long summer days together, often to celebrate a novel just completed for publication.Greenway also boasts beautiful gardens, woodlands and breathtaking views across the River Dart, as well as a visitor centre, shop and café.

Your first clue to discovering more about both Agatha Christie and the festival, is to visit our micro site at www.englishriviera.co.uk/agathachristie. Go on, it would be a crime not too.





Monday, 13 September 2010

Brain Gym® Exercises

These simple exercises are based on the copyrighted work of Paul E. Dennison, Ph.D., and Gail E. Dennison.  Ph.D. Dr. Hannaford states that our bodies are very much a part of all our learning, and learning is not an isolated "brain" function. Every nerve and cell is a network contributing to our intelligence and our learning capability. Many educators have found this work quite helpful in improving overall concentration in class. Introduced here, you will find four basic "Brain Gym" exercises which implement the ideas developed in "Smart Moves" and can be used quickly in any classroom.

Below is a series of movements called PACE. They are surprisingly simple, but very effective! Everyone has a unique PACE and these activities will help both teacher and student become positive, active, clear and energetic for learning.

Drink Water

As Carla Hannaford says, "Water comprises more of the brain (with estimates of 90%) than of any other organ of the body." Having students drink some water before and during class can help "grease the wheel". Drinking water is very important before any stressful situation - tests! - as we tend to perspire under stress, and de-hydration can effect our concentration negatively.

"Brain Buttons"

This exercise helps improve blood flow to the brain to "switch on" the entire brain before a lesson begins. The increased blood flow helps improve concentration skills required for reading, writing, etc.
Put one hand so that there is as wide a space as possible between the thumb and index finger.
Place your index and thumb into the slight indentations below the collar bone on each side of the sternum. Press lightly in a pulsing manner.
At the same time put the other hand over the navel area of the stomach. Gently press on these points for about 2 minutes.

"Cross Crawl"

This exercise helps coordinate right and left brain by exercising the information flow between the two hemispheres. It is useful for spelling, writing, listening, reading and comprehension.
Stand or sit. Put the right hand across the body to the left knee as you raise it, and then do the same thing for the left hand on the right knee just as if you were marching.
Just do this either sitting or standing for about 2 minutes.

"Hook Ups"

This works well for nerves before a test or special event such as making a speech. Any situation which will cause nervousness calls for a few "hook ups" to calm the mind and improve concentration.
Stand or sit. Cross the right leg over the left at the ankles.
Take your right wrist and cross it over the left wrist and link up the fingers so that the right wrist is on top.
Bend the elbows out and gently turn the fingers in towards the body until they rest on the sternum (breast bone) in the center of the chest. Stay in this position.
Keep the ankles crossed and the wrists crossed and then breathe evenly in this position for a few minutes. You will be noticeably calmer after that time.

In the air

This is a mental and physical challenge which will energise you. Think about a word and write it in the air or with your own body (letter by letter). Your partner will try to discover the word you're thinking about.

Top 6 Keys to Being a Successful Teacher

1. Sense of Humour

A sense of humor can help you become a successful teacher. Your sense of humor can relieve tense classroom situations before they become disruptions. A sense of humor will also make class more enjoyable for your students and possibly make students look forward to attending and paying attention.
 
2. A Positive Attitutude

A positive attitude is a great asset in life. You will be thrown many curve balls in life and especially in the teaching profession. A positive attitude will help you cope with these in the best way. For example, you may find out the first day of school that you are teaching Algebra 2 instead of Algebra 1. This would not be an ideal situation, but a teacher with the right attitude would try to focus on getting through the first day without negatively impacting the students.

3. High Expectations

An effective teacher must have high expectations. You should strive to raise the bar for your students. If you expect less effort you will receive less effort. You should work on an attitude that says that you know students can achieve to your level of expectations, thereby giving them a sense of confidence too. This is not to say that you should create unrealistic expectations. However, your expectations will be one of the key factors in helping students learn and achieve.

4. Consistency

In order to create a positive learning environment your students should know what to expect from you each day. You need to be consistent. This will create a safe learning environment for the students and they will be more likely to succeed. It is amazing that students can adapt to teachers throughout the day that range from strict to easy. However, they will dislike an environment in which the rules are constantly changing.

5. Fairness

Many people confuse fairness and consistency. A consistent teacher is the same person from day to day. A fair teacher treats students equally in the same situation. For example, students complain of unfairness when teachers treat one gender or group of students differently. It would be terribly unfair to go easier on the football players in a class than on the cheerleaders. Students pick up on this so quickly, so be careful of being labelled unfair.

6. Flexibility

One of the tenets of teaching should be that everything is in a constant state of change. Interruptions and disruptions are the norm and very few days are 'typical'. Therefore, a flexible attitude is important not only for your stress level but also for your students who expect you to be in charge and take control of any situation.

Thursday, 9 September 2010

Learning styles and teaching

Your students will be more successful if you match your teaching style to their learning styles.

  • What is a learning style?
  • Where do learning styles come from?
  • Why should teachers know about learning styles?
  • What types of learning styles are there?
  • What teaching methods and activities suit different learning styles?

What is a learning style?

Ellis (1985) described a learning style as the more or less consistent way in which a person perceives, conceptualizes, organizes and recalls information.

 

Where do learning styles come from?

Your students' learning styles will be influenced by their genetic make-up, their previous learning experiences, their culture and the society they live in.

 

Why should teachers know about learning styles?

Sue Davidoff and Owen van den Berg (1990) suggest four steps: plan, teach / act, observe and reflect. Here are some guidelines for each step.

Students learn better and more quickly if the teaching methods used match their preferred learning styles.

As learning improves, so too does self esteem. This has a further positive effect on learning.

Students who have become bored with learning may become interested once again.

The student-teacher relationship can improve because the student is more successful and is more interested in learning.

 

What types of learning styles are there?

There are many ways of looking at learning styles. Here are some of the classification systems that researchers have developed.

 

The four modalities

 (originates from the work of Dr's Bandler, R. and Grinder, J. in the Field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming)

Students may prefer a visual (seeing), auditory (hearing), kinaesthetic (moving) or tactile (touching) way of learning.
 

Those who prefer a visual learning style...

...look at the teacher's face intently

...like looking at wall displays, books etc.

...often recognize words by sight

...use lists to organize their thoughts

...recall information by remembering how it was set out on a page

 
Those who prefer an auditory learning style...

...like the teacher to provide verbal instructions

...like dialogues, discussions and plays

...solve problems by talking about them

...use rhythm and sound as memory aids

 
Those who prefer a kinaesthetic learning style...

...learn best when they are involved or active

...find it difficult to sit still for long periods

...use movement as a memory aid

 
Those who prefer a tactile way of learning...

...use writing and drawing as memory aids

...learn well in hands-on activities like projects and demonstrations

 
Field-independent vs. Field-dependent

  
Field-independent students

They can easily separate important from a complex or confusing background. They tend to rely on themselves and their own thought-system when solving problems. They are not so skilled in interpersonal relationships.

 
Field-dependent students

They find it more difficult to see the parts in a complex whole.

They rely on others' ideas when solving problems and are good at interpersonal relationships.

 
Left-brain dominated vs. right-brain dominated

Students who are left-brain dominated...

...are intellectual

...process information in a linear way

...tend to be objective

...prefer established, certain information

...rely on language in thinking and remembering

  
Those who are right-brain dominated...

...are intuitive

...process information in a holistic way

...tend to be subjective

...prefer elusive, uncertain information

...rely on drawing and manipulating to help them think and learn

 
McCarthy's four learning styles

McCarthy (1980) described students as innovative learners, analytic learners, common sense learners or dynamic learners

Innovative learners...

...look for personal meaning while learning

...draw on their values while learning

...enjoy social interaction

... are cooperative

...want to make the world a better place

 
Analytic learners...

...want to develop intellectually while learning

...draw on facts while learning

...are patient and reflective

...want to know " important things" and to add to the world's knowledge

 
Common sense learners...

...want to find solutions

... value things if they are useful

...are kinaesthetic

...are practical and straightforward

... want to make things happen

 
Dynamic learners...

...look for hidden possibilities

...judge things by gut reactions

...synthesize information from different sources

...are enthusiastic and adventurous

 
What teaching methods and activities suit different learning styles?

 

The Four Modalities

Visual

Use many visuals in the classroom. For example, wall displays posters, realia, flash cards, graphic organizers etc.

Auditory

Use audio tapes and videos, storytelling, songs, jazz chants, memorization and drills

Allow learners to work in pairs and small groups regularly.

Kinaesthetic

Use physical activities, competitions, board games, role plays etc.

Intersperse activities which require students to sit quietly with activities that allow them to move around and be active

Tactile

Use board and card games, demonstrations, projects, role plays etc.

Use while-listening and reading activities. For example, ask students to fill in a table while listening to a talk, or to label a diagram while reading

 
Field-independent vs. field-dependent

Field-independent

Let students work on some activities on their own

Field-dependent

Let students work on some activities in pairs and small groups

 
Left-brain vs. right-brain dominated

Left-brain dominated

Give verbal instructions and explanations

Set some closed tasks to which students can discover the "right" answer

Right-brained dominated

Write instructions as well as giving them verbally

Demonstrate what you would like students to do

Give students clear guidelines, a structure, for tasks

Set some open-ended tasks for which there is no "right" answer

Use realia and other things that students can manipulate while learning

Sometimes allow students to respond by drawing

 
McCarthy's four learning styles

Innovative learners

Use cooperative learning activities and activities in which students must make value judgements

Ask students to discuss their opinions and beliefs

Analytic learners

Teach students the facts

Common sense learners

Use problem-solving activities

Dynamic learners

Ask students about their feelings

Use a variety of challenging activities

 
If you vary the activities that you use in your lessons, you are sure to cater for learners with different learning styles at least some of the time.
 

 

Tuesday, 7 September 2010

APPI no Facebook

A APPI já está na rede social do Facebook com as últimas novidades e informações.
 Para visitar a respectiva página (ou mural), cliquem aqui.

Todos os TESOLers podem também visitar a página desta associação, clicando aqui.
(Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages)

Há ainda, entre outros, estes murais de interesse:
British Council
BritLit
Cambridge University Press
ELT Teachers

Até breve!

Sunday, 5 September 2010

Useful web tool

Minhas queridas colegas,
hoje estive a explorar uma ferramenta muito interessante que serve para fazer apresentações. Tem a mesma função do power point, mas muito mais interessante e facílimo de utilizar. É o prezi (http://prezi.com/). Experimentem! Tenho a certeza que vão gostar!!

Alteração ao Estatuto da Carreira Docente da RAM

Para uma leitura detalhada do Decreto Legislativo Regional n.º 17/2010/M, cliquem aqui.

Se preferirem outra versão, nomeadamente, em apresentação Power Point ou Flash, cliquem aqui.

Até breve!