do you speak

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Do you speak Do you speak Silvina Orsatti Silvina Orsatti Spanish Teacher Spanish Teacher Instructional Technology Instructional Technology Specialist Specialist 2011 NECTFL Sans Inc/Mead 2011 NECTFL Sans Inc/Mead Leadership Fellow Leadership Fellow Dr. Frank Brooks Dr. Frank Brooks Associate Professor Associate Professor Spanish and Spanish and Foreign Languages Education Foreign Languages Education Indiana University Indiana University of Pennsylvania of Pennsylvania ? ?

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Do you speak. ?. Silvina Orsatti Spanish Teacher Instructional Technology Specialist 2011 NECTFL Sans Inc/Mead Leadership Fellow. Dr. Frank Brooks Associate Professor Spanish and Foreign Languages Education Indiana University of Pennsylvania. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Do you speak Do you speak

Silvina OrsattiSilvina OrsattiSpanish TeacherSpanish Teacher

Instructional Technology Instructional Technology SpecialistSpecialist

2011 NECTFL Sans Inc/Mead 2011 NECTFL Sans Inc/Mead Leadership FellowLeadership Fellow

Dr. Frank BrooksDr. Frank BrooksAssociate ProfessorAssociate Professor

Spanish andSpanish andForeign Languages EducationForeign Languages Education

Indiana University Indiana University of Pennsylvaniaof Pennsylvania

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Learning other languages and understanding the cultures of the people who speak them

is vital to success in the global environment in which our students will live and work

The goal of a language program is to develop

students' language proficiency

around modes of

communicative competence reflecting real life communication

ACTFL Standards for Foreign Language Learning

= The Five Cs

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

ACTFL 21st Century P-21 skills map

Standards demand higher-leveluse of content

Web 2.0 applications can help students

develop language proficiencyand enhance 21st century skills

while making learning more enjoyable

and meaningful for them

We’ve come a long way!

Web 1.0 sites are static

Information might be useful but, in many cases, there is no reason for a

visitor to return to the site later.

Example: a personal Web page that gives information about the site's owner,

but never changes.

Web 1.0 sites aren't interactive

Visitors can only visit these sites; they can't impact or contribute to the

sites.

Example: profile pages that visitors can look at but can not impact or alter,

whereas a wiki allows anyone to visit and make changes.

Web 1.0 applications are proprietary

Users can download, but they can't see how the application works or

change it.

Web 1.0 vs Web 2.0Web 1.0 =

1st generation of the Internet

The Read-Only Web (for most of us)

Example: if we didn’t have access to special knowledge (e.g., how to write html code) or special technology (e.g., servers), then we could only 'read' the content that other people had written and published on their websites.

Web 2.0 =

2nd generation of the Internet;

The Read-Write Web

We can read content and publish our own material on the web through services that make it easy for us

All about participation, collaboration, interactivity, communication, community-building, sharing, networking, creativity

Colin Lankshear & Michele Knobel (2006): “Shifts in the Web can effect Mindset”

WEB 1.0

The world is appropriately interpreted, understood and responded to in broadly physical industrial terms

Products as material artifacts

Tools for producing

Focus on individual intelligence

Expertise and authority ‘located’ in individuals and institutions

Space as enclosed and purpose specific

Social relations of ‘bookspace’; a stable ‘textual order’

WEB 2.0

The world cannot adequately be interpreted, understood and responded to in physical-industrial terms only

Products as enabling services

Tools for mediating and relating

Focus on collective intelligence

Expertise and authority are distributed and collective; hybrid experts

Space as open, continuous and fluid

Social relations of emerging ‘digital media space’; texts in change or flux.

Web 2.0

Web 2.0 materials encourage participation through online aspects…do not require

downloading of software, can just point and click, generally designed to be intuitive and

can be easily accessible

1. Communication2. Social Interaction3. Authenticity4. Exposure5. Feedback6. Learner autonomy

Web 2.0 tools can enhance language learning by facilitating:

Web 2.0+

Language Learning

Some research (Maynard, 2002) shows that gender affects the way people think, behave

and learn.

• In FL learning, boys are more likely to drop languages.

• Most boys do not like to talk in the FL classroom because:

• Peer pressures/fear of negative feedback• Lack of self-confidence• Speaking the FL as not real work, • Prefer activities having concrete and practical

outcome, such as writing.• Pronouncing odd sounds in front of fellow

students

WEB 2.0 materials …

• Exploit potential to access language learning opportunities (even from home)

• Reduce peer pressure (Dearing & King, 2007)• Increase self-assurance when speaking

(Picardo, 2008)• Podcasts, mp3s and authentic videos help

develop speaking and listening skills.• Shift from information seekers to content

producers• Produce authentic content for “real”

audiences• Shown to be motivating (Warschauer, 2006)

Digital blooms

Digital literacy is less about the tools...

and more about the thinking!

““Closing the Technology Gap in Closing the Technology Gap in

World Language Teaching”World Language Teaching”

Project Wiki

http://psmlaonlinepd.wikispaces.com

Project Blog

http://psmlaonlinepd.blogspot.com

Session 1 Learning the Tools

Webinars

RationaleTools

Tutorials and ExamplesDiscussions

Blackboard Collaborate~~~

Post-webinar discussionsEdmodo/Skype

Post-webinar activitiesCreative Corner = for a raffle prize

Experts

Becky Benner-CarrPete Brooks

Dick DetwilerThekla Fall

Laura FranklinToni Johnson

Sanaa JouejatiDianne KrauseNatalie Puhala

Amanda SewaldJan Stewart

Creative Cornerwith Photopeach

Session 2 Integrating the Tools

in the Classroom

Webinars

Let's Brainstorm!Let's Plan!

Let's Assess!Let's Share!

~~~Blackboard Collaborate

Bubbl.Us/Google Docs/MindmeisterEdmodo/Skype

WikispacesVoiceThread

Session 3 (upcoming, in the summer of 2012)

Becoming a life-long learner

Do you want to join?;-)

HANDS-ON TIME

Let's learn how to use web 2.0 tools (and apps) to enhance 21st century

skills

with online speaking activities for the world languages

classroom!

Voki http://www.voki.com

Voki is a free tool that allows you to create a talking character or “avatar”.

You can customize your avatar to look like you or take on the identity of other characters.

Your avatar can even speak with your own voice which is added via microphone, upload, or phone.

http://bit.ly/JBush

VOKI enables users to express themselves

- It can be accessed at home/school;

- Necessitates computer-student interaction: a motivation

http://bit.ly/GerLady

- Quieter, more reticent students can make their presence felt and heard

- Allows students to role- play and “hide behind a mask” (an avatar).

- Facilitates move from teacher-centered to student-centered or class-based learning

Let's create a

together!

http://www.voki.com

FotoBabble http://www.fotobabble.com

Project with Fotobabble

Let's create a

together!

http://www.fotobabble.com

FaceJackApp (for iPhone and iPad)http://facejackapp.com

FaceJackApp is a free app that allows you to create a talking picture, and save/export it as a video.

Blabberize, for PC and Mac

Let's create a

together! Http//facejackapp.com

Avatars and Talking Photos (for Droid)

qr Voicehttp://qrvoice.net

QR Voice is a free tool that allows you to create QR codes that when scanned will play a short audio message.

To create your message and QR code you type in your message, only up to 100 characters.

QR Voice is offered in Spanish, French, English, and other languages.

?

Let's create a

(qr voice)

together!

http://qrvoice.net

Questions? Help?

Silvina or Pete!

[email protected]

Twitter: sorsatti

[email protected]

www.iup.edu/foreignlanguages