Part III: Some highlights from the
previous school year
Last year my colleague from another school and I
decided to take a challenge. We started creating an online EFL course with
a Finnish start-up company called Tabletkoulu. The pedagogy and underlying guidelines
behind this company are inspiring to say the least. The courses are based on
methods such as flipped learning, phenomenon-based learning, game-based
learning, project-based learning, co-operative learning and self-directed
learning. I have always been excited about the possibilities that educational
technology has brought to language learning, so it seemed like a natural step
to be involved in creating learning material that would benefit from these
developments.
What fascinates me are the opportunities to make language alive through authentic learning material and learning experiences,
the almost overwhelming world of interacting and sharing, and learning from
others. In addition to this, I can see the potential that educational
technology has in truly embracing all kinds of language learners with so many
individually tailored ways to study.
In the spring term 2014 our course ENA3 Study and
work was still under construction but I wanted to test some parts of it
with my students. To cut a very long story short, here are some random
observations on using the material:
- The
students worked either on computers or iPads. They worked either on their own,
in pairs, in small groups and at times I was instructing them.
- This
is what the table of contents of the course looks like:
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Table of contents |
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- Because of the time
restrictions we only had time to study sections two and three. In addition to
this, we studied grammar whenever it felt natural. For example, the course
material has several interviews with direct questions. They were easily
converted into indirect questions, and we observed what it did to the word
order. Similarly, when writing a CV or a covering letter, you naturally use
adjectives. This is when we also studied how to use comparison and quantifiers.
- Not
all my students enjoy speaking in English, thus writing their comments on
discussion forum encouraged them to use the language without being too stressed
about the pronunciation, for example.
- The
material has many exercises that encourage students to co-operate and get out
of the classroom, for example, to make interviews, record them and use the
target language. Each exercise has also a discussion forum. This turned out to
be really handy because it made the conversation visible if needed.
- I
was surprised to see how engaging the exercises were. As the students were
doing them, they were able to gain points after finishing each exercise. This
motivated them to collect more points. Encouraged by this, we then decided that
the exercise points would be added to their course exam points (course exam
consisted of a listening comprehension test and four short theme-related
essays). Thus, the actual work done during the course became a visible factor
in the student evaluation.
- While some students were really quick in moving from one exercise to another,
others struggled with them. I found myself being more aware of the difficulties
the students had as I could follow their progress in their portfolios. As many
students carried on doing the exercises independently, I had more time to help
those who had difficulties.
- The
platform allowed teachers to add their own material in it. This was a great
feature! For example, when studying school related vocabulary, I thought it was
important for my students to be able to speak about their own school in English.
So I was able to add material that was specific for my students. The students
themselves also participated in searching the material, for example, finding relevant
vocabulary on our school English website.
- The material also includes exercises which introduce the students to the use of, for example Twitter, LinkedIn and Khan Academy.
-
The
platform also enables collaboration between the teachers who are using the same
course material. You can start a conversation not only with your own group of
students but also nationwide with all the users. I had no chance to try this
out. It would be interesting, though and I very much like the idea of teachers
sharing their ideas and experiences.
- The
theme-related vocabulary on study and work for the course can be found
on Quizlet. Click here to see the vocabulary sets.
- My
students are big fans of Quizlet (well, most of them are :) At some point there was
a huge race of the gold medal in Scatter and Space Race. The students got so
into practising the vocabulary that it was their wish to have more vocabulary
testing. For this purpose I used, for example, Socrative or pair work with word definitions.
- All in all, I enjoyed using the course material and the feedback
from the students was mainly positive. However, some students told me after the
course that they would prefer to have “something concrete to hold in their hands” after the
course. Some of them printed the vocabularies on Quizlet to ease this anxiety.
To see how some parts of the course material look
like, take a look at these photos.
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The topic of today? |
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Surveying bullying |
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2.2 Schools abroad |
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What is studying like in ... ? |
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We can work it out! |
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The right kind of applicant |
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Careers |
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Professional working proficiency test |
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4.2. Learner profiles |
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Extrovert, introvert - does it matter? | |
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By myself |
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Speaker's corner |
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Project: Education news | |
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I love learning new words |
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Practice makes perfect |
If you want to learn more about Tabetkoulu, check out their website here. The link is in Finnish but all the team members speak English.
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