Perfect Phonics Site

April 12, 2010

Starfall.com — 學Phonics的好網站,全部都有圖對應,不但學發音,也學單字,即使短文也可點單字發音

ABCs

  • 字母大小寫 (Letter Name),單音(Letter Sound),單字發音,a e i o u 及 ABC Phonics songs

Learn to Read

  • Game — 組字 (make a word)、圖文記憶翻牌 (make a match),依指示找圖 (picture hunt),單字發音分類 (word sorting)-含圖示
  • Book – 教單音及組合音,會唸出每個單音及如何組成單字,
  • Skill — 動畫故事,字母順序由來,由左到右書寫由來,各種特殊發音教學等

It’s Fun to Read

  • All about me – 生活化,有意義的短句填充及發音,Who Am I? What Is My Pet? About My Body, Bathroom, Kitchen, Livingroom
  • Art Gallery – 繪本閱讀,每個故事有一個發音主題
  • Magic — 魔術師變化學服裝,學完則以遊戲複習
  • Music — 音樂家故事,學習簡單文法

I’m Reading – 小劇本

  • Comics — 5本漫畫繪本,無整句唸
  • Folk Tales – 6本童話故事,可整句唸及選唸單字
  • Greek Myths – 6本希臘神話,可整句唸及選唸單字

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers

November 8, 2009

Summary of the E-Book: (53 pages)

Teaching Listening:

1. Listen and Write — http://www.listen-and-write.com/  (also writing)

自建聽寫測驗的好工具,適合各種不同程度的學生。

A dictation exercise creation tool.  It offers a number of options to support and develop students ability to listen.

How to use it with students

  • Create your own activities - You can create your own dictation activities for your students based on the audio files that you want them to understand.
  • Track you students progress – Ttʼs an ideal tool for creating homework tasks. If your students are competitive you can also keep a class scoreboard to show which students are doing best.

2. ESL Video — http://www.eslvideo.com/index.php

自建線上選擇題。可寄給學生連接或直接內嵌到自己的部落格。學生看完影片後做答並得到線上回饋。註冊後,學生可以傳送他們的結果給老師。但老師要建立學生帳號並告訴學生。

It enables you to create web based interactive quizzes based around
online videos. You can create a variety of multiple choice type questions, add transcripts or translations, add notes , etc. Once you have completed your quiz you can either send students a link to it on the ESL Video site or you can embed the quiz into your own website or blog.

The quizzes you can create are mostly multiple choice. Students watch the video and
select their answers.  They can then get some feedback on their answers.  If you and your students are register users of the site, your students can send you their
results. To do this you need to create a class ID and give your students their code.

How to use this with students

  • Video task for homework – You can create video based quizzes for your students to work on for homework.
  • Student created tasks – You can get your students to create quizzes for each other. These could be based around video that they like or they could find or create a video which demonstrates understanding of a particular language point you have been working on.

Teaching Writing:

1. Penzu — http://www.penzu.com/

A simple online tool for creating a personal journal.

How to use it with students

  • Writing portfolio - You can use it to set written homework task for students. These are then neatly stored and can be reviewed as a kind of writing portfolio and shared with parents or employers.
  • Model process writing – You can use it to create models for writing activities. You could use a new entry each time you redraft to show how the text changes through the process steps of brainstorming and drafting to the finished product.

2. Dvolver Moviemaker – http://www.dfilm.com/live/mm.html

動漫製造機

It enables you to create your own animated cartoons by selecting from a range of characters backgrounds and scenarios and adding your own dialogue text bubble. The movies can then be sent by email or embedded into blogs or websites for others to enjoy.

How to use this with students

  • Social expressions – You can create movies which demonstrate social Englishlanguage points or phrases and expressions being used in context. This can really liven up presentations of new language for students.
  • Vocabulary examples – You can ask students to create animations which incorporate specific language points or vocabulary.
  • Create conversations -You can give your students images of some of the characters + a context background for where they meet and then ask them to brainstorm a conversation between the two characters. They could then use the site to produce a ʻpolishedʼ final version of the conversation to share with other students.
  • Tell jokes - You or your students can use the site to get the characters to tell jokes(often told by two characters). These could be jokes that are translated from their L1 or you could get students to search through online joke sites to find something they like.
  • Film festival - Set up your own film competition to see who can produce the best 3+ scene film. The best ones could then be embedded into a class blog or website.
  • Demonstrate time relationships – You can create animations that demonstrate time relationships for teaching tenses.

3. Wordle — http://www.wordle.net/create

Create colorful graphic representations of texts.  You can change fonts and colors as well as the text direction.

How to use this with students

  • Revision of texts – You can paste in short texts that your students have studied recently. Show them the word cloud and see if they can remember what the text was about and how the words were used within the text. You can build up a bank of word clouds over a semester and pull them out at random to get students to recall the texts they have studied and the key vocabulary in them. You could also see if they could rewrite or reconstruct the text based on the word cloud.
  • Prediction – You can create word clouds of texts before the students read or listen and ask them to make predictions about the content of the text based on the word cloud. They could also check any new words from the word cloud that they are unsure of before they read or listen.
  • Dialogue reconstruction – You can create a word cloud of a dialogue students are studying and use it as a prompt to remember or reconstruct the dialogue.
  • Short poems – You can generate a word cloud from a short poem, then ask students to create their own work based on the word cloud.
  • Personal information – You could get your students to each create a text about themselves and then turn it into a word cloud. You could then put the clouds up around the class and see if the students could identify each other from the cloud. They could exchange clouds and use them to introduce each other.

4. Wallwisher — http://www.wallwisher.com/wall/teachersweb20

留言牆,留言者不須註冊,就可留文字、圖片及影片,作為提問者的回應。可做為研習工作坊時,第一件請學員做的事–寫下對此研習的期望。學員只要在牆面任意處快按兩下即可留言。

Wallwisher is like a virtual ʻstickyʼ notice-board, though unlike real notice-boards you can post stickies with text images, links to websites and even videos.

How to use this with students

  • Video tasks – We can create video tasks and get students to post responses to the wall by leaving it open for everyone to contribute.
  • Treasure hunt – We could use the wall to collect different links to various resources around the web for students to explore, a little like a web quest or treasure hunt.
  • Theme based walls – We could give students a theme and get them to create their own walls based around that theme.
  • Fan walls – We could get students to create fan walls based around a favorite band or celebrity.
  • Share resource links – You can use the wall to collect and share resources.
  • Image based tasks – This activity uses an image to get students to practice using present continuous.
  • wallwisher_present continuous
  • Grammar walls – We can even create grammar walls and get students to post what they know and examples of different verb tenses or grammar points.
  • Wishing walls – We could even get students to post their wishes on it using third conditional.

Teaching Speaking:

1. Voxopop — http://www.voxopop.com/  (also listening)

A web based audio tool that enables users to record their speaking for others
to listen and respond to.

How to use it with students

  • Narrative building - You can record the first sentence of a narrative and then ask students to listen to the thread and add a sentence each to the story.
  • Dictations - You could record your own online dictation texts. Get the students to listen to the text, and write down what they hear and then record their own version of the text for you and other students to listen to.
  • Pronunciation drills – Record some pronunciation drills and get students to listen to them and then record themselves saying the words or sentences.
  • True false statements – Record some statements about yourself and get students  to leave questions for you to find out which of the statements are true. You can leave your answers to the questions online too.
View this document on Scribd

Make Way For Ducklings

November 7, 2009

Make Way for Ducklings won the 1942 Caldecott Medal for McCloskey’s illustrations.

Story Review:

It’s not easy for duck parents to find a safe place to bring up their ducklings, but during a rest stop in Boston’s Public Garden, Mr. and Mrs. Mallard think they just might have found the perfect spot–no foxes or turtles in sight, plenty of peanuts from pleasant passers-by, and the benevolent instincts of a kindly police officer to boot. Young readers will love the mother duck’s proud, loving protection of her wee webbed ones, and those with fond memories of Boston will enjoy familiar locales, from Beacon Hill to Louisburg Square, and over the Charles River–often from a duck’s-eye view.  –Karin Snelson

讓路給小鴨子

野鴨 馬拉 太太在波士頓城外河中小島上生了八隻小鴨。當小鴨學會走路後, 馬拉 太太要帶他們走回波士頓公園去住。他們一家人要如何穿越城內交通最繁忙的街道和十字路口呢?這就是這本生動活潑圖畫書要告訴您的。

 

more about “Make Ways For Ducklings“, posted with vodpod

 

 

Teaching tips:

1. Play the flash file.

2. Divide the students into 6 groups and ask each group to copy the scrip for 2 minutes. (Total 11:13)

3.  Tell everyone your part and discuss the main idea of the story.

4. Ask students some questions about the plot.

5. Write down a sentence pattern you learn from this story and make a sentence.

Suggested questions:

1. What were Mr. & Mrs. Marllard looking for?

–> A place to live.

2. What place did Mr. & Mrs. Marllard decide to live in?

–> Boston Public Garden.

3. What did they eat in the place they live?

–> Peanuts.

4. How many ducklings did Mr. & Mrs. Marllard hatch?

–> Eight.

5. What were the ducklings names?

–> Jack, Kack, Lack, Mack, Nack, Ouack, Pack and Quack.

6. The ducklings’ names are in rhyme.  What’s the rhyme?

–> ack.

7. What did Mrs. Marllard teach her ducklings?

–> She taught how to swim,  how to dive,  to walk in a line to come when they were called, and to keep a distance from bikes and scooters and other things with wheels.

8. Who helped the Marllard family to cross the road, and what’s his job?

–> Michael, the policeman.

9. What does the writer try to tell us?

–> We should protect animals.


Officer Buckle and Gloria

November 7, 2009

Officer Buckle and Gloria is the name of the 1995 story and main characters of the story by Peggy Rathmann that won the 1996 Caldecott Medal. It talks about a police officer (Officer Buckle) getting a dog named Gloria. Until that time, whenever Officer Buckle tried to tell schools about safety everyone fell asleep. Then, unbeknownst to Officer Buckle (literally, behind his back), Gloria does tricks to demonstrate safety rules, and Gloria is a big success. When Officer Buckle finds out that the schoolchildren are so enthusiastic because of Gloria, he refuses to teach safety and a huge accident happens. A letter from a sweet girl, named Claire, convinces Officer Buckle to start teaching again. In the end, Officer Buckle and Gloria go to many schools and teach the students about safety together.

巴警官和狗利靈

巴警官比誰都瞭解安全守則,可是當他到學校去解說守則時,卻沒有人想聽。有一天巴警官有了一位新搭擋 -警犬gloria。當他們倆人聯手出擊時,竟得到熱烈的回應,起先巴警官並不曉得,原來當他在前頭一條條地宣講安全守則時,在他身邊的gloria就用肢體動作表演出來,所以才會大受歡迎。等巴警官發現原來受歡迎的是gloria時,他沮喪得不想再去演講,讓gloria單獨出席吧!可是只靠gloria似乎沒有任何效果,這一對搭檔顯然需要一起出席才行呢!
團隊的意思自然不應該是一個人獨自的行動,也不是一個人特別有光、特別受歡迎。在這個故事裏小朋友會發現,巴警官和gloria誰單獨站在臺上都不行,他們各自有特色,巴警官很瞭解安全守則,但是光是把安全守則念一遍實在很乏味,gloria很清楚如何表現出這些守則,讓聽過的人可以印象深刻,可是它並沒有辦法獨自表演,所以這一對搭檔就是需要一起出現,他們的表演才能完美無缺。—本書獲得1996年凱迪克金獎。

more about “Officer Buckle and Gloria“, posted with vodpod

 

Teaching tips:

1. Play the flash file.

2. Divide the students into 6 groups and ask each group to copy the scrip for 2 minutes. (Total 11:42)

3.  Tell everyone your part and discuss the main idea of the story.

4. Write down the sentence or the part you like best and why.


Owen

November 7, 2009

Owen (Caldecott Honor Book) by Kevin Henkes

This is a very sweet book about growing up.  In the book, the main character, Owen, is getting ready to go to school for the first time. He is crushed when he learns that he cannot take his beloved blanket to school with him. As the story unfolds, Owen and his parents work to find a solution to his dilema. This book has subtle humor and simple text that is perfect for emergent readers. The story is one that small children can easily relate to and parents will appreciate. The illustrations are consistent with Kevin Henkes’ style. They are lovable and full of expression.

阿文的小毯子

阿 文有一條小毯子,他到那裏都帶著,可是大人嫌小毯子又髒又破又舊,總是想辦法要偷偷把小毯子丟掉。許多小孩在某一個時期都會有一條自己特別鍾愛的小毛巾, 也有可能是髒的不得了的小布偶、小毯子,但是不管多髒多舊,只要有它在身邊,熟悉的味道、熟悉的觸感,對孩子有很大的安撫的作用。

這本美國凱迪克獎的得獎作品,是一本適合親子共讀的書,它可以讓父母和孩子透過閱讀一起來討論討論,如何解決這條讓人又愛又頭痛的小毯子。

more about “Owen“, posted with vodpod

 

Teaching tips:

1. Play the flash file.

2. Divide the students into 6 groups and ask each group to copy the scrip for 1.5 minutes.(Total 8:46)

3.  Tell everyone your part and discuss the main idea of the story.

4. Write down the sentence or the part you like best and why.


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