Thursday 6 December 2012

Week 10: In the making of a perfect E-Teacher

Hello Everyone,

This week is the closing week of the course. So besides trying Levels of Technology Integration (LoTI) and giving advice to the future participants, I was reflecting on my journey through the course which I will share here.

But besides that I would also like to share that there was only one task that remained to be done and that was creating a Webquest on Zunal which I did this week on teaching "Ode to a Nightingale" Please have a look and comment on the same. 

When I began the course, I thought I would look something like this:



But during the progress of this course, I realized that it was nothing so complicated but was there to empower both the students and the teachers. It will not be able for me to describe here all that I have learnt in the course in toto but I will briefly discuss the topics that were covered over the weeks. What began in  Week 1 as path full of apprehensions and fear as to "Will I be able to do anything in the course, or will I fail?" and "What if my internet fails me?" etc. (but God be praised, nothing amiss occurred) is now sucessfully completed. 

It was the first "virtual" or online course that I did and completed successfully.

In fact it was some sort of extra work for me initially but during the course of it around week 4, I started enjoying it and got hooked to the computer most of the time. It became a part of my routine to sit at the computer for hours and look at the resources introduced, try something new and adapt it to the class that I was teaching.

 In a way, I have lived this course because the way it required to introduce things to the class one was teaching. The project is not something that one had to think and write. I have thought about it, implemented it, felt it, realized it and seen the effect of it. 

I am really thankful to RELO for giving me the opportunity to do this course. 
I am also thankful to my colleagues of this course for being very cooperative, kind and helpful.

Finally I would like to thank my Course Instructor Ms. Courtney Cunningham for being such a gem of a person and a teacher. Hats off to her. Had it not been for her guidance, I would not have been able to complete this course, successfully. Her directions and instructions were clear and precise. During the time of any confusion she came to my rescue as a lifeboat and a lighthouse to give me directions. 

Though the course is over, but the learnings of this course will last me a lifetime. 

I would like to close with this quote, "A good-bye is never painful unless you’re never going to say hello again."

Do stay in touch. 

Best wishes Everyone
Ashish Pande

Ode to a Nightingale Exercise

Dear Students,

Though the Semester is over and all of you have done well in the semester end examination, I would like you to attempt an exercise on "Ode to a Nightingale" by John Keats using "Webquest" just for fun.

You can go to the exercise that I have created by clicking on this link.

After this you will complete the task by writing and publishing on this blog under this heading.

Happy Learning!

Best Wishes,

Ashish Pande

Sunday 2 December 2012

BA-Semester II: Selected Novels and Short stories


Dear BA-1 students, 

Happy holidays and I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. 

This is to inform you that the following novels and short stories have been selected for the next  semester. It would be good  if you could do a background reading before the classes formally begin on January 1, 2013. 

NOVELS

1.      Wuthering Heights: Emily Bronte
2.      Animal Farm: George Orwell
3.      Jane Eyre: Charlotte Bronte
4.      The Picture of Dorian Gray: Oscar Wilde
5.      The Mayor of Casterbridge: Thomas Hardy
6.      Hard Times: Charles Dickens

SHORT STORIES

1.      “A Rose for Emily”: William Faulkner
2.      “The Terror”: Chekhov
3.      “Metamorphosis”: Franz Kafka
4.      “The Furnished Room”: O Henry
5.      “A Horse and two Goats”: R.K. Narayan
6.      “The Lost Necklace”: Guy de Maupassant
7.      “Chrysanthemums”: John Steinbeck
8.      “Light is Like Water”: Gabriel Garcia Marquez
9.      “Araby”: James Joyce
10.  “House of the Fallen Usher”: Edger Allan Poe
11.  “The Purloined Letter”:  Edgar Allan Poe
12.  “Mr. Palomas on the Beach”: Italo Calvino
Reading list
1.      Allen, Walter. The English Novel. London: Penguin Books Ltd, 1954. Bradbury,
2.      Malcolm. The Modern British Novel. London: Heinneman, 1994.
3.      Leavis, F. R. The Great Tradition: George Eliot. Henry James, Joseph Conrad. London: Chatto and Windus, 1960.
4.      Peck, John. How to Study a Novel. London: Macmillan, 1995.
5.      Showalter, Elaine. A Literature of Their Own: British Women Writers from Bronte to Lessing. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1977.
6.      Van Ghent, Dorothy. The English Novel: Form and Function. New York: Rinehart, 1953

Best Wishes, 

Ashish Pande. 

Reflections Week 9: Multiple Intelligences and Final Draft

As the penultimate week of the project comes to an end, a sense of completion and achievement is being felt amid a feeling of nostalgia. There were two important things that were done this week. One of them included the submission of the final draft of our projects. The other was being introduced to Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences.

By the end of this week, I also happened to check the examination answer books for my students for the semester end examination. Reading their answer books (especially the BA-1 class: Introduction to Poetry- The class on which I did my project) I was able see the marked difference in the way they had performed from their first internal assessment. There was a marked changed in the way they wrote their examination answers and the linguistic performance had improved significantly. I am glad I did this project. 

Project Final Draft

Thanks to my partner Nino that I was able to fill in the lacunae in the project and make important changes in the final draft. There were many things that had to be thought out and implemented before submitting the final draft of the project. One of them included the question as to how would the learnings of the project influence my teaching style in future. I had to arrange an informal meeting with the students to decide the outline for hte next semester. It was decided that in the next semester 6 novels and 12 short stories that would be taught would be done with the help of technology. After ensuring this, I was able to incorporate the same in the final draft of my project. 

Multiple Intelligences in Classroom and using Technology to cater to them 

The topic of discussion and the reading material that was made available was on Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences. The following diagram is an excellent representation of the varying kinds of intelligences. 





However, this was not 'the' focus of discussion. Courtney had clearly instructed us on the discussion forum to  
focus on the technology aspect. 

The resources for the week included the article "Technology and Multiple Intelligences" (http://eduscapes.com/tap/topic68.htm) which was a very informative article and helped me understand how to use technology for each kind of intelligence. In my analysis of the multiple intelligences and adopting technology for each kind, I was able to suggest ways for using tools of technology to address the needs of  different kinds of learners. Going through the discussion forum and reading Cherry's remark that my post and the comments associated with it helped him allay apprehension of integrating MI and technology in the language classroom. There was another article shared by Raj entitled "Multiple Intelligences and Technology" (http://www.casacanada.com/multech.html). The article talked about integrating technology into the classroom for the following seven kinds of intelligences namely Linguistic, Logical-Mathematical, Visual/Spatial, Musical, Bodily-Kinaesthetic, Interpersonal and Intra-personal.

The other articles and resources include the following:


  1. Multiple Intelligences after twenty Years by Howard Gardner: (http://pzweb.harvard.edu/PIs/HG_MI_after_20_years.pdf)
  2. How Technology Enhances Howard Gardner's Eight Intelligences (http://www.america-tomorrow.com/ati/nhl80402.htm#
  3. Learning styles online quiz - learn about your own learning style. A very good quiz that can be taken by anyone.  (http://www.edutopia.org/multiple-intelligences-learning-styles-quiz)
  4. Howard Gardner Video on Multiple Intelligences (http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=iYgO8jZTFuQ#!) shared by Raj. 
  5. Sailing with 5Cs with Learning Strategies (http://www.nclrc.org/sailing/)

I would like to quote Jasmina who writes that teaching is like cooking that includes, "A little bit of everything, mixed appropriately, seasoned to taste, prepared and served with patience and a good dose of encouragement will melt down even the grumpiest student."

Looking forward eagerly to the final week. 

Ashish Pande. 


Sunday 25 November 2012

Week 8 Reflections: More tools and sadness creeping in


Before writing the reflections for this week, I decided to read what Jasmina had written. It brought about a sense of nostalgia before actually experiencing it. She had talked about only two weeks to go before finally all of us go our separate ways which kind of brought about a sense of sadness especially because I had felt an absence of it for the first four days of the week. I did not feel it much till Wednesday since I was busy like everyone else in drafting my project report, but still there was a feeling of something not right. I really felt it hard on Thursday morning and afterwards when there was a sense of ennui. There is a good feeling also that till now one has been able to learn a lot and has been able to apply it to classroom teaching successfully as well. Like Jasmina, I also want the rest of the classmates to be in touch even after we graduate this course.

Project Report

Nostalgia apart, the week was very fruitful for me personally. I did not think that I would be able to draft a report so quickly. It was very easy because of the simple reason that this course has been designed in such an organized manner that one keeps doing the groundwork every week for the final run and it does not seem to much labour towards the end. My parter Nino and I have already shared our first drafts on the class wiki and I am eagerly awaiting for feedback from all quarters. I would request everyone who reads this to please have a look at my project report and suggest changes and corrections no matter how minor they may be.

Peer Assessment as a Part of the Project

One of the fulfilling things this week that worked for me was organizing a peer assessment exercise for my class of Poetry i.e. BA Semester-I on Monday, November 20. It was held in the computer lab at 3:00 p.m. and was a thought out exercise in which each student was to be assessed on his/her post on Practical Criticism of the poem "The Daffodils" by William Wordsworth based on the interactive power point presentation that I had made. 

The task was done in such a way that all the students were assessed by two peers who were assessed by other peers. In this way any scope of benefit to each other was ruled out. To ensure objective assessment, a rubric was also provided to the students. Despite this, I could see that there are marked variations in the assessment done by the students. It was for this reason that it was announced initially that the peer assessment will be reviewd by the teacher.  I have also realized that I am very lenient in my marking scheme.

Tools

Besides the tools discussed this week, I realized that the biggest tool is the internet. As I posted on the Nicenet discussion forum as well that it makes me feel jealous with the present day students because I remember the struggle one had to make in collecting material for my MA classes especially in a paper on Greek Mythology and Drama. The books on the topic were so rare and costly that it was not possible to buy them. If I were doing my MA now, I am sure there would be no problem in getting the material.

The other tools that we were introduced to this week are:

  1. SMILEhttp://clear.msu.edu/teaching/online/mimea/smile/v2/index.php
  2. Hot Potatoeshttp://hotpot.uvic.ca/
  3. Easy Test Makerhttp://www.easytestmaker.com/default.aspx. I was also able to make a very simple test with the help of this tool and post it on our class wiki. 
  4. 4Teachers: A very good educational resource that has a great pool of other resources within it like Rubistar, Quizstar, Academic Skills builder etc.( http://www.4teachers.org/tools/)
  5. Dvolver Movie Makerhttp://www.dvolver.com/moviemaker/index.html
  6. Crossword Puzzle Game: http://www.crosswordpuzzlegames.com/create.html
  7. Web Poster Wizardhttp://poster.4teachers.org/
  8. ANVILL: A National Virtual Language Lab. (https://anvill.uoregon.edu/anvill2/)
  9. Tools for Educatorshttp://www.toolsforeducators.com/
  10. Boggles World ESL: It has a huge amount of resources for teachers including worksheets and lesson plans. (http://bogglesworldesl.com/)
I could not explore any other tools as we have semester end exams at our university, but will certainly do so in due course of time during and after this course.

Looking forward to the final draft of my project and an exciting week 9. 


Thursday 22 November 2012

Peer Assessment Results

PEER ASSESSMENT RESULTS

Dear BA-Sem-1,

The results of the peer-assessment are as follows. You will notice the pattern of marking varied despite providing you with a rubric. However, these marks are not final and are subject to review by the teacher i.e. me. 
Name of the Student
Assessor I
Assessor II
Total
Akhil Vasudevan
Sweta-7
Vijay-7
14/20
Ankita Sundriyal
Sweta-8
Vijay-9
17/20
Ayushi Singh
Ankita Sundriyal-7
Akhil Vasudevan- 8
15/20
Faiiz Hussain
Ankita Sundriyal-7
Akhil Vasudevan- 8.5
15.5/20
Faith T Varghese
Ayushi Singh-7
Faiiz Hussain-8.5
15.5/20
Hakim Omar Nisar
Ayushi Singh-5
Faiiz Hussain-8
13/20
Kartik Kashyap
Faith T Varghese-5
Hakim Omar Nisar-5
10/20
Neha Pande
Faith T Varghese-6
Hakim Omar Nisar-7
13/20
Ram Singh
Kartik Kashyap-8
Neha Pande-6
14/20
Roushan Roy
Kartik Kashyap-8.5
Neha Pande-5
13.5/20
Sana Haider
Ram Singh-9
Roushan Roy-4.5
13.5/20
Sayantan Das
Ram Singh-8.5
Roushan Roy-4.5
13/20
Shramona Roy
Sana Haider-8
Sayantan Das-9
17/20
Shubhadarshini Mallick
Sana Haider-5
Sayantan Das-7
12/20
Shyam
Shramona Roy-7
Shubhadarshini Mallick-7.5
15.5/20
Swastika
Shramona Roy-8
Shubhadarshini Mallick-7.5
15.5/20
Sweta
Shyam-7
Swastika-7
14/20
Vijay
Shyam-8
Swastika-8
16/20

Sunday 18 November 2012

Reflections: Week 7- Student Autonomy and 1 Computer Classroom

Despite personal problems at home (father's epilepsy and brain ceasure), and Nicenet down, Week 7 was another great learning experience. It dealt with two topics:

1. Student Autonomy
2. One Computer classroom.

We had to read the whole material and comment on either one of the topics but our course instructor Courtney modified the plan that we had to combine the two for writing our observations. It was a very good plan. Most of us were able work the combination of the two.

How do I normally use Computers in the Classroom?

Before doing this course I used computer in the classroom for normally two things.

1. Conducting a class using the Power Point.
2. Screening a film. 

Rarely when I used to get very creative, I used to create an activity that would include:

Listening Comprehension:

In this activity I would take up a song or a dialogue or a scene from a good movie and ask the students to answer questions based on that; Or I would also ask them to transcribe the lyrics of the song played. 

Assessment during a group discussion or an Interview and giving feedback:

Since I type faster than I write with the help of a pen and paper, when I conducted a group discussion or a one on one interview/ assessment to gauge the level of learning. I used to type the mistakes and errors made in pronunciation, grammar and fluency against the name of every student. I also mailed it to the students.

Recording the voice of the students:

Sometimes when students cannot understand the production of a particular sound, I used the laptop as a recording device. I use it to tell the students, how the word actually sounds and how do they pronounce it. Thanks to Courtney, now I know of a software which is very effective--Vocaroo. 

Jasmina and I during our course of discussion agreed on some of the following points:
  1. Miming: is a very good tool for learner autonomy. The learners can mime their favourite actors or cartoon characters in order to learn a new language. They would lose self-consciousness or hitch while doing so. 
  2. Using songs: The students can make use of songs for improving their listening comprehension. They would listen to a song in English, try to guess the lyrics and then see the lyrics for a while. They would continue doing so until they got all of it right. 
  3. Reading a story: The students write the summary of a story that is read in the class and go home and ponder over it. 

How can I now use Computers in the Classroom?

1. Allowing them free access to all my presentations: This point has been suggested by Jasmina and I agree with it fully. I can also do the same with my students.

2. Allotting workspaces for all courses: In the computer, that could be kept in the class, I could make separate folders for each semester and put the necessary material in that. The credit for this learning also goes to Jasmina.

3. As an Information and Communication station: The computer in the class can be loaded with encyclopaedia or other language learning software which the students can use in spare time.

4. As a Presentation Tool: Besides using it for Power Point Presentation, I can also use it to display my notes or a quiz that I develop or a couple of video clips to drive a point home.

5. As a Publishing Tool: Thanks to Donna Ashmus for giving this idea that a computer can be used for taking out monthly class magazine, newsletter, anthologies, class-room journal, Ongoing story centre and web publishing.

6. As Learning centre and Simulation Centre: Donna gave this idea that drills etc. can be conducted with the help of a specific software. Specialized software can also be used to create simulation, form teams of students.

I am glad that this course has widened the horizon to me for using a single computer in a classroom.



Reading Assignments

1. Dimitrios Thanasoulas's Article

One of the first articles that I read was "What is Learner Autonomy and How Can It Be Fostered?" By Dimitrios Thanasoulas. He quotes Benson and Voller who define autonomy in five ways:

  1. There are situations in which learners study entirely on their own.
  2. Self directed learning in which learners learn and apply a set of skills.
  3. Inborn capacity which is suppressed by institutional education.
  4. Exercise of learners' responsibility for their own learning
  5. For the right of learners to determine the direction of their own learning. 
He also makes a point that learning is simply not a matter of memorization but a constructive process which involves seeking or sometimes constructing meaning. He also believes that the teacher lending a helping hand to students every now and then is a weakness or the sign of an ill-prepared teacher. From these statements, it implies that the author wants the students to be totally self-reliant. However, I have my own reservations. Student autonomy can never be a substitute for the teacher. The author also mentions some cognitive strategies like repetition, resourcing, translation, note taking, deduction, contextualization, transfer, inferencing and question for clarification. Dimitrios also mentions some metacognitive strategies like directed attention, selective attention, self reinforcement and self evaluation. 

According to him self-reports, diaries and evaluation sheets can be used to promote learner autonomy. 

2. Samuel Sheu's Article: Learner Autonomy: Bird in-the-hand or Bird-in-the-Bush?

This is a very interesting article and touched the heart of most of us including Mahesh and me. We discussed the situation in India where the parents and the government decides the future of the students. We came to the conclusion that the autonomy of the learners depends to a great extent on the autonomy provided to the teachers. The situation here in India where the syllabi are now made by the bureaucrats in the government and the schedule is so tight that there is no room for innovation is quite similar to what Sheu mentions in his article. I really liked the statement of the author where he writes, "an examination-dominated system has made every learner of English gasp for breath". Reading the posts of my colleagues made me aware that the situation is more or less in most of the parts of the world and we as teacher need to take steps to promote learner autonomy. 

3. ESL Activities for the One Computer Classroom (S.Gaer): Word-Processing Ideas:


4. Internet ideas:      


5. Donna Ashmus's article:7 Categories of Classroom Computer Use:   I have already used the information of this article in writing how will I now use computer in the classroom. 


                      THE PROJECT

I have chosen Nino to be my partner for the project. 

During the implementation of the technological change in the classroom, I did a lot of things like teaching with the help of web, power point, audio-visual devices, challenging the students to write their own draft on the computer in the computer lab while I observed them. 

To see the effect of this change, I conducted a test in which the students had to use the "Interactive Power Point" that was created by me as a part of the course. They had to use the Power Point Presentation and then write a paragraph on their understanding of the poem. This was also a part of their internal assessment. So this was made formal to bring some seriousness in the task. 

The power point presentation that I used was mailed to the students. They were made to sit in the computer lab for 40 minutes and use the interactive power point. 

Then they were given the task to write a paragraph on the same. 

The assessment would be carried out at two levels.

1. Peer assessment.
2. Assessment by the teacher. 

In order to ensure that the assessment is not subjective or biased, I created a rubric for the students. 

The Rubric that I created to enable the students for Peer Assessment. 

Analysis of A Work of Art : Rubric for Evaluation of an answer on Appreciation of a Poem


CATEGORY
4
3
2
1
Theme of the poem
Makes a complete and detailed description of the theme of the poem and all the important points are dealt with.
Makes a detailed description of the themes of the poem and some of the important points are dealt with.
Makes a detailed description of some of the themes of the poem and one or two important points are dealt with
Descriptions are neither detailed nor complete.
Expression
Excellent, showing personal as well as objective and metaphorical understanding of the poem. 
Good expression showing personal or objective understanding of the poem. 
Fair expression showing some understanding of the poem. 
Neither personal nor objective understanding of the poem is seen. 
Figures of Speech
All the major figures of speech like metaphor, simile, synecdoche, metonymy, personification, hyperbole, transferred epithet etc. are identified.
Most of the major figures of speech are identified.
Only some of the figures of speech are identified.
One or less figures of speech are identified.
Comprehension
The write up shows an excellent comprehension of the poem. 
The write up shows a good comprehension of the poem. 
The write up shows a fair comprehension of the poem. 
The write up shows a very poor comprehension of the poem. 
Language
Excellent, with no grammatical or spelling mistakes.
Good with one or two grammatical or spelling mistakes.
Fair with 3-5 grammatical or spelling mistakes.
Poor with more than 5 grammatical or spelling mistakes.


After the students have awarded points for each category, they need to add them up and divide them by 2. The number that they get will be the marks that they award to their classmate.

Then I appointed two examiners for each student and made sure that they were mutually exclusive so that there was no conflict of interest. 

On Tuesday at 3:00 PM, they will have the assessment in the lab. 

Looking forward to a whole new week.