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This is all very interesting. I am also interested in understanding more about publishers in the front lines addressing technology... as many inquiry- and project- based school programs that cater to developing 21st century skills have pretty much canned using structured course books ... which is a huge revenue stream for publishers. Francisco Lozano works for Heinle/Tompson and am not sure how to read their stand on all this. If they want to really be behind technology, they need to modernized their programs as well. With so much authentic material available to 21st century learning already on the Web, I don't clearly see a traditional publisher's role in emerging school programs. I really didn't think that Lozano's keynote at MEXTESOL addressed technology and immersive learning environments ... even though the plenary was about technology. These publishers do have a wealth of resources, including research, authors, editorial staffs that could reinvent themselves to help lead in the area .. more than just interactive whiteboards. I find a lot of the stuff that publishers have on the Web as too schooly and still tied to traditional teaching and learning. We shouldn't use new tools in old ways. But rather we should use them in 21st century ways.
Since you are talking about Wordpress, perhaps your mind has shifted about the death of the blog? People use blogs as a personal reflection tool, which is perfect for portfolios as well. Blogs aren't meant to be collaborative tools, but more a network of connected journals that create a networked "node" identity, sort of cross fertilization rather than collaboration. For that we have wikis and social networks and such.
Self-access needs to be address more here in Mexico .. and I am happy to see that Mexico in stepping up to the plate by hosting peer gatherings to further the cause.
Remember from my MEXTESOL preso, that the NCTE guidelines for 21st century skills look like this:
Develop proficiency with the tools of technology
Build relationships with others to pose and solve problems collaboratively and cross-culturally
Design and share information for global communities to meet a variety of purposes
Manage, analyze and synthesize multiple streams of simultaneous information
Create, critique, analyze, and evaluate multi-media texts
Attend to the ethical responsibilities required by these complex environments
There isn't much above that ties to sitting at desks in straight rows cracking a coursebook with a teacher-fronted class. And the NCTE are English teachers, not content-based subjects such as History or Math (although the NCTE guidelines would fit there too).
All teachers, full or part-time spend one hour a week for each class they teach conducting conversation sessions with students at the SAC.
Very interesting! Any idea as to the number of students who are attending the SAC (at UCC) and how may full and part-time teachers we´re talking about? Also, did they mention how many hours per week the SAC is open? Or the percentage of students using the SAC?
I like the sound of this SAC, although I am not sure if everyone is ready for something like this. But I am wondering, are the teachers paid for the time they put in at the SAC, in addition to their class time?
Leigh Thelmadatter said:Ok.. got some time... Do you know it gets pitch dark here at 530pm? Very weird and unnerving.
The first plenary speaker was ???? (get you the name later). Got a doctorate in something, and is from Holland. Taught at the U of Auckland, NZ and was a visiting profesor at the U of Tokyo. Talked at lot about how, at least for adults, 80% of what they learn, they learn on their own, spending about 15 hours a week on average doing it. Argued that education shouldnt be about "teaching" in the classroom but rather supporting learners as they learn on their own, showing/giving students tools and opportunities and showing them how to take best advantage of them. To illustrate his point, he used a program in Cambodia where 3,000 or so villages have no schools at all. They set up computer kiosks in a central location in these towns and a bus with wireless access downloads requests for information into the kiosks for the villagers to access, then the people decide how to use the information. He also talked about the One Laptop Per Child program. Both he cited as examples of how technology can support autonomous, individualized learning. By the way, supposedly Mexico is the only country he knows of that has a regular conference on self access.
The next workshop I attended was about using portfolios in self access. Long on portfolios and very short on how their use would support self access. However, he did mention using sites like Wordpress and "Writely" for electronic portfolios, which I thought was an interesting idea.
The next talk I went to again was long on technology and short on self'access centers per se. But then it was titled New Ways of Teaching with Technology in Language Learning. It was given by Frank Lozano, who gave the first plenary at MexTESOL this year. He did have some interesting points...Basically, that technology pushes changes in teaching and changes in teaching are possible using technology... in particular, contextualizing learning in differing situations, short'cycle and frequent feedback and incorporating students' own and varied experience, interests and prior knowledge into the learning process.
Some benefits of CALL that Frank mentioned were 1)saves teacher time as much of the drill practice can be moved to computer and/or self access materials 2) helps teacher monitor the learning process (if the program has this feature) 3) allows for blended and distance learning 4) and is highly motivational. Of all of these, the only one a unhesitantly agree with is number 4. I can think of a few "but"s for the others.
Only the last workshop dealt extensively with self access centers. It was given by three teachers from Universidad del Caribe in Cancun. This is a new, public university "in the mangroves" near the resorts. All students must study English. Not only do they have a well developed SAC (self access center), with just about all the toys someone like me would want, their SAC is central to the English dept. It takes the entire second floor of the library building. But the really important thing is that after students are accepted by the university, placement in English consists of both a test, AND an interview at the SAC to verify the placement and even negotiate it with the student, if s/he feels it is not correct. The English department is located in the SAC, and the full-time teachers have their work stations there. All teachers, full or part-time spend one hour a week for each class they teach conducting conversation sessions with students at the SAC. All students are required to spend a minimum of 20 hours in the facility each semester. Interestingly enough, assesment of what students do is not done. I asked specifically, and other than attendance, nothing else is really evaluated. However, they claim that getting students to practice English there is not a problem as they focus on making the SAC a place students WANT to come to and WANT to use their English. Or in education-speak, they "create a socio-cultural background"... since EFL students cannot go to an English-speaking environment, they create this space that is English-speaking. Everything done, whether it is academic or just for fun is done in English. The also call it "humanistic"... treating students affect and emotive intelligence first before the cognative. Im not sure what I think about this last part. I dont think it would be practical for my school. Though I would absolutely love having teachers take shifts at a SAC. UDLAP does this as do some other schools.
Met a couple of interesting people already. One works for CELE's self access and the other is from Monterrey and interested in picking my brain about the self access center I created in Toluca.
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