Friday 17 February 2012

Putting Your Vocab Bag Online: Memrise and Quizlet

Intro

This post is essentially a comparision of two websites, Memrise and Quizlet. Both sites allow you to upload groups of words, both sites have activities to help students learn the words. My main interest has been from the perspective of making our class vocab bag virtual but they are a vocab-building resource you might encourage your learners to use regardless.

Background

For a couple of years I've created a 'Vocab Bag' page for students on our class wiki. The purpose of this was to encourage more self-study. Although this proved a good reference and record for the students, it basically ended up being just a list of words. Once when I was feeling particularly keen, I found time to link some of the words to online dictionary definitions and others to howjsay.com, where they could at least hear the words pronounced. This example is as good as it got but I found it far too time-consuming in the end and really not that good. Memrise and Quizlet offer much more.


What Memrise and Quizlet have in common

  • Easy sign up

  • Option to sign in with Facebook

  • Ability to create your own word groups

  • Option to pinch other people's word groups

  • Words can be either paired with their translation or English definition

  • Games and activities to help learn the words

  • Quick and easy to upload new words


What's special about Memrise

The sound thinking behind Memrise is that words must be revisited and recycled before being commited to the long-term memory. In Memrise words are seeds which first grow in your greenhouse and then are moved to your garden. If you don't water your words, you'll get an email informing you that 'some of your words are wilting'. Here's are virtual vocab bag from term 1 this year.


Why I like Quizlet best

Whilst Memrise is certainly more attractive-looking, Quizlet has a number of features which make it my current choice:

  1. Students can listen to the words!

  2. You can monitor your students by creating an online group

  3. There's a greater variety of games and activities


And what the students think

From a class of 10 adult intermediate students, 6 have signed with 3 students very active on this term's virtual vocab bag. I see this as a success. What I need to do next is to find out why some of the class are seemingly not interested. It maybe that web-based learning doesn't appeal to them – this has to be accepted by the tech-loving teacher! On the other hand, it may be they're having problems getting started – a class trip to the computer room might be the answer.

I recommend giving it a try whether or not you're a tech-loving teacher - it's certain some of your students will benefit. Give me a shout if you want help setting it up with your class.

2 comments:

gavin said...

Memrise: Ss can listen to sound files recorded by real native speakers
Quizlet: Stephen Hawking computer vocoder sound with strange intonation

Memrise: have to create an account to use
Quizlet: can be used without account

Memrise: individual wordlists which can't be modified / added to by others
Quizlet: goup collaboration possible

Memrise: 3 different practice exercise types
Quizlet: 5 different practice exercise types. "Scatter" game excellent for WC IWB use.

Memrise: competitive element - get more points than your pals / "cohort" members
Quizlet: competitive element - beat the records for the games.

Overall I think memrise is better for personal use, building up a personal vocab bag, but Quizlet is more versaltile for use as a class vocab bag, especially if you have students who aren't likely to sign up and use it at home.

Stanners said...

Thanks, Gavin. Fair comment although I think the computer voice is reasonably good for individual words but agree that the intonation is a bit off when it attempts to read the definition.
Yes, I thought about you and a mutual friend re: the competitive element - didn't D. spend 2 solid days indoors learning Chinese?