Tuesday, April 29, 2008

MEC Senior Editor, Jeremy Smith, writes:

 

Scientists identify biggest challenges of the future

 

 

This week's news item, adapted for MEC from a news article originally published in the Guardian Weekly, is about a study looking at the biggest technological challenges of the next 50 years.

 

Go to the News Items section on your Work Area screen to find out what the challenges are and how they can be met.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008 3:56:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, April 25, 2008

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 [1]  | 
Thursday, April 24, 2008

MEC Marketing Coordinator, Jane Petrie, writes:

 

The Moscow Institute of Linguistics - a Macmillan English Campus Case Study

 

 

The Moscow Institute of Linguistics (MIL) is one of the newest users of the Macmillan English Campus (MEC). MIL started using MEC in December 2007 and teaches students ranging in age from 12 to 60, at a variety of levels, from beginner to advanced.

 

We asked teachers at MIL to explain how they were using MEC and what benefits the implementation of a blended learning solution has brought.

 

A practical solution

 

Asked why MIL chose to adopt MEC, Vadim Klimachev, a senior teacher, says it provides the opportunity 'to make language learning highly effective, interesting, up-to-date and diverse'.

 

He describes the way in which, having been assigned to an appropriate course, 'the students are asked to complete a set of tasks within a specific period (normally a week or two); typical difficulties and mistakes are analysed and discussed in class with the teacher'.

 

One of the things that the teachers highlight is the flexibility that using MEC brings. As one teacher says, MEC 'can be used in accordance with students' individual needs. There is plenty of listening, which is often the most difficult aspect for language learners, and it can be used both in class and at home.'

 

Other teachers, asked how they use MEC, highlight its usefulness for homework and how, once exercises have been completed, it often leads to further discussion in class.

 

Learner autonomy

 

Students benefit from being able to work at their own pace, completing supplementary activities if necessary. Those who happen to miss a lesson can 'use MEC to go through material covered during a class they missed' and MEC also makes it easy to 'work on the aspects they need to revise'.

 

Other teachers also highlight the way that MEC 'offers students the opportunity to work independently' and provides 'a wide range of exercises on different topics'. They also note that many 'students are carried away by the process of testing their English on the internet and fulfil much more than the tasks set by the teacher!'

 

In this context, the automatic markbook is really useful, with teachers commenting that students enjoy 'the ability to check their results immediately and retry exercises'.

 

Teacher support

 

MEC also helps teachers to support students with greater effectiveness, due to its in-built monitoring facilities such as the markbook. Vadim highlights the 'ease of checking students' results and evaluating progress of their work'. Consequently, the time saved in lesson preparation and marking can be used to support students in other ways.

 

The approach taken by MIL works because of this complementary combination of face-to-face teaching and online resources.

 

Feedback about MEC and e-learning in general points to the fact that being able to use online resources increases motivation, and provides a structured and easy way to practise. In doing so, learner confidence is increased and results are improved. This produces a great result for the Moscow Institute of Linguistics!

 

 

Thursday, April 24, 2008 3:35:52 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, April 23, 2008

MEC Product Trainer, Sarah Milligan, writes:

 

Do you have an IWB in your school but you're not sure how to use it?

 

 

 If you have a Promethean Activboard you can complete an online Level 1 - Foundations Skills Course for free!

 

Click on this link Promethean Learning and create yourself an account. You will find the course under Accredited Courses along with other Promethean IWB online courses.

 

You can also find some tips on how to use IWBs on Youtube. Click on the link below to find six short videos made by PrometheanUK.

 

PrometheanUK Youtube

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 23, 2008 3:17:25 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Tuesday, April 22, 2008

MEC Senior Editor Jeremy Smith writes:

 

Great green land grab

 

 

This week's news item, adapted for MEC from a news article originally published in the Guardian Weekly, is about the growth of private conservation, where people buy land to protect it from environmental destruction.

 

Go to the News Items section on your Work Area screen to find out about the effects this type of conservation may have on the environment.

 

You could also ask students to find out about the following organizations mentioned in the news item and what they do:

Forest Peoples Programme

Wildlands project

Tuesday, April 22, 2008 2:00:06 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, April 18, 2008

MEC Marketing Assistant, Julian Chant, writes:

If you're after a simple and flexible graphical search tool to use with your class, then look no further than Boolify.



What is the logic behind Boolify? In the words of the company's developers:

'Librarians, teachers and parents have told us how hard it is for students to understand web searching. Boolify makes it easier for students to understand their web search by illustrating the logic of their search, and by showing them how each change to their search instantly changes their results.'

Search results are presented through Google's "Safe Search STRICT" technology, so not only is the tool a great way to understand and build searches, it also has great results provided by Google.

As Lars Hyland points out:

'This is a simple, yet powerful, attempt to address some of the core challenges we face in a networked world - how do you find something of value, and how do you decide what you find is of value. Tools like Boolify will help us all learn to use online content in more sophisticated and objective ways.'

The site also provides a number of great lessons on search including:

* Evaluating Websites
* Basic Boolean (And, Or, Not)
* Refining search results

These would be great fun to do in class with an Interactive White Board (IWB) which is an excellent display for dragging the colourful icons around the screen.

To learn more about Boolean search logic, take a look at the downloadable PDF of our seventh online MEC Clinic entitled 'Searching on MEC and MEDO'.

Friday, April 18, 2008 1:57:01 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, April 16, 2008

MEC Product Trainer, Sarah Milligan, writes:

 

Make your learners film stars!

Have you ever heard of Brick Films? It's a website full of films with characters and sets made almost entirely of Lego! These films have been painstakingly put together and are available completely free to watch for everyone.

Here's an idea for how to use this website in class with students of intermediate level or above:

  1. To teach this lesson you will need to be in a computer lab or have access to an Interactive Whiteboard or a data projector linked to a computer.

  1. Click on the link below which will take you to the website.

     Brick Films

 

  • Or go to Youtube and write in lego films in the search.

Youtube

 

  1. Choose a film that you think your learners will like or that fits in with a theme you are using in class.  

 

    4. Allow your learners to watch part or all of the film a few times in class without the sound. Depending on your classroom facilities, they can watch the films on an IWB, on their computer or on a data projector. Remember you can direct your students to the website and film by publishing the webpage to them in My Web Links.

 

    5.  Put your learners in groups. Each learner in a group takes on one of the characters from the Brick Film and together the group writes a short script for the film. If you have chosen a film without much dialogue the group can write a narrative to go with the film instead.

 

    6. When the groups have finished they can read out their scripts or narratives while the film plays, the rest of the class listen. As an extra activity your learners could listen to the real script to compare it with their own.  

 

    7. To finish the lesson or for homework you could use any of the following MEC resources about films and movie stars.

 

  • A Titanic Romance - Language Exercise (level 4)
  • The last film I saw - Listening Activity (level 5)
  • The making of Titanic - Listening Activity (level 5)
  • Comments on the cinema - Language Exercise (level 6)

 

Wednesday, April 16, 2008 4:27:31 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Tuesday, April 15, 2008

MEC Senior Editor Jeremy Smith writes:

 

Barricades come down in Cyprus

 

 

This week's news item, adapted for MEC from a news article originally published in the Guardian Weekly, is about the dismantling of barricades that divided Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus.

 

Go to the News Items section on your Work Area screen to find out what this could mean for the future of the island.

 

You could direct students to the following web link for a summary of the recent history of Cyprus:

 

BBC Country profiles - Cyprus

Tuesday, April 15, 2008 3:28:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  |