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Archive for the ‘language learning tips’ Category

ABOUT ”ITEC” PROJECT

Saturday, May 19th, 2012

ABOUT ”ITEC” PROJECT

I and my students and some of my teacher friends are in these project. The project is implemented by more than 1000 classrooms across the Europe and 36 schools in Turkey.

iTEC (Innovative Technologies for an Engaging Classroom) is a four year, large-scale project that takes an informed look at the potential classroom of the future.

Starting in September 2010, iTEC will bring together policy makers, researchers, technology suppliers, other technology-enhanced learning experts and innovative teachers in order to design and build scalable learning and teaching scenarios for the future classroom with recognition of the realities of pace of the educational reform process. Rigorous testing of these future classroom scenarios in large-scale pilots will then be carried out in order to significantly increase the possibility that innovation can be mainstreamed and taken to scale when the project ends.

With 27 project partners, including 14 Ministries of Education (MoE), and funding from the European Commission of 9.45 million Euros, iTEC will provide a model describing how the deployment of technology in support of innovative teaching and learning activities can move beyond small scale pilots and become embedded in all Europe’s schools. The strategic nature of the project is underlined by the fact that the iTEC piloting in >1,000 classrooms in 12 countries is by some margin the largest pan-European validation of ICT in schools yet undertaken.

The key aim is to develop engaging scenarios for learning in the future classroom that can be validated in a large-scale pilot and be subsequently taken to scale.

This will be achieved through an increased understanding of the ways in which new and emerging technologies can support more effective forms of learner engagement.

A number of previous scenarios for the school of the future have proposed a radical vision in which governments announce the end of compulsory schooling by 2020 and the school has even disappeared. Such blue-sky thinking has a role to play but there is a danger that this approach results in designs for the future classroom that are simply too unconnected with current practice, fail to engage teachers and cannot be mainstreamed because they are divorced from educational policy making in the real world. While iTEC will develop ambitious scenarios for the future classroom, it will also recognise the realities and pace of the educational reform process. By the end of the project, schools will most certainly still exist but the organization of learning will be changing as social interaction and personalization becomes much more prevalent.

iTEC, therefore, will explore a vision of the future where schools will remain the key location for learning and assessment as part of a wider network of physical and virtual learning locations. In doing so, the project recognises that the learning process will increasingly engage with other stakeholders including parents and cultural and business sector members and draw in adult and informal learning. iTEC also begins with a clear understanding that the starting point for change is current teaching practice and that educational policy making in the real world must be understood as the context for this change. The project will not only examine how innovative technologies can be deployed but also the underlying change processes that are required in order for innovative teaching and learning practices to be mainstreamed and taken to scale.

An underpinning principle of the project’s approach is an appreciation that the power of technology to significantly enhance learning and teaching is not always transparent to practitioners. The iTEC learning centred approach is based upon the understanding that technology in itself cannot bring about schools that are competent in the use of ICT without other factors such as vision and competency, and technology that is designed with usability in mind.

The increasing use of Web 2.0 content and social tools to extend learning beyond the physical learning space is the focus for iTEC’s pedagogical and technical analysis. The strategy is particularly to look beyond how schools are currently using learning platforms (LMSs, VLEs etc.) which arguably support a more formal approach to teaching and learning, and which have shown disappointing levels of adoption. Moving forward, iTEC will aim to build upon the popularity of community driven learning using personal learning spaces created by individuals through interaction with multiple personal online learning services.

Current trends suggest that tools and services supporting learning are increasingly likely to be fairly small, autonomous applications. Ways must be found to ensure that teachers and learners can reliably discover, assemble and fully exploit these tools. It is also recognised that interactive whiteboards have played a valuable role in demonstrating; how technology can engage both teachers and learners; drive transformational change in the classroom; and act as a ‘gateway’ to more enhanced adoption of technology. With a range of interactive, multi-touch technologies being deployed at large scale in classrooms across Europe, it is now time to examine how these technologies can be successfully integrated with other emerging tools and services to ensure ease of adoption and maximise potential benefits.

A central objective for European Ministries of Education in order to help engage and motivate learners of the future should be to ensure that the richness of ICT used in schools does not pale in comparison to how pupils are using ICT for personal recreational use. To achieve its aims, the iTEC project may particularly need to challenge the tendency for schools to limit the learner’s use of personal technologies (requiring pupils to ‘power down’ when at school) and instead encourage and support learners in exploiting the potential of Web 2.0 approaches to content creation and social networking.

SOURCE:    http://itec.eun.org/web/guest/about

Learning a new language — How long will you take?

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Learning a new language — How long will you take?

After reading my recent article about learning a language, I had some people probe me further.

“So, if I do everything you wrote about, then how long will it take me to learn English or Turkish?” they asked. Again, my answer is that it depends on how much time and work that person wants to put into the learning process.

Let’s start with focus

In modern society we have many things to distract us. We’ve got cell phones, home phones, televisions, radios, video games, etc., to distract us from focusing on what we want to focus. We also have all the other distractions such as work, chores, books, family and friends.

No matter what distractions exist in your world, if you want to learn a new language, you have to make time to focus on language learning. Attention is the key to getting the brain to learn. Think of things that distract you, like a loud voice or the telephone. If those distractions keep you from learning, then you have to find ways to manage them. Often that requires a shift in your thinking. Start small with what time of day you feel most alert. If you focus better in the afternoon, then that’s when you will want to carve out some study time. If you’re a morning person, then try to integrate 5-15 minutes of studying into your morning routine. Better yet, try to surround yourself with opportunities to be immersed in the language, like listening to the language on tape, on the radio, or while watching your favorite movie.

Creating a study space

To focus best, you need to create a study space. Everyone has a different idea of what makes the perfect study space. Some people like studying in a small, comfy corner of the living room, whereas other people like studying language where it lives, like a busy café in the middle of the city. Personally, I need silence, a hard, straight-backed chair and a desk. You need to create a study space that reflects your personal learning style and one in which you know you will be able to maintain a high level of focus and interest.

Know your purpose

Your purpose for learning the language may also help inform your choice. If you need to learn a large amount of vocabulary for a test, decide whether you need a quiet or noisy place to study. If you want to increase your oral proficiency, then getting out and practicing asking and answering questions with native speakers might be a better choice than sitting quietly at home studying the language on cue cards.

By knowing your purpose, you can choose the methods of studying that will reflect your learning styles and strategies, as well the methods that will meet your goals. Make sure that the materials feed your learning style and interests to keep your brain focused on the learning. With all the books, websites, courses and other media at your disposal, you have a wide array of materials from which to choose. For example, when learning Turkish, some people like the variety of watching their favorite English movie dubbed in Turkish one day, meeting with Turkish-speaking friends at a café on another day and snuggling up in the corner and doing workbook exercises on yet another day — you have the power to choose and you will choose well if your purpose is clear. Your success depends on how well your plan meets your needs, helps you maintain your focus, and allows you to enjoy the learning process.

Chart your successes

Charting your successes helps keep you accountable and helps to remind you of where you started and where you are going. Consider putting a check mark on the calendar for every day that you spend five to 15 minutes studying or practicing the new language. At the end of the week, you could reward yourself for meeting your goal of studying x times per week or month — whichever you prefer. Giving yourself a reward is another way of re-focusing your attention on your goal.

Make learning easy

Do you remember ever having been late for an important meeting? Missing a bus? Falling in love for the first time? All of these events have one large component in common: emotion.

The best way to focus your brain is to tie learning to emotions. Yes, learning a language takes hard, repetitive work, but that learning can also be emotionally charged, good fun! Unless you were born with an ear for language or a photographic memory, you will have to slog it out — but you can try the “whistle-while-you-work approach” to keep your emotions in play. We were given emotions to help us store things in our long-term memory banks — emotions help us survive. If you were chased by a tiger walking along the tall grass and you survived, you will surely be cautious when walking along the tall grass in the future. That’s the power of emotion. For that reason many corporations pay top dollar for outdoor adventures to help with team-building and leadership training — the emotions of those experiences and the learning tied to them stick with employees.

Conditioning is one part

Part of learning is unconscious or based on conditioning. If I touch the stove, it will burn me. If I say a certain English interjection on Turkish television, my friends will tease me relentlessly until I learn to replace that interjection with “şey.” Learning could also be positively affected by less-profound emotions, like enjoying listening to native speakers speaking Turkish while you sip Turkish coffee and enjoy a delicious breakfast. Even a little bit of emotional content will help you to learn more efficiently.

Use your eyes and ears

The more you engage your senses, the better the learning will be. Using the mind’s eye and ear, you will do much to enhance your learning. Try to paint a picture in your mind about the words and phrases you hear. Imagine hearing the words played out in different scenarios — funny and serious. The more you focus your eyes and ears on learning, the better chance that you have to get the information into long-term storage. That’s why repetition is so important: the more you repeat the information in similar and different ways, the better able the brain will be to recognize and process the information.

Practice does make perfect

As I’ve written and said many times, you can own the best instrument in the world and hire the best teacher, but somewhere along the way you will need to pick up the instrument and practice. Because we know that short-term memories quickly fade away from consciousness, we have to practice regularly to get information into long-term memory. The best way to store information for faster retrieval is to organize your learning. For example, instead of trying to learn unrelated vocabulary words, try learning words in the same category. Start with a category of interest, like food. Imagine eating the food that you are trying to remember while reciting the name in your mind. As you are pretending to chew, hear and see the word for the food item. Finally, think in your mind whether you like or dislike that food, saying the entire phrase in the language, if you know it, otherwise saying the phrase in your native language with exception of the word. For example, an English speaker learning Turkish might say, “I love eating patlacan for lunch.”

Everything is created twice

Imagine that you are a fluent speaker of the language you are learning. Your imagination goes into action to create the scenarios that would occur were you to have mastered that language. Literally, you are already creating your language mastery in your mind. If you can imagine it, you can achieve it! In addition, if you imagine that your senses, body, and brain can remember, then the possible memories that can be created are infinite.

Habituation

Once you start creating the memories you want to have to learn the new language, you want to habituate, or “over-learn,” this information. Habituation will help you to stop having to think about every word that comes out of your mouth — that’s right, you want to over-practice, so that the new language will tumble off your tongue without much thought — like driving a car. However, you don’t want to be mindlessly blathering or mispronouncing words, so start small and over-practice a few phrases to try out for a week or so until the words become habit. In this way, your ability to be both mindless and mindful will keep you in the language learning zone.

SOURCE:       http://www.todayszaman.com/news-274874-learning-a-new-language—-how-long-will-you-take.html