Searched for : Ania

MEC Trainer, Joanna Trzmielewska, writes:

 

On the 11th June we held a Macmillan English Campus online clinic, giving ideas on how to use online resources to teach vocabulary. The host was Ania Rolinska from IH Prague. Ania presented very useful and interesting online resources which can be used to consolidate vocabulary.

 

Below you can find some feedback from the clinic's participants:

 

 

Sarah Gibson- Sheridan: Wow - very interesting presentation. Thanks for the great tips and ideas.

 

Daniel Fernandez- IH Bydgoszcz: I really learnt a lot and have some ideas for my students that I

can use next school year.

 

Roberto Murakami- Cultura Inglesa Sao Paulo: Great tips and ideas, Ania! Thanks for sharing!

 

Sedat Cilingi- Istanbul Bilgi University: Thank you very much for everything.

 

 

A big thanks to everyone who participated. We had 12 participants in total!

 

If you missed this clinic, please click on the link below to see a downloadable PDF of Ania's presentation:

 

 Online tools helping to learn vocabulary.pdf (1.81 MB)

 

Ania has also written us several blog postings. Click here to find them.

 

If you are interested in attending the next MEC clinic you can contact us by leaving a comment or emailing j.trzmielewska@macmillan.com

 

 

Wednesday, June 17, 2009 11:37:30 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 

“What I want to show is online tools that might help students consolidate vocabulary by helping them memorise it, use it productively and store it in effective ways.”

This is how Ania Rolinska describes our next MEC online clinic 'Using online resources to teach vocab'.

 

 

Ania (pictured above) is a teacher and the E-learning Coordinator for IH Prague. She is extremely enthusiastic about using technology in the classroom and has written us a few blog postings too.

 

This clinic will take place on the 11th June at 3pm UK time.

 

If you are interested in attending this event or you require any further information, please let us know by emailing me at s.milligan@macmillan.com.

 

MEC clinics are short sessions involving groups of no more than 25. They are on a first-come, first-served basis to any teachers who use MEC.

 

There is no cost involved: we will set up and host the sessions. Those attending simply need a computer with internet access, sound and ideally a microphone. 

Wednesday, May 27, 2009 10:35:41 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 

IH Prague teacher and e-learning coordinator, Ania Rolińska, writes:

Using Twitter in ELT                 

 

What is it?

Twitter is a combination of a social networking site, microblog and instant messenger that lets you stay hyperconnected with your friends, family or co-workers. The primary purpose of the service is to keep your social circle posted as to your exact whereabouts and doings through regular updates or 'tweets'. Answering a simple question 'What are you doing?' can require some mental gymnastics though as you have to squeeze the info into a tiny space of 140 characters. Therefore, you have to be concise and to the point (some people resort to text speak to gain extra space).

 

 

Setting up a free account can be accomplished with a few clicks of a mouse. Another few clicks is enough to network your account with those of your friends' and get their updates straight onto your Twitter user page, mobile phone, web page or blog (depending on the selected settings). Your tweets can stay private between you and your contacts or be accessible to the public. For more information about how Twitter works check out their About us page or 7 things you should know about … Twitter, an article on www.educause.net.

 

How to use it with learners?

With regards to English Language Teaching (ELT), Twitter seems to be a tool worth looking at and exploiting.

                              

At a basic level, students can follow tweets on a public timeline. They are provided with digestible bites of authentic language, and through guided discovery they are exposed to the rules of current usage (text speak, ellipsis).

 

In more practical terms, Twitter instantly lends itself to practice in the use of Present Continuous or Present Perfect (reporting what the person has just done), but also other more advanced structures like participle clauses or ellipsis. These features are easily overlooked in traditional language instruction.

 

But Twitter is not only about announcing what you are up to; it can serve as a forum for reflection, posting important questions or sharing online resources (just post the URL like in the screenshot below). The followers can respond to the tweets by posting comments and asking follow-up questions, thus sparking an online conversation.

 

 

Twitter could provide space for thriving student-to-student(s) collaboration and interaction outside the class, thus supplementing Macmillan English Campus self-study resources and tutor-to-student(s) communication. What's even more important is that the solution is simple, intuitive and easy to grasp even for the less technologically minded. With that in mind, here are some ideas on how to use Twitter with your class.

 

Facilitating vocabulary acquisition/retention

The teacher posts a few words plus their definitions in the MEC Word Lists (or messages just the words to students who look up the definitions in MEDO and create their own wordlists). Compiling a list of lexis is a good start but using the words in context is the next step and that’s where Twitter comes in handy. Students create personalized examples with the new words/phrases and publish them using their Twitter account. There could be a new word every day and every student recycles the same word, reading their classmates' updates for different examples. Alternatively the teacher could send a different word to every student once a week and they pool the new words by checking their classmates' updates. There might be a competition for the best example or one posted the fastest. Both methods can be used to revise or pre-teach any vocab from MEC vocab/listening/reading activities.

 

Current news

Select a News Item that your students might be particularly interested in reading about or find somehow controversial. Ask them to read it, choose one of the accompanying questions and answer it on Twitter. Then ask them to read their classmates' posts and comment on the content, thus engaging in an online discussion. A great introduction to using Twitter in this way could be the MEC News Item Twitter gets political.

 

If you use a News Item in class, ask your students to look for related articles/videos/podcasts on the internet (you can allocate selected websites to make the task easier for them) and post the URL in their Twitter status (with a mini-commentary if they can fit it in). Classmates look at the suggested resources and post their comments, using the feature of 'reply to the Twitter update'.

 

You could also tell students to follow current news or celeb gossip - they choose or get assigned a theme or person and try to look up relevant information as often as possible and post it on Twitter. To motivate them you could run a contest for the best reporter.

 

Mini stories

Students write summaries of their day or invent mini stories about a fictional character and post them over a period of time (see Novels in 3 Lines project for model). They could do it individually or take turns, each of them providing a subsequent episode (a class Twitter account would be better in that case).

 

I've always wanted to know…

The teacher or a student posts a question to which the other classmates have to find an answer or express their opinion. In the same vein students might post a problem to which the others suggest solutions, e.g. they need to buy a birthday present for their gran. So in the tweet they quote the maximum price and vaguely specify their gran's interests. The classmates look for a perfect gift online and post the URL to it in reply to the original tweet.

 

I am sure there are other stimulating ways in which Twitter can be used in class. No matter what the task is, students interact with their classmates, teacher and other Twitter users producing bits of language in a way that forces them to be brief and precise, thus improving the important skill of thinking clearly and communicating effectively.

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2009 4:37:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 

IH Prague teacher and e-learning coordinator, Ania Rolińska, writes:

Community Walk is a website which allows you to create highly personalised and interactive maps thanks to its powerful, yet simple and intuitive interface. You just click on the orange Create Map icon and follow straightforward instructions. If you encounter any problems, there are a few tutorials available as well as discussion forums. You might design a route from A to B or mark places of interest like tourist attractions, your favourite hangouts or quaint second-hand shops where you can get the best bargains. You might restrict yourself to your neighbourhood or explore a bigger area like the whole city, country or even a continent. There are no limits, just your imagination! You can add other features like comments, photos, video and audio so that the place comes across in all its visual splendour or shabbiness with your description. The maps can be open to the public (and collaboration) or kept private in which case you have to create a free account. A couple of clicks are enough to embed the map in your website or blog.

 

A few suggestions for using the mapping tool in class

§   As a 'getting-to-know-each-other-better' activity or to practise the Present Simple, students create a map of their neighbourhood to show the bakery where they get bread rolls for their breakfast or a corner where they always meet an old guy with a dog, etc. To practise past tenses and used to they could do the same but about the area where they used to live in the past or spend their holidays as a kid.

§   Students in pairs create a tour around their city or a city they know well or have read about/listened to, e.g in a MEC Listening Activity such as A tour of Dublin... They do some research on the Internet to gather more information about the places of interest and find photos to add a visual twist to the map. Just make sure they don't do any copying and pasting. The tour might follow a theme, e.g. historical places or the best restaurants and pubs (see Food in the Harbour City, a MEC Language Exercise, for a model).

 

 

§   Students in small groups work on a project about different customs across their country or if you have a multinational group, it could even be a continent or the whole world! The interactive map could be embedded in the school website or class blog. Following the same line of thinking, the website lends itself perfectly to presenting the results of a MEC Web Project like Food around the USA.

§   Students plan a dream holiday (they look at Holiday Paradise Vocabulary Activity for a model) and then present their plan to the class. They vote for the best one.

 

 

§   Following the results of a City quiz, a MEC Listening Activity, students create a similar map of their city or country to practise the superlative. If you have a multinational group, then they can compare their cities and countries, thus getting further practice in superlatives and comparatives.

§   Lower-level students mark different places around a small area, e.g. bank, shops, restaurants, etc. They add short descriptions. In pairs they analyse their maps and ask each other questions with there is/are. This could be a follow-up activity with more focus on fluency once you had drilled the structure with a MEC language exercise such as Is there a bank in this street?

§   Last but not least, students might practise giving and understanding directions. They don't draw on pieces of paper any more but create real routes on real city plans!

 

Whichever way you use Community Walk, the students will get into it as they are creating something meaningful and relevant, they are sharing their personal story and experience with you and their classmates.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009 3:13:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 

The MEC training team, Steph and Sarah, write:

On the 24th April we held our 9th online Macmillan English Campus clinic. The title of the clinic was Setting up a class blog to use with MEC resources.

Ann Foreman


The clinic was written and presented by
Ann Foreman, a teacher trainer and ICT coordinator for the British Council, Bilbao. Ann also has her own blog called Encouraging Learner Autonomy
where you'll find all sorts of great ideas about how to use technology in the classroom.

Click here to see the clinic presentation. To move to the next slide, left click with your mouse. To go back to a previous slide right click with your mouse and then click on rewind.

Ann demonstrated an example class blog posting related to the theme of Identity, a syllabus item from the Macmillan English Campus Inside Out Advanced course.

Tip for using a class blog

·         If you are working in an IT suite you can ask your learners to blog during the lesson. Otherwise, blogging is a fun way for learners to do their homework. You can check what they've written at home and give feedback in the next lesson or even as a comment on the blog. If you have an interactive whiteboard or a computer and a data projector in your classroom, you can review the postings together in class. It's a great way to compare ideas and correct errors.

·         If you're using MEC for a distance learning course, a class blog is a great way for students to submit written homework and keep in touch with their teacher.

·         Using topics from MEC courses is a great way to provide your learners with inspiration for their blog postings. Another useful resource might be Web Projects, as they cover a wide range of topics and levels, exposing learners to authentic language and encouraging them to study independently. Learners could complete a Web Project and then each write a posting on their findings or their opinions on the subject.

Do you have any ideas for using MEC resources with class blogs? Have you made a blog with your class and would like to share your experience with us? We'd be delighted to hear from you either by email or as a comment on this posting. Get blogging!

Our thanks to Ann and everyone who participated in the clinic. The participants were:

·         Monica Vlad - EQUALS EuroEd, Romania

·         Anna Rolinska - AKCENT International House, Prague, Czech Republic

·         Travis Rout - British Council, Czech Republic 

·         Neil McLaren - British Council, Slovakia

·         James Glanville - British Council, Slovakia

·         Suzanne Mordue - British Council, Slovakia

·         Astrid krake - VHS Munich, Germany

·         Katia Lotte - FL&C, France

·         James Frith - BELL Cambridge, UK

·         Roberto Murakami - Cultura Inglesa, Brazil

 

Please don't hesitate to contact us with your questions and comments. If you are interested in attending the next MEC clinic you can contact us by leaving a comment or emailing s.milligan@macmillan.com

 

Friday, April 25, 2008 11:31:36 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 

MEC Training Assistant, Steph Earnshaw, writes:

 

On 6th November we held the fifth MEC clinic. Vilson Coimbra of CISP, São Paulo, Brazil presented his ideas for integrating Campus activities into your lesson plan.

 

Vilson Coimbra

 

Click on the links below to see a downloadable PDF of Vilson's clinic presentation:

 

Integrating Campus activities into your lesson plan.pdf (871.92 KB) 

 

Vilson has been working with Campus for over three years and was able to provide some really useful examples of how to use MEC in class. At CISP Campus is used as part of the general curriculum and also for remedial work and distance courses. They previously used Campus with data projectors for class work but they have now successfully moved on to interactive whiteboards for all their MEC classroom activities. You can find out more about Vilson and CISP by clicking here and here.

 

The clinic participants were:

 

Marc Pillich-Wright - EAQUALS, Romania

Katia Lotte - FL&C, France

Sandra Brady - FL&C, France  

Karen Thompson - FL&C, France

Astrid Krake - VHS, Germany

Donna Liersch - VHS, Germany

 

Thank you very much to Vilson and everyone who took part. Don't hesitate to contact us with your questions and comments.

Thursday, November 08, 2007 2:27:52 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 

MEC Training Assistant, Steph Earnshaw, writes:

 

We're delighted to announce that The European Association for Quality Language Services (EAQUALS) has recently started using Macmillan English Campus. Their MEC training took place on the 19th and 20th of September at the Hampsted school of English in London, and on the 24th and 25th September at the CLM Bell school in Trento, Italy.

 

The Piazza, Trento 

 

It was a real pleasure to meet the participants for both the London and Trento training sessions. Participants came from EAQUALS schools in London, Italy, Poland, Romania and Greece and many already had plans for MEC courses and ideas for using MEC in their school. There was also lots of positive feedback on MEC along with some useful suggestions for future MEC developments.

The Hampstead school of English, London

Most of the EAQUALS schools plans to start using MEC immediately so we look forward to finding out how they're getting on.

Thursday, October 04, 2007 12:53:17 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  |