Showing posts with label IWBs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IWBs. Show all posts

Friday, 22 June 2012

Passive learning on the IWB

Does the maximisation of the IWB have a positive influence on teaching?  Walker-Tileston (2004) argues that children learn best through their dominant senses, seeing, hearing and touching.  Interactive classrooms can appeal to all three senses simultaneously through a variety of visual representations, sounds and the capacity to touch and interact with the board.  Therefore, I carried out a short experiment to see whether my Jnr3 students retained and remembered vocabulary and grammar structures better through memory games on the IWB.  The experiment was carried out for a period of 6 weeks on units 11-13 of English in Mind on 12 students.  Memory games were used on the IWB for the vocabulary in units 11 and 13 and for the grammar in unit 12.  The resources used were: Pelmanism on the IWB, Quizzlet.com and the English in Mind DVD.  At the end of each unit, students had to complete a unit check on the target language covered.  The results obtained demonstrated that in both vocabulary and grammar exercises, students’ average marks were higher when only the coursebook had been used.  However, marks were generally higher for vocabulary exercises (average 75%) than grammar (average 68%).  To complete the experiment students were asked to fill in a questionnaire at the end to reflect on the sample lessons.  The results were quite contradictory.  Their responses revealed that students unanimously preferred doing exercises on the IWB and preferred vocabulary exercises in general.  However, 73% felt they had learnt more doing exercises in the coursebook and 64% felt that they had learnt more from grammar exercises.  91% found exercises more interesting on the IWB and found exercises more difficult in the coursebook.  Ironically, when asked to choose which exercises they had learnt the most from this year, they all chose exercises from the coursebook (50% chose Check your progress and 50% chose Read and listen).  With regards to general feedback, 55% would like more exercises on the IWB or in the computer room, especially relating to grammar, 36% would like less homework and 9% would like more exercises relating to vocabulary. 

It is clear from the results that students enjoy working with the IWB, but they also seem to have a preference for what is easier, which did equate to better acquisition when learning vocabulary in general.  Even though the lessons included an element of interactivity, the fact that I was teaching old things in new ways resulted in passive learning, thus students only remember a meagre amount of the target language taught.  I believe that the uniqueness of IWB technology lies in the possibility for an intersection between technical and pedagogic interactivity.  Transforming teaching and learning with technology is a function of pairing thoughtful product design with current research in order to support instructional assessment practices that work.  Unfortunately, I speak the language of technology with a pronounced accent.  To eliminate passive learning and engage the digital era students when using the IWB it is essential that new content be taught in new ways.


(posted on behalf of Flor)

Tuesday, 12 April 2011

Getting Students To Produce IWB Flipcharts

Like a lot of teachers, I've been worried about hogging the IWB a bit too much. The recent insett on getting students to create flipcharts was really helpful and interesting. It gave me the idea of getting students to produce 5-minute tasks based on module 5 of English File Upp-int. One of my worries was that it would take up too much time so that's why I called them 5-minute tasks. I thought up the tasks and divided them into 'revision' tasks i.e. on areas we'd already covered and 'teaching' tasks i.e. on areas which were due to come up over the next few weeks. We then spent an hour in the CALL room and I monitored closely and made suggestions as to activity type - a lot of the final products were mix and match activities e.g. one pair wrote up rules for using 'used to' with examples for each rule. The other students then had to match the example to the rule. Over the next few weeks the students presented their 5-minute activities. They proved great as fillers and both the presenters and their audience seemed really engaged. And the objective of making the classes more learner-centred was certainly achieved. My biggest worry had been that the hour in the CALL room would be laborious, and would challenge their computer rather than their language skills. However, I stressed that the project would only be successful if they did the preparation part in English and they reponded well to this. This was something of an experiment for me, as I suspect that my classes generally rate low on the 'learner-autonomy' scale, but it worked out really well.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Friday, 12 November 2010

Top tips for creating flipcharts

Some simple easy ideas - plus a video showing how to implement them - for creating attractive flipcharts from José Picardo's Box of Tricks. Enjoy!

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

ActivInspire - using a personal profile to save your settings on IWBs

Did you know that you create a personal profile with your favourite settings? This means that when you open up ActivInspire it will always show the same set of tools, the background colour of pages etc that you have decided on.

  • With ActivInspire open (in the staffroom or classroom, it doesn't matter which), select Edit from the top menu and select Profiles...

  •  Now you can set your flipchart page colour

  • Choose what tools appear on the toolbar

  • And decide how many colours appear in your palette
  • You can also make sure that ActivInspires shared resources - images, sounds, backgrounds etc - load and are available for you to use (on some computers in the staffroom they haven't been loading)
  • To do this, click on settings and uncheck Use default 'Shared Resources' path
  • Click on .... next to Shared resources file




  • And this window will open. On My Computer find the T:drive > Materials > ActivInspire Resources


  • Now click on the little disk with the pencil (top right-hand corner) to save your profile
 

  • Save it wherever you want to on your computer (perhaps the T.drive is best then it will be accessable from both staffroom and classroom)

  • Now when you click on Shared Resources in the Resource Browser (if you can't see this on the right of your flipchart, select View > Browsers), all the resources should be available for you to use.
  • If you need to load your profile in a classroom. Again, select Edit from the top menu and select Profiles and click on the folder symbol (top right-hand corner) and find it on your computer where you saved it.


Monday, 2 August 2010