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FINAL PROJECT PORTFOLIO 
TOPICS IN LINGUISTICS 
Dayanara Loján 
Jéssica Caicedo 
2014-11-14 
Questions: 
1. Have you ever tried to incorporate a new technology into your classes? What issues did 
you face in doing so? 
I tried to include the usage of dictionaries and it was quite successful because it was easier to 
get information faster when compared to the traditional way on which you have to look for the 
information by hand and it could be quite annoonline ying. The students felt it was easier to look 
for unknown vocabulary and that it was more user friendly. Also, I tried to give them some extra 
material, for example, videos for rehearsing the colors and the parts of the body or music videos 
which could give them more vocabulary and some of the students watched them but others felt 
it was “not necessary”. They thought it was an option because online material is not “as serious” 
as a written paper. Some students ignored it and others felt it was a waste of time. 
2. What are some benefits students can get from collaborative blogging? 
The students could really face their problems and compare their knowledge with others. When 
blogging with some other learners they could really face, practice and show their communicative 
skills. When they comment, they show how good or bad they are at writing, giving their opinions. 
Furthermore, they are able to see if their abilities and sharings are useful, helpful, 
understandable or if they are just fine “for the grade, for the book”. 
3. Which of the aspects of technology above are available to teachers and students in 
schools in your country? 
Here in Ecuador, we have a massive availability on the physical level because it is prestigious 
to have technological devices and parents believe that if they provide their daughters and sons 
with this things they are making them instantly “more prepared” “smarter”. However, this is the 
only available aspect in my country because the learners go as far as having the instrument, the 
physical one, but they are unable to use it, to look for other levels. maybe they would achieve, 
as a consequence of how lost they are, a component technology level going, for example, to 
Google translator, they might feel this could check what they just finished. But it is certainly not 
the best way of rehearsing and using technology. 
4. How has the use of technology changed since you started teaching or learning a 
language? 
When I started learning languages, the use of technology was just an strategy for breaking the 
routine, for relaxing a little bit, as an award for being kind with the teacher or just a way to keep 
us entertained when she needed to do something else. There was not really a connection 
between learning and technology, computers were just for playing and books were for learning.
Moreover, the world wide web was just a strange concept, something that we really didn't have 
in mind. 
5. What resources are available in your school? Consider the computers and the software 
installed on them, the resources in the computer lab and the materials in the library and 
on your network (if you have one) and that you use in your classroom. Would you 
classify these as behaviouristic, communicative or integrative? 
The resources on my school are quite limited. There are obviously Internet access and 
computers for all the students but they do not have any language learning software. Internet is 
the “main dish”. It is supposed to integrate all the answers and all the activities. Internet “is the 
software”. The library is better as it has many books in English or for English but they don’t have 
a CD for the student, they have just a limited number of topics and cover just some basic 
interests. They are just behaviouristic as they are only directed to get a good grade, to get a 
positive reinforcement. With this I mean that the method expected in my school is: Search for 
something on the web, prove that you did it then make it “as the teacher likes it” and get a good 
grade. The process for the books from the library is the same, take the book the teacher gave 
you, read it prove that you read it not that you can use the language or that your vocabulary is 
better. As far as you get a good grade it’s fine. 
6. Can you choose three benefits from those listed above that you think offer the strongest 
reasons for the use of technology? 
The three benefits that make (for me) technology use on learning activities not just good bus 
essential are: 
Provides a stress-reduced environment 
Access to more engaging materials 
Supports different skills 
7. What do you think are the most difficult challenges teachers face in moving to TLLT? 
The most challenging aspects for teachers moving to TLLT is the fact of “losing their class”. If 
their students are able to reach further horizons on the language, they would not see the 
teacher as such an important figure, they might lose the admiration and respect on what she/ he 
says or they could even make her/him questions that he is not prepared “at the moment” to 
answer making her/him to feel/ see as if he was not very well prepared or important. Also, a 
difficulty for moving to this new method is moving to it. Some teachers that are not particularly 
young may feel technology is difficult, mysterious but mainly impossible. 
8. Which of the potential benefits for teachers above have you experienced yourself? 
I have found that my classes now are more centered on the students and it makes me not only 
happier but also a better teacher. They can choose to a certain point how they want to learn 
what I want them to learn. If it’s reading, why not reading a newspaper from Australia, or a 
british anime magazine that they find fabulous. If they are more comfortable, i’m also more 
comfortable. Moreover, they could take the bull by the horns and face their very personal 
problems, so they don’t have to practice “reading” when the are lacking some “writing” 
rehearsal. Also they could experience “real world” language. English on its environment not only
in the classroom because on Youtube or lyrics training they won’t get a zero but a more 
complex and complete idea of “real world things” for example, they would know what “twerking” 
means by getting into the real world. Also, as a teacher it is easier to reach more content 
resources just with a click that with all the research effort of going to the library and making 
some copies and sharing and comparing which is not bad but it could make my work as a 
teacher also less stressing. 
9. How do you think computer-mediated communication can lead to ‘increased 
participation’? 
They could lead into this through chats, forums and discussion boards about things they are 
comfortable with. For instance, if I try to use their discussion abilities in English I can open a 
forum on a controversial topic and make them participate. Computer mediated communication 
increases participation because it can really give the student an opportunity to say what he 
wants, of course he is expected to learn, for example, simple past, but not in a military way or in 
a unidirectional method. She or he is also a thinking creature and needs to be motivated and to 
react to and in the learning process. 
10. Have you observed differences in your students’ communicative behaviour during 
traditional classroom speaking practice and online communication? 
They are far more concentrated on online chat rooms and also they are more aware of how they 
present themselves through language. When they rehearse speaking on the traditional way, 
they think that making the same mistakes over and over again is just “ok”. In fact, they think 
“making errors with boys and girls that are on my same level and that can make the same or 
more mistakes is just fine”. When they are on a chatroom with a native speaker, they are far 
more conscious. They want to produce English in the best way the are able to. They use all their 
knowledge, they try even to produce different registers and styles, rhythms and suprasegmental 
patterns. They learn it also and try to imitate it. They are far more enthusiastic even if they are 
quite shy they want to make it “good” so they face their problems and do it. 
11. In what ways does reading a text in a book differ from reading a text online? 
It presents a wider variety of exercises and it is also less boring. It’s not just reading but it 
includes listening and getting into the text. Normally reading has a relation with summaries and 
internalization while reading online could lead to the practice of other skills and other 
entertaining activities. The reading parts on traditional exercises are usually the most 
predictable while on online reading they are quite innovative and non predictable and I strongly 
believe that if it’s not predictable the student has less chance of getting bored. 
12. Which of the above have you tried yourself? Can you think of additional purposes for 
each of these uses of technology? 
From the activities mentioned above I have also used youtube for showing language in context 
and for promoting an input in lexicon. I use modern songs and also very “level-appropriate” 
songs in order to face the students with the language, to prove the relevance of learning it (on 
context) but not to make them aware that they lack too much of vocabulary or syntactic 
structures.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 
1. How much training and support is available for teachers in your school, in the use of 
technology? Draw up a plan for the kind of training programme that you think would be 
useful, particularly for new teacher 
In my school, the word training is just taken as the formal seminarium or convention where a lot 
teachers assist to get more knowledge, to update on publications and some books, maybe a 
different approach to their subject. Computers and technology are far way from that process. In 
fact, the only one that receives technology training is the “computer class” teacher. He is the 
only one that goes to these kind of activities because he plays the role not of the technological 
trainer but the one who does all the technological things for everyone. When a teacher has 
doubts, he is the one that supports him and gives him some advice but this advice is on the 
majority of the cases extremely basic: how to run a CD, how to download a program, (even!) 
how to insert a flash memory in the computer or record on a CD. 
I think that a plan for old and new teachers should be divided into modules that should be taken 
one after the other, immediately, if possible and that should not repeat for all or be the same for 
everyone, i.e., a mathematics teacher should not take the same course an English langauge 
teacher has. 
Second Basic Basic module 
module 
Third Module: 
ET (the basics) 
Fourth Module: 
A rehearsal 
Fifth module: 
Specializing 
Assist: Assist: ALL Assist: ALL Assist: ALL Assist: ALL 
In groups, 
divided 
All the possible 
issues and 
questions on the 
most basic 
information, e.g., 
recording a CD. 
Creating some 
projects (basic 
ones with the 
knowledge from 
the first part) 
The teachers get 
at least a broad 
idea of what ET 
means, is and 
how it has been 
helpful. 
The teachers 
rehearse all the 
previous 
knowledge. 
The teachers 
form groups 
based on their 
fields and 
research 
together 
technological 
aids 
2. Talk to teachers in your school (or go online) and find out what kind of current websites 
your colleagues recommend for both teachers and learners, and why. 
They recommend websites as teachersnetworks.org, canvas.instructure.com, edhelper.com 
because they find them to be quite helpful for making lesson planning more simple, they keep 
their students more “into” the class and could give some fun to the students as well to the 
teacher. For instance, pages as discoveryeducation.com/teachers/ offers a great list of 
resources to practice outside the class. Not only for students but also for teachers . Even on 
some as http://42explore.com/index.htm teachers are able to learn and update. for
students, there are also a lot of suggested websites and resources as busuu.com/es/ as 
the students are able to get more vocabulary and listen to some dialogues and are even 
able to produce some dialogues thanks to the learning community that this and other 
resources have. Of course, teachers and students may have a lot of times to adapt to 
the limitations that the non paid versions of these tools have. 
3. In section 19.2 , Levy lists five levels at which TLLT fits with current thinking in 
second language acquisition and can support language teaching. Can you think 
of an example of how technology could help with each of these? 
On the physical level, tablets and laptops can be really helpful for language teaching as 
they make so much easier to reach more reading materials as well as listening 
materials as podcasts, or read books like the ones on pages like 
http://www.leerescuchando.net/ where they could reach those sources with so much 
ease. The students could improve faster their abilities as they have the resources near 
to them. 
On the management level, pages like Log In to Canvas are quite helpful for managing 
the formal aspects of a class with some less bureaucracy. 
On the applications level, blogs and wikis could be really helpful for teaching (and 
grading) a more complex and complete writing ability as well as getting to know better 
how near or far of the mastery their students are, for example, if they upload a 
recording of them giving an opinion. Then the teacher could catch some 
suprasegmental aspects that otherwise could be unsuccessful. 
On the resource level, teachers have their best allies to get their students into the 
language (in use) especially if they teach a language that is not produced in the normal 
environment. They could, then, give their students the opportunity to “perceive” the 
language in its real context, in use, for example, the teacher could present the National 
Geographic magazine to their students if she/ he feels that her/his students have 
enough language ability to do it or if they are going through a related topic. This level 
could be quite motivating for students of any level. 
On the component technology level, grammar checkers and online dictionaries could 
have a great impact on the acquisition of the language as they could act as a constant 
solution givers for students especially when they have written assignments and oral 
presentations on which they must prove their mastery of syntactic, orthographical and 
vocabulary richness.
4. Review the three phases of CALL, identified by Warschauer, and some defining 
characteristics of each phase. How would you situate popular programs like 
Rosetta Stone in terms of these three phases? 
Warschauer talks about three phases of CALL. The first is the behaviouristic, on this, 
the approach to technology is mainly based on giving tasks to students as if it was an 
“electronic” tutor. It included drills and lists and the focus was grammatical aspects of 
the language. The second phase is the communicative one, which was quite similar to 
the behaviorist phase but had more options for the students. They could choose 
different activities. Some of them were even interactive and presented the opportunity to 
practice other skills. On the third skill which is called the integrative phase, the same 
task, the student was also able to use more of her/his abilities. 
Rosetta Stone is a program for learning languages that includes all the linguistic abilities 
divided into levels. It is behaviouristic because it gives the student tasks that go along 
with her abilities, as far as she goes, there goes the exercise.It is quite response-oriented 
more than a communicative. However, it presents also a communicative side 
as it may give the opportunity to chose the areas she wants to practice as far as the 
ability of the student reaches. However, I wouldn’t say it has a 100% integrative aspect 
even though it’s so modern. Rosetta stone has a behaviouristic approach because it 
has a system that is definitely oriented to the answers and from there constructs. 
5. What new skills might learners and teachers need to acquire to use TLLT 
effectively? 
They need first to change is their minds about computers and education. They should 
both be aware of a simple but important concept: they are not contradictory terms. 
Computers are not just for “spending some time”, they aren't just “facebook”and books 
are not the only way to learn a language. Also, they should be aware that computers 
and TLLT benefits come to the people that are patient enough to master it. They should 
get at least a basic knowledge on technological matters. This is easier for students that 
already master Twitter, Instagram..etc., but for teachers it might be quite challenging. 
On the other hand, for students, the idea of taking Computers as something serious 
might be also challenging. But patience and practice makes perfect.
6. This chapter listed many ways that technology can support the teaching of the 
four skills, as well as vocabulary, grammar and intercultural awareness. Choose 
one of these areas and develop a lesson plan where technology is fully 
integrated. 
STUDENT STEP 
ACTIVITY 
TEACHER 
ACTIVITY 
HOW TO HELP SKILL/S 
THE WEAK 
WARM- UP & 
REVISION 
The student 
has to watch a 
video that has 
to do with the 
topic s/he 
learnt the class 
before--> The 
Present 
Progressive and 
also, s/he has 
to repeat what 
it is said on the 
video. 
The teacher has 
to present the 
video to the 
students and 
s/he has to 
stop it in order 
to say what is 
write on the 
screen and for 
make his/her 
student to 
repeat it. 
*Listening 
because they 
listen to the 
teacher 
pronouncing the 
words that are 
on the screen. 
*Speaking 
because they 
have to repeat 
what the 
teacher said. 
*Reading 
because they 
also have to 
read what it is 
on the screen. 
The teacher can 
make the 
students repeat 
the same 
phrase a couple 
of times and if 
there is a 
student that 
doesn’t get it 
yet, the teacher 
can go 
backwards and 
make him/her 
repeat it three 
more times. 
The student INTRODUCTION 
has to listen to 
a song that has 
to do with the 
new topic they 
are going to 
learn in this 
lesson. 
The student 
also has to 
complete a 
sheet with the 
lyrics of the 
song s/he is 
listening to. 
The teacher has 
to look for an 
appropriate 
video and 
present it to the 
students. The 
teacher is going 
to delete all the 
verbs in 
present perfect 
presented in 
the printed 
sheet with the 
lyrics of the 
song. 
*Listening 
because the 
students have to 
listen to the 
song presented 
by the teacher. 
*writing 
because they 
have to fill in 
the blanks with 
the correct verb 
conjugated in 
present perfect. 
The teacher can 
make a group-work 
in order to 
check the 
activity among 
the people in 
the group. 
So, the students 
can make a 
collaborative 
activity. 
PRACTICE 
The student 
has to read 
The teacher has 
to be very 
*Reading 
because the 
The teacher can 
assess
his/her peer’s 
work. 
attentive in 
order to 
prevent his/her 
students start 
talking in 
Spanish. 
students have to 
read their peers 
work. 
personally the 
student that 
does not 
understand yet. 
CHECKING & 
REVIEWING 
The students 
have to sing 
aloud the song 
they were 
listening to 
before. 
The teacher is 
going to sing 
with them. 
*Listening & 
Speaking 
Because the 
students have to 
listen to the 
song and repeat 
it. 
*Reading 
because they 
have to read the 
work they’ve 
already done 
and checked. 
The teacher can 
provide some 
homework in 
order to 
reinforce what 
the students 
need to 
practice. 
1. Warm- up : the teacher can use this video to teach her/his students the Present 
Progressive: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTeGorY3rg4 
The teacher has to read every single action Mr. Bean is doing and s/he has to 
make the students repeat it. Then, the teacher is going to ask one student to read 
what is on the screen and after that, the whole class is going to repeat it.
2. For the introduction to the new topic, the teacher can use this video: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghRK6cu8e8U 
7. A teacher who gives out homework for students to complete online after school is 
making a number of assumptions about his or her learners, their (preferred ways 
of) learning and their home situations. What are some of these assumptions, and 
are there any pitfalls to be avoided? 
The teacher is assuming that all the students have the financial possibilities to 
have a computer at home and also, the teacher is assuming that all the students 
have access to internet (at home), this is to say, the teacher is not thinking that it 
could be a student that does not have that possibilities and that s/he has to pass 
for too many things in order to accomplish him/her homework. What the teacher 
could do is making him/her students work in the school lab in order to avoid these 
pitfalls. 
8. Teachers often do not allow students to use mobile phones in class. What are 
some ways in which mobile phones CAN be used effectively as learning tools? 
Mobile phones, if used well, can be a powerful tool for learning a new language, 
since nowadays, mobile phones can have access to internet, and so, students 
can have some applications on their phones for checking vocabulary. They, also, 
can do some class activities that can be fun and useful for their learning process. 
For example, the teacher can assign an activity in which students have to record 
themselves saying a specific phrase, this phrase is going to be part of a dialogue, 
at the middle of the class, the teacher is going to collect all the records and s/he 
will have to have all that records in his or her laptop and the students will have to 
listen to each of that parts and to put all the parts together in order to have a 
coherent dialogue, all in a collaborative work. At the end of the class, they are 
going to listen to the records that are already ordered and they will be able to 
understand the complete dialogue. This is great because they can feel like they
were talking among them in English as natives and this could motivate them to 
continue practicing. 
9. Do your students have access to Skype? Develop an activity that could be used 
with Skype. 
Nowadays, almost everyone has access to skype because of the facilities it gives 
at the time of helping people to communicate. I, as a teacher, would assign them 
a work in which they have to use skype for communicating with “native” speakers 
of the language they’re trying to learn. For example, I would prepare a meeting by 
skype with people in USA that are learning Spanish for talking to my students in 
English for 15 min. and then, they have to talk in Spanish with them 15 min too, 
and so on. In this way, all of them learn, the learners of English and the learners 
of Spanish. 
10. How can the internet be used to develop intercultural awareness? Design an 
activity that has this as a focus. 
The teacher can use internet for making the students work with people of other 
cultures. As I said in the question before, students can use skype for knowing 
people of other countries, depending on the language they are learning and they 
can share whatever they want to share. The teacher, obviously, has to be aware 
in order to avoid students talking in Spanish or talking about inappropriate topics. 
The students can also participate in a speech about the cultural aspects of the 
language they are learning. They can search on the internet for this kind of 
cultural aspects of that specific cultures and they can make a presentation about 
it, at the end, it could be a forum for asking questions and for discussing about 
the topic.
Sources: 
 The Present Progressive. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTeGorY3rg4. 
Retrieved on 26/11/2014 
 Education world. Connecting educators to what works. 
http://www.educationworld.com/a_news/skype-becomes-regular-tool-classrooms-educators- 
say-1628934814. Retrieved on 26/11/2014. 
 Foreign Language Annals. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1944- 
9720.2002.tb03151.x/abstract. Retrieved on 28/11/2014

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Final project portfolio

  • 1. FINAL PROJECT PORTFOLIO TOPICS IN LINGUISTICS Dayanara Loján Jéssica Caicedo 2014-11-14 Questions: 1. Have you ever tried to incorporate a new technology into your classes? What issues did you face in doing so? I tried to include the usage of dictionaries and it was quite successful because it was easier to get information faster when compared to the traditional way on which you have to look for the information by hand and it could be quite annoonline ying. The students felt it was easier to look for unknown vocabulary and that it was more user friendly. Also, I tried to give them some extra material, for example, videos for rehearsing the colors and the parts of the body or music videos which could give them more vocabulary and some of the students watched them but others felt it was “not necessary”. They thought it was an option because online material is not “as serious” as a written paper. Some students ignored it and others felt it was a waste of time. 2. What are some benefits students can get from collaborative blogging? The students could really face their problems and compare their knowledge with others. When blogging with some other learners they could really face, practice and show their communicative skills. When they comment, they show how good or bad they are at writing, giving their opinions. Furthermore, they are able to see if their abilities and sharings are useful, helpful, understandable or if they are just fine “for the grade, for the book”. 3. Which of the aspects of technology above are available to teachers and students in schools in your country? Here in Ecuador, we have a massive availability on the physical level because it is prestigious to have technological devices and parents believe that if they provide their daughters and sons with this things they are making them instantly “more prepared” “smarter”. However, this is the only available aspect in my country because the learners go as far as having the instrument, the physical one, but they are unable to use it, to look for other levels. maybe they would achieve, as a consequence of how lost they are, a component technology level going, for example, to Google translator, they might feel this could check what they just finished. But it is certainly not the best way of rehearsing and using technology. 4. How has the use of technology changed since you started teaching or learning a language? When I started learning languages, the use of technology was just an strategy for breaking the routine, for relaxing a little bit, as an award for being kind with the teacher or just a way to keep us entertained when she needed to do something else. There was not really a connection between learning and technology, computers were just for playing and books were for learning.
  • 2. Moreover, the world wide web was just a strange concept, something that we really didn't have in mind. 5. What resources are available in your school? Consider the computers and the software installed on them, the resources in the computer lab and the materials in the library and on your network (if you have one) and that you use in your classroom. Would you classify these as behaviouristic, communicative or integrative? The resources on my school are quite limited. There are obviously Internet access and computers for all the students but they do not have any language learning software. Internet is the “main dish”. It is supposed to integrate all the answers and all the activities. Internet “is the software”. The library is better as it has many books in English or for English but they don’t have a CD for the student, they have just a limited number of topics and cover just some basic interests. They are just behaviouristic as they are only directed to get a good grade, to get a positive reinforcement. With this I mean that the method expected in my school is: Search for something on the web, prove that you did it then make it “as the teacher likes it” and get a good grade. The process for the books from the library is the same, take the book the teacher gave you, read it prove that you read it not that you can use the language or that your vocabulary is better. As far as you get a good grade it’s fine. 6. Can you choose three benefits from those listed above that you think offer the strongest reasons for the use of technology? The three benefits that make (for me) technology use on learning activities not just good bus essential are: Provides a stress-reduced environment Access to more engaging materials Supports different skills 7. What do you think are the most difficult challenges teachers face in moving to TLLT? The most challenging aspects for teachers moving to TLLT is the fact of “losing their class”. If their students are able to reach further horizons on the language, they would not see the teacher as such an important figure, they might lose the admiration and respect on what she/ he says or they could even make her/him questions that he is not prepared “at the moment” to answer making her/him to feel/ see as if he was not very well prepared or important. Also, a difficulty for moving to this new method is moving to it. Some teachers that are not particularly young may feel technology is difficult, mysterious but mainly impossible. 8. Which of the potential benefits for teachers above have you experienced yourself? I have found that my classes now are more centered on the students and it makes me not only happier but also a better teacher. They can choose to a certain point how they want to learn what I want them to learn. If it’s reading, why not reading a newspaper from Australia, or a british anime magazine that they find fabulous. If they are more comfortable, i’m also more comfortable. Moreover, they could take the bull by the horns and face their very personal problems, so they don’t have to practice “reading” when the are lacking some “writing” rehearsal. Also they could experience “real world” language. English on its environment not only
  • 3. in the classroom because on Youtube or lyrics training they won’t get a zero but a more complex and complete idea of “real world things” for example, they would know what “twerking” means by getting into the real world. Also, as a teacher it is easier to reach more content resources just with a click that with all the research effort of going to the library and making some copies and sharing and comparing which is not bad but it could make my work as a teacher also less stressing. 9. How do you think computer-mediated communication can lead to ‘increased participation’? They could lead into this through chats, forums and discussion boards about things they are comfortable with. For instance, if I try to use their discussion abilities in English I can open a forum on a controversial topic and make them participate. Computer mediated communication increases participation because it can really give the student an opportunity to say what he wants, of course he is expected to learn, for example, simple past, but not in a military way or in a unidirectional method. She or he is also a thinking creature and needs to be motivated and to react to and in the learning process. 10. Have you observed differences in your students’ communicative behaviour during traditional classroom speaking practice and online communication? They are far more concentrated on online chat rooms and also they are more aware of how they present themselves through language. When they rehearse speaking on the traditional way, they think that making the same mistakes over and over again is just “ok”. In fact, they think “making errors with boys and girls that are on my same level and that can make the same or more mistakes is just fine”. When they are on a chatroom with a native speaker, they are far more conscious. They want to produce English in the best way the are able to. They use all their knowledge, they try even to produce different registers and styles, rhythms and suprasegmental patterns. They learn it also and try to imitate it. They are far more enthusiastic even if they are quite shy they want to make it “good” so they face their problems and do it. 11. In what ways does reading a text in a book differ from reading a text online? It presents a wider variety of exercises and it is also less boring. It’s not just reading but it includes listening and getting into the text. Normally reading has a relation with summaries and internalization while reading online could lead to the practice of other skills and other entertaining activities. The reading parts on traditional exercises are usually the most predictable while on online reading they are quite innovative and non predictable and I strongly believe that if it’s not predictable the student has less chance of getting bored. 12. Which of the above have you tried yourself? Can you think of additional purposes for each of these uses of technology? From the activities mentioned above I have also used youtube for showing language in context and for promoting an input in lexicon. I use modern songs and also very “level-appropriate” songs in order to face the students with the language, to prove the relevance of learning it (on context) but not to make them aware that they lack too much of vocabulary or syntactic structures.
  • 4.
  • 5. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. How much training and support is available for teachers in your school, in the use of technology? Draw up a plan for the kind of training programme that you think would be useful, particularly for new teacher In my school, the word training is just taken as the formal seminarium or convention where a lot teachers assist to get more knowledge, to update on publications and some books, maybe a different approach to their subject. Computers and technology are far way from that process. In fact, the only one that receives technology training is the “computer class” teacher. He is the only one that goes to these kind of activities because he plays the role not of the technological trainer but the one who does all the technological things for everyone. When a teacher has doubts, he is the one that supports him and gives him some advice but this advice is on the majority of the cases extremely basic: how to run a CD, how to download a program, (even!) how to insert a flash memory in the computer or record on a CD. I think that a plan for old and new teachers should be divided into modules that should be taken one after the other, immediately, if possible and that should not repeat for all or be the same for everyone, i.e., a mathematics teacher should not take the same course an English langauge teacher has. Second Basic Basic module module Third Module: ET (the basics) Fourth Module: A rehearsal Fifth module: Specializing Assist: Assist: ALL Assist: ALL Assist: ALL Assist: ALL In groups, divided All the possible issues and questions on the most basic information, e.g., recording a CD. Creating some projects (basic ones with the knowledge from the first part) The teachers get at least a broad idea of what ET means, is and how it has been helpful. The teachers rehearse all the previous knowledge. The teachers form groups based on their fields and research together technological aids 2. Talk to teachers in your school (or go online) and find out what kind of current websites your colleagues recommend for both teachers and learners, and why. They recommend websites as teachersnetworks.org, canvas.instructure.com, edhelper.com because they find them to be quite helpful for making lesson planning more simple, they keep their students more “into” the class and could give some fun to the students as well to the teacher. For instance, pages as discoveryeducation.com/teachers/ offers a great list of resources to practice outside the class. Not only for students but also for teachers . Even on some as http://42explore.com/index.htm teachers are able to learn and update. for
  • 6. students, there are also a lot of suggested websites and resources as busuu.com/es/ as the students are able to get more vocabulary and listen to some dialogues and are even able to produce some dialogues thanks to the learning community that this and other resources have. Of course, teachers and students may have a lot of times to adapt to the limitations that the non paid versions of these tools have. 3. In section 19.2 , Levy lists five levels at which TLLT fits with current thinking in second language acquisition and can support language teaching. Can you think of an example of how technology could help with each of these? On the physical level, tablets and laptops can be really helpful for language teaching as they make so much easier to reach more reading materials as well as listening materials as podcasts, or read books like the ones on pages like http://www.leerescuchando.net/ where they could reach those sources with so much ease. The students could improve faster their abilities as they have the resources near to them. On the management level, pages like Log In to Canvas are quite helpful for managing the formal aspects of a class with some less bureaucracy. On the applications level, blogs and wikis could be really helpful for teaching (and grading) a more complex and complete writing ability as well as getting to know better how near or far of the mastery their students are, for example, if they upload a recording of them giving an opinion. Then the teacher could catch some suprasegmental aspects that otherwise could be unsuccessful. On the resource level, teachers have their best allies to get their students into the language (in use) especially if they teach a language that is not produced in the normal environment. They could, then, give their students the opportunity to “perceive” the language in its real context, in use, for example, the teacher could present the National Geographic magazine to their students if she/ he feels that her/his students have enough language ability to do it or if they are going through a related topic. This level could be quite motivating for students of any level. On the component technology level, grammar checkers and online dictionaries could have a great impact on the acquisition of the language as they could act as a constant solution givers for students especially when they have written assignments and oral presentations on which they must prove their mastery of syntactic, orthographical and vocabulary richness.
  • 7. 4. Review the three phases of CALL, identified by Warschauer, and some defining characteristics of each phase. How would you situate popular programs like Rosetta Stone in terms of these three phases? Warschauer talks about three phases of CALL. The first is the behaviouristic, on this, the approach to technology is mainly based on giving tasks to students as if it was an “electronic” tutor. It included drills and lists and the focus was grammatical aspects of the language. The second phase is the communicative one, which was quite similar to the behaviorist phase but had more options for the students. They could choose different activities. Some of them were even interactive and presented the opportunity to practice other skills. On the third skill which is called the integrative phase, the same task, the student was also able to use more of her/his abilities. Rosetta Stone is a program for learning languages that includes all the linguistic abilities divided into levels. It is behaviouristic because it gives the student tasks that go along with her abilities, as far as she goes, there goes the exercise.It is quite response-oriented more than a communicative. However, it presents also a communicative side as it may give the opportunity to chose the areas she wants to practice as far as the ability of the student reaches. However, I wouldn’t say it has a 100% integrative aspect even though it’s so modern. Rosetta stone has a behaviouristic approach because it has a system that is definitely oriented to the answers and from there constructs. 5. What new skills might learners and teachers need to acquire to use TLLT effectively? They need first to change is their minds about computers and education. They should both be aware of a simple but important concept: they are not contradictory terms. Computers are not just for “spending some time”, they aren't just “facebook”and books are not the only way to learn a language. Also, they should be aware that computers and TLLT benefits come to the people that are patient enough to master it. They should get at least a basic knowledge on technological matters. This is easier for students that already master Twitter, Instagram..etc., but for teachers it might be quite challenging. On the other hand, for students, the idea of taking Computers as something serious might be also challenging. But patience and practice makes perfect.
  • 8. 6. This chapter listed many ways that technology can support the teaching of the four skills, as well as vocabulary, grammar and intercultural awareness. Choose one of these areas and develop a lesson plan where technology is fully integrated. STUDENT STEP ACTIVITY TEACHER ACTIVITY HOW TO HELP SKILL/S THE WEAK WARM- UP & REVISION The student has to watch a video that has to do with the topic s/he learnt the class before--> The Present Progressive and also, s/he has to repeat what it is said on the video. The teacher has to present the video to the students and s/he has to stop it in order to say what is write on the screen and for make his/her student to repeat it. *Listening because they listen to the teacher pronouncing the words that are on the screen. *Speaking because they have to repeat what the teacher said. *Reading because they also have to read what it is on the screen. The teacher can make the students repeat the same phrase a couple of times and if there is a student that doesn’t get it yet, the teacher can go backwards and make him/her repeat it three more times. The student INTRODUCTION has to listen to a song that has to do with the new topic they are going to learn in this lesson. The student also has to complete a sheet with the lyrics of the song s/he is listening to. The teacher has to look for an appropriate video and present it to the students. The teacher is going to delete all the verbs in present perfect presented in the printed sheet with the lyrics of the song. *Listening because the students have to listen to the song presented by the teacher. *writing because they have to fill in the blanks with the correct verb conjugated in present perfect. The teacher can make a group-work in order to check the activity among the people in the group. So, the students can make a collaborative activity. PRACTICE The student has to read The teacher has to be very *Reading because the The teacher can assess
  • 9. his/her peer’s work. attentive in order to prevent his/her students start talking in Spanish. students have to read their peers work. personally the student that does not understand yet. CHECKING & REVIEWING The students have to sing aloud the song they were listening to before. The teacher is going to sing with them. *Listening & Speaking Because the students have to listen to the song and repeat it. *Reading because they have to read the work they’ve already done and checked. The teacher can provide some homework in order to reinforce what the students need to practice. 1. Warm- up : the teacher can use this video to teach her/his students the Present Progressive: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTeGorY3rg4 The teacher has to read every single action Mr. Bean is doing and s/he has to make the students repeat it. Then, the teacher is going to ask one student to read what is on the screen and after that, the whole class is going to repeat it.
  • 10. 2. For the introduction to the new topic, the teacher can use this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghRK6cu8e8U 7. A teacher who gives out homework for students to complete online after school is making a number of assumptions about his or her learners, their (preferred ways of) learning and their home situations. What are some of these assumptions, and are there any pitfalls to be avoided? The teacher is assuming that all the students have the financial possibilities to have a computer at home and also, the teacher is assuming that all the students have access to internet (at home), this is to say, the teacher is not thinking that it could be a student that does not have that possibilities and that s/he has to pass for too many things in order to accomplish him/her homework. What the teacher could do is making him/her students work in the school lab in order to avoid these pitfalls. 8. Teachers often do not allow students to use mobile phones in class. What are some ways in which mobile phones CAN be used effectively as learning tools? Mobile phones, if used well, can be a powerful tool for learning a new language, since nowadays, mobile phones can have access to internet, and so, students can have some applications on their phones for checking vocabulary. They, also, can do some class activities that can be fun and useful for their learning process. For example, the teacher can assign an activity in which students have to record themselves saying a specific phrase, this phrase is going to be part of a dialogue, at the middle of the class, the teacher is going to collect all the records and s/he will have to have all that records in his or her laptop and the students will have to listen to each of that parts and to put all the parts together in order to have a coherent dialogue, all in a collaborative work. At the end of the class, they are going to listen to the records that are already ordered and they will be able to understand the complete dialogue. This is great because they can feel like they
  • 11. were talking among them in English as natives and this could motivate them to continue practicing. 9. Do your students have access to Skype? Develop an activity that could be used with Skype. Nowadays, almost everyone has access to skype because of the facilities it gives at the time of helping people to communicate. I, as a teacher, would assign them a work in which they have to use skype for communicating with “native” speakers of the language they’re trying to learn. For example, I would prepare a meeting by skype with people in USA that are learning Spanish for talking to my students in English for 15 min. and then, they have to talk in Spanish with them 15 min too, and so on. In this way, all of them learn, the learners of English and the learners of Spanish. 10. How can the internet be used to develop intercultural awareness? Design an activity that has this as a focus. The teacher can use internet for making the students work with people of other cultures. As I said in the question before, students can use skype for knowing people of other countries, depending on the language they are learning and they can share whatever they want to share. The teacher, obviously, has to be aware in order to avoid students talking in Spanish or talking about inappropriate topics. The students can also participate in a speech about the cultural aspects of the language they are learning. They can search on the internet for this kind of cultural aspects of that specific cultures and they can make a presentation about it, at the end, it could be a forum for asking questions and for discussing about the topic.
  • 12. Sources:  The Present Progressive. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTeGorY3rg4. Retrieved on 26/11/2014  Education world. Connecting educators to what works. http://www.educationworld.com/a_news/skype-becomes-regular-tool-classrooms-educators- say-1628934814. Retrieved on 26/11/2014.  Foreign Language Annals. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1944- 9720.2002.tb03151.x/abstract. Retrieved on 28/11/2014