Showing posts with label best-of-ELT-blogosphere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best-of-ELT-blogosphere. Show all posts

Best-of-ELT-Blog-Posts (Karenne's picks) January 2011

molten earth
What was really "hot" this month
Dave Dodgson kicked off a bit of controversy, striking a nerve when he asked why he should have to pay to present at conferences; George Vassilakis explores their commercialization; Adam Simpson delves into the costs and effort that goes into hosting a conference and explains why he thinks that yes, in fact, you should pay for the privilege and Sharon explains that, from her perspective, by paying a fee you are actually permitting a fellow educator to sit down at the same conference table as you, thereby contributing to the democratization of education.  What do you think?

Although unconnected to the discussion, Anna Varna pipes up with how a presentation she attended didn't live up to her expectations and ends with a touching recall of what keeps us teachers teaching!


Teacher training
In Unplugging Teacher Development, Willy Cardoso challenges us to think about the value of  staffroom discussions with peers over workshops and conferences.  I think he's touched on a major point on why so few teachers do pursue professional development.  He also describes what he would like to see in teacher-training programs.  Although I didn't quite catch the connection to rugby, David Warr then provides ideas on teacher-training-unplugged that are worth reflecting on.

John Hughes, in a very practical series on the management issues involved in teacher training, presents a tick-off list for recruting and managing teacher trainers and Alex Case, ever taking the piss,  suggests 25 different ways to get away with being a crap English teacher.

Adam Simpson lays out a more serious and very helpful list of 10 motivation theories and thinks about why our students are "just not into it... "   Professor Baker has started an interesting series of posts entitled "Explain it to me like I'm an 8yr old" and his post: Connectivism and Connected Knowledge is a must-read.   

Scott Thornbury creates a video conversation laying out the history and criticisms of PPP in ELT - sparking off a highly dynamic discussion: it's worth watching the vlog but especially  reading the ensuing points of view of his contributing commenters.  In the knowledge sharing marketplace, Phillip Towndrow explores ICT and pedagogy: should it be teacher-centered, technology-centered or learner-centered?  



Language & linguistics
Voxy's Theresa Dold shares 15 insightful language and culture infographics.  Beautifully presented and interesting particularly the one made up of the demographics of English on Planet Earth.   Gabe Doyle shares a story about the need for linguistic humility and thinks about the culture of the words we use, a lesson we can all learn from!   Vicki Hollett unveils an ad for the British television show, Law and Order, and discusses translations from UK English-to-US English.  (p.s. Vicki, you really must see The Wire: finger-nail-biting-brilliant!) 

Key Dogmeist and YahooGroupMod, Fiona Mauchline, writes up a guest post for Ceri Jones on ways translation can have a valid position in language learning and shares some excellent tips.  Mark Liberman, in another humorous piece shares with us a bit of grammar's history relating to the  emergence of progressive passive (passive continous) and how it replaced the passival.  Bet you didn't know that!  



On being in the classroom
Cecilia Coelho reveals a personal error in the way she communicated with a student in  her post, the power of the words we say.   Debate opens on the position of the educator vs the intrinsic beingness of teachers' humanity, responding spontaneously to difficult classroom situations.  Also on her blog, she hosts a post from Dave Dodgson who reflects on his life as language learner.   

In his quintessentially philosophical style, albeit that I think I disagree with him...  Diarmuid Fogarty suggests that the deeper we move into getting students to understand and analyze language,  the less they learn.  Candy von Olst faces the word "unless" head on and winds up with a headache, leading me to laugh and speculate that hmmm... perhaps, Fogarty's on to something.



Lessons
Eva Buyuksimkesyan shares an extremely clever idea of listening to music in another language while trying to guess at the lyrics and writing poems in English; Mike Harrison collaborates with David Warr to create a language plant of Martin Niemöller's poem: First they came; Claudio Azevedo shows us  how to use the film, Did you hear about the Morgans, as a way to practice imperatives.  

And then on the way to work one day, Paul Braddock spontaneously snaps pics of a rather unpleasant lad cutting his nails which leads to him dreaming up an extremely clever lesson tip for using camera-phones with our digital students.   David Vincent found a funny picture he recommends using as  a conversation starter and Ceri Jones closes in on translations in a truly inspired lesson plan comparing literature texts.



ELT EdTech
On the DELTA blog, Nik Peachey lays out the advantages and disadvantages of iPads in the classroom;  Angela Maiers shares a very interesting infographic on cell phone usage - worth exploring with adult Business English language-learners: how are mobile phones affecting their industries or responsibilities?    David Reed, of  the best ELT mobile learning blog out there in the 'sphere, shows us how students can blog directly from their phones to the platform, Posterous.

Ozge continues her alphabetized analysis of Web tools - very useful, I love this series!  Tyson Seburnt presents SoundCloud - a very interesting way to work with authentic listening materials; Ana Maria Mendes shows us a cool way to share youtube videos and Jen Verschoor shares with us how she lost a job due to the fact she teaches with technology in her classroom :-(



The business of teaching
Larry Ferlazzo discusses Merit Pay and provides links supporting why he thinks it is a bad idea:  Jason Renshaw worries about the ELT industry and  questions whether or not a superpower is emerging and how we might be feeling about that.  

And finally, David Truss neatly presents a case for educators being in the learning business not the teaching business and asks why time for professional development can't be embeded into our paid responsibities.


Well, that's it... my wrap up of do-read-these-they're-top-notch-articles written in January, if you'd like to read what else has been circulating the 'sphere, visit this link.  To read what I wrote about in January, come here.

Hope you've now found many new articles to enjoy reading at your leisure,
Karenne

p.s.  also, do visit this month's ESL Carnival by Alice Mercer, it contains an absolutely superb list of posts!

The ELT Blogosphere: May 2010

On Friday 28th, 2010 I came home after a really hard day of teaching to find out, via Twitter, that Kalinago English has been chosen as Bab.la's #2 Language Teaching blog!   It's truly an honor and if you're one of my lovely readers or friends or family members who voted for me thank you very, very much!

In fact what I discovered also, once I recovered and looked at the Lexiophiles' round-up was that a whopping 15 members of BELTfree, an online community dedicated to ELT bloggers, made it into the top 100 and, as the group's mistress (moderator) I am even  prouder of this than my own prize.

The thing is, for those who have been following my conversations on Um, I hate to ask, on principle I tend to have reservations about contests of this nature.  

From a marketing perspective, it is important to have these sorts of badges on our blogs - it's part of social proof if you will, which is why we wear them, but what happens whenever these awards occur is that inevitably other blogs of similar or even higher quality are omitted - perhaps they don't have a significant number of contacts who can vote for them, or they weren't able to suck it up and toot their own horns (trust me, there is a certain loss of face involved in doing that) but it doesn't mean that their work has no value or isn't appreciated.

These monthly (or bi-monthly when I'm knee deep in other projects) come without any sort of shiny badge** to put on your blogs...  it's just me Karenne Sylvester, fellow TEFL teacher telling you, my blogging colleagues and professional readers: here's the quality, I've traveled throughout the globe to find it, have saved the best of the best posts I read and organized them for you - so go read and go enjoy!


(Sorry it really is a bit of a bumper edition this time 'round - forgot to publish April's due to IATEFL and the Carnival and some of the posts were just too good to decide not to... so it's probably best to use this list as an online magazine index and choose  to read the ones which sound most up your street!    Or come back later...)

**do you  want me to make a nice shiny badge? Or would you like to make me one that I can share with the stars below? :-)

To catch up posts from this blog see:
Kalinago English summary


In the ELT Blogosphere

TEFL industry

Methodology, Pedagogy, Linguistics

Teaching English as a Foreign Language


On Technology

Lessons using technology


Lessons without "technology"

Hidden Gems (Posts from the Past)

Introducing New ELT Bloggers on the Block
    Old Bloggers on the block: Why not pick one of these and put it into your google-reader, decide to read all of their posts and comment frequently and encourage them in their new style-writing process...


    And if all that wasn't enough...

    See you next month!
    Karenne
    image credit: Planet Earth Remix

    10 ELT bloggers who turned me on to blogging

    I'm a wee bit late... (I will be saying that a lot in the next few weeks)

    There's this really fun blog-meme going 'round the 'sphere at the moment called Vale a pena ficar de olho nesse blog (it's worth keeping an eye on this blog) and I've been very nicely mentioned/included by:
    Thank you very much for your luv!
      Now, it's my turn to do this spreading of the goodwill and pointing out great blogs to put in your reader but thing is, we're not supposed to mention blogs which have been mentioned by other people and all the goodies have been listed and listed and relisted.   

      Darren on Lives of Teachers made a very valid call out to shake things up a bit so I tossed around doing a post entitled the 10 Blogs About Blogs which Taught Me How to Blog... 


      Jason, don't you dare gazump me... got-it?  
      :-)

      then decided, nah, that'd be way better saved for the promised series of guest-posts I'll be doing on other people's blogs about becoming a blogger- more on that series to start soon, however no dates, so that I won't have to write even more sorry I'm lates :-)  

      Did I mention my computer crashed - did I? did I? 
      Just as I was supposed to be relaxing after a lot of 
      stressful months... :-( 


      So... instead I thought I'd tell you all about the ELT blogs I was reading and learning from back in 2007 and 2008 before I tried dipping toes in myself.

      So the He who Probably Doesn't Remember being one of my biggest influences - the one who got me off my butt & filling blank blog pages (as like everyone else I'd started a blog and then didn't know what to do with it for ages...)

      was none other than the Dude from That'SLife:  

      Gavin Dudeney

      Yup, Gavin - it's your fault. 


      See, prior to his NetVantage workshop at ELTAF where Gavin was holding a talk in Frankfurt about the various web2.0 tools implementable by companies for marketing one's business, I'd mostly been rather an awestruck reader and very occasional blogger on my own website.   

      A reader of non educational blogs, yet not really sure how to blog, like most good people spent a good time trawling through the 'net trying to find others doing it well in our field  to learn from, Gavin made it seem so easy in our discussion over a cafeteria lunch so I looked around and found some good sites: to be honest it simply blew me away, the thought that there were actually teachers out there who wrote about whatever they wanted to (and not always politely and sometimes completely crazily and sometimes they made me laugh and sometimes they made me angry and sometimes they motivated me... and I was so intrigued by the way it looked like they were actually having conversations with their readers)...

      Sometimes what they wrote about had absolutely absolutely ZILCH to do with teaching and sometimes they were  oh-so-very-full of how amazingly wonderful they were as human beings but sometimes there were gems:  filled with extraordinary teaching tips and ideas for using technology in the classroom and I wanted in... 

      Boy, I wanted in...

      Here's a list of the nine other bloggers who influenced me to join in on the ELT Blogosphere

      When I first found his site (actually pre-Dude) I was terribly confused - I mean why did his most recent articles appear at the top instead of like a book, in order, right? I had to read a lot about blogging and a lot of blogs before I realized that's the way they're supposed to go.   

      He often took the piss out of methodology, still does, and he made funky lists of things teachers should do  to be more effective and surely that wasn't allowed? I mean TEFL is serious teaching.  To be frank, no matter how modest he is, you are not an ELT blogger until you have studied this blog.   The man is a genius, dive through his archives: go, learn.  

      I used to simply stare at Nik's blogs and wonder how and why anyone in the whole world would write that much and be that dedicated to doing something for education just for the sake of it.  He was enormous influence and I caught the bug from him.

      Ditto.  But to be honest, he still does this to me - when working with my students reading blogs and looking at our reader I see up-close just how often he posts and how varied and far-reaching his work is.   Sometimes I suspect he does all of this in one giant batch - it's mind-blowing.

      Ditto.  He posts every single day and many, many times and he knows absolutely everything about anything related to EFL and current themes and events and teaching tips and technology advice and whenever you find yourself in a bind and you don't know what to teach tomorrow : visit his blog, you will walk away with many, many ideas.  

      This was the first serious-about-teaching, ELT blog which I found and although The ELT Notebook is no longer updated, there is an enormous wealth of posts there ranging from how to teach different skills, working in one-2-one scenarios, teacher development and loads of lesson ideas.

      She didn't manage to turn me on to Second Life but like Sue, she did turn me on to the idea of talking about lessons and sharing one's own professional development via a blog.

      In the beginning, I tried to maintain two blogs - one for teachers and one for my students.  In the end I couldn't manage both and gave up How to learn English.  However, Clare's blog was an inspiration for how to write in short bursts providing readable and easily digestible text for language learners.

      I will always, always be fond of Sandy:  he put the edge on edublogging.  He deals with real issues in his own particular way, on his own terms - sometimes I might raise an eyebrow at the way he writes or the words he uses but he tackles what is not tackled openly elsewhere and has thus, earned my absolute respect.


      And last but not least...

      10. David Deubel
      Well, by the time I got serious about my blogging and started really delving into the theories of the blogosphere, the concepts behind communicating in this fashion, the sheer immediacy of it all, the greatest lesson I carried away from brilliant writers like Darren Rowse, Liz Strauss and Chris Brogan was that who you share your 'sphere with is of incredible importance - you need to reach out to them and you need to work with them.  

      The blogosphere is not about single people writing articles, it's about a community conversing.  

      So I started looking for people who understood this.  And it goes without saying that Mr EFLClassroom2.0 is all about the love of sharing and the gift of community. :-) Thanks, David.

      Best, Karenne


      If you're an edublogger too - who was it that convinced you to start a blog, who influenced your style and approach, taught you the ropes?


      p.s. Sorry, was limited to only ten blogs but if there were more allowed here are 10 more (!) who've been in my reader since the 'early' days :   SethRonaldo, Jamie, Mike, DaveESL, Graham, Pete, David V, Troy, and Aniya


      p.p.s. As often occurs, Alex and I have similar ideas at more or less the same time - read his history of ELT blogging here.

      EFL Carnival of Lessons Prezi

      I'm a whole month and a day late.  

      Sorry... if you submitted a post and have been wondering where on earth and when on earth it'd be posted - really many, many, many apologies for taking so long to put the lesson carnival together... it has been very busy round Kalinago's way: presentations, conferences, computer-crash, eeee....

      Anyway, thing was... see, you wouldn't believe the quantity and quality of absolute creativity, inspiration and sheer brilliance which exists out there in the blogosphere - your peers, well they have some mean ideas and put together challenging and dynamic lessons for our students... and the first version of this  blog post and carnival was well, it kind of resembled one of those supplementary activity books - you know, all dry methodological facts and information in orderly boxes and it dully ran on for a whole eight pages, completely bypassing all the energy put in by my fellow ELT blogging teachers.


      So I went stop.  

      I had to respond in kind...

      So I put together a Prezi - (and um, had to learn how to put together a Prezi)... and it's below.  

      To use it, click through in sequence from blogger to post or randomly select wherever you want to go, midstream.  Whenever you see a lesson you'd like to do with your students or you'd like to zoom in to something in particular, scroll in/out with your mouse and whenever you want to get on over to a specific post mentioned on the canvas, click on the links near red arrows...  You can also download it onto your own desktop or embed it within any community website to click to the links from there.

      Have fun and enjoy this roller-coaster ride through the ELT blogosphere!











      Thank you very much to the teachers, materials writers and bloggers who participated in this ESL/EFL Carnival:

      Best,
      Karenne
      image credit: Venice carnival by Neomodus photos - http://www.flickr.com/photos/7935996@N04/4392393813/sizes/m/

      NB:  Larry Ferlazzo, King of the ELT bloggers is the organizer of the EFL/ESL carnivals.  He keeps track of the carnivals and spreads the news throughout the blogosphere inviting submissions and hosts.  The next ESL/EFL carnival will be on June 1st, 2010 and will be hosted by Mary Ann Zehr.

      You can also use this link to make your submission to the next carnival.

      ELT Blogosphere & Twitterverse, Summary Feb 2010

      Top posts on Kalinago English in February
      Reminder: 
      ELT Carnival of Lessons, deadline March 21st, 2010


      And the stuff I really enjoyed reading last month....


      Teaching English and other ELT Related Issues


        Thought-provoking, challenging and interesting posts on teaching from out there in the Blogosphere



        Lessons, Tips and Ideas for the classroom

          Articles and Links to Share with our Learners

            Technology Related News, Issues and Tips

            Social Media


              New!!! ELT-Bloggers to check out


              Useful links related to this posting:
              Teacher Reboot Camp, What did they Tweet
              Larry Ferlazzo, Monthly Best Twee


              Best,
              Karenne

              ELT Blogosphere and Twitterverse, Summary January 2010

              Stuff I wrote and stuff I really enjoyed reading this month....

              Teaching English and other ELT Related Issues
              from Kalinago English

              from the Blogosphere

              from the Twitterverse




              Lessons, Tips & Ideas for the classroom
              from Kalinago English

              from the Blogosphere




              from the Twitterverse




              Technology Related Issues and Tips
              from Kalinago English
               
              from the Blogosphere


              from the Twitterverse








              Social Media
              from Kalinago English

              from the Blogosphere



              from the Twitterverse


              New!!! ELT-Bloggers to check out



              Useful links related to this posting:
              Lives of Teachers, Weekly Twitter Updates
              Teacher Reboot Camp, What did they Tweet

              Best,
              Karenne

              Working on my appetite for learning, September 09

              My monthly summary of the best of the blogosphere is ready to be pulled out of the proverbial oven - so much written this month: in here, out there within the community and right across the entire edu-twitterverse: all very much worth taking pause and biting into.


              On Kalinago English


              I was honoured to host two more guest pieces as part of the She-in-ELT series: Shelly Terrell wrote us a beautiful article about the work of Sister Luz Moreno and Alex Case sort of did a spoof piece on a character based on the many experiences of different female characters he's known, taught with personally - so um yea, Michael Lewis probably didn't say those words, well, not exactly.

              I attended a very dynamic forum moderated by Scott Thornbury then wrote about the new mandate for those of us who find teaching with technology beneficial for our students (including a film of what one of my student's thinks) - the comments on that post got me kick off another series of posts... on why I mostly don't like coursebooks.

              In the middle of that, I celebrated my blog's first anniversary!

              Filmed a tech tip for you - using smartphones in the classroom. Wrote a rather heartfelt piece on globalisation, professionalism in the TEFL industry and our role in that, got cracking good advice on pronuncing vowels (i for i-pod, e -email: it works you guys, thanks so much!).

              I also posted a piece on motivation with adult language learners... to be continued in the coming month (have to process and edit the videos).


              In the blogosphere


              I really enjoyed A passion for warcraft by Gavin Dudeney and Marisa Constantinides' with or without you - both related to teaching with or without technology, the themes of the SEETA discussion.

              Gavin, by the way, is looking for help on a presentation he's doing on attitudes to using technology so if you're in the camp of the non-believers, do please head on over and explain why.

              Tamas Lorincz shared his less encouraged but more determined thoughts on teaching against the odds and Vicki Hollett has been writing about the theory of the mind - the thoughts of others complete with a very fascinating video on how we know what someone else is thinking.

              Which brings me on over to Anne's gorgeous v-blog on signs and communication which made me write a whole bunch of nonsense in the comments there.


              Found the TEFL Tradesman's post on Life in the 3rd division an awful bump back to reality rather going up against the grain of my own posting of how important we TEFL teachers all are to globablization.

              Ah, perhaps one day... I hear word from Marxist ELF that an alternative conference is up for discussion next year - hitting some of the harder questions in our industry. More on that later but she's also looking for some help.


              Alex has already been gearing up for those issues with posts like How can we increase TEFL teachers pay? And Sara Hannam touched on some hard hitting points in her Critical Mass blog on improving conditions and joining unions.



              Thank goodness for Janet Bianchini's wonderful list of the things she's done due to her life in TEFL which cheered me up no end, along with Barbara Sakamoto's lovely piece on her cross-cultural experience in The English Auntie.



              For more great lists wrapping up the blogosphere, see also


              The twitterverse


              New to Twitter?
              Not sure how it works: see this post here.

              Hope this post was satisfying... and/or leaving with you with a hunger for even more!

              Enjoy,
              Karenne

              p.s. bonus prize to those who can correctly guess the name of the methodology author who's considering an alternative career in food photography (pics used with permission).

              The Blogosphere, the Twitterverse (ELT 08/09)

              Wrapping up what I wrote,
              showing the best I've read,
              linking the twop of the tweets...


              Summary: Kalinago English August 2009

              This month, She-in-ELT kicked off with two great pieces: one from About.com journalist Karen Schweitzer on Deborah Healey, the other by award-winning Business English textbook author, Vicki Hollett, who wrote about her OUP ed, Cristina Whitecross and later on this week we'll have Gavin Dudeney over to do a proper intro to the series telling us about a few of the women who've touched his professional life.

              I filmed(!) some of my students giving me feedback and solicited advice from you on doing progress checks.

              Covered the steps on how to become an ELT blogger (jam-packed with tips from 27 different bloggers) and also knocked up a quick and simple guide to using Twitter for English language teachers.

              Announced the Business English teacher's conference to be held in Poznan, Poland in November and also gave you the heads up on the scholarships available to attend IATEFL next year in Harrogate (submission deadline 18 Sept).

              Twittered on about Twitter profiles, in the space of 140 characters, provided a video lesson plan using a Microsoft advertisement as a base for cultural discussion, gave you some ideas for using drawings and/or powerpoint with language learners and at the end of the month, shared a personal story of my own near-death experience, calling for a web2.0 way to write e-wills & last testaments.

              And while all of that was going on over here

              I also found...



              The best of the ELT Blogosphere

              Ken Wilson has started blogging!

              This is no normal entry to the blogosphere - in fact, you could say, it's the very first ELT autobiographical blog from the youngest ever ELT author, the man who brought us the Mister Mondays songs and the English teaching theatre.

              A fascinating and often very amusing tale, making me think of what fun it all was back when the likes of Jeremy Harmer, Barry Tomalin and Scott Thornbury were young lads starting off teaching...

              And by the way, Vicki Hollett is calling for you to share your own starting off teaching stories with her.

              Another new prolific blogger I'm fast gaining respect for is Chwa EeLoon of the ELT Cafe in Malaysia. Chwa has a very unique and interesting style, short bursting posts about life on the job as a EFL teacher. One posting I enjoyed in particular was I'm black, you're white and she's fat.

              Isabelle Jones on My Languages announced a great competition for teenagers to create a bank of language training videos. Vicky Saumell found 12 essential steps to technology integration.

              Marisa Constantinides'
              behavour model for creating incompetence is an important read along side Andy Hockley's Mangerial reflections.


              Gavin Dudeney has been busy reinventing the wheel.

              Yeah, well, when it comes to Publishing anyway.

              Funnily enough, I actually pitched this same idea to an ELT publisher over dinner about two years ago and um... the Ed took an instant and open dislike to me and to what I considered to be the ideal solution to the photocopying of copyrighted Business English materials problem...

              Mmmmm... seems my idea might not have been quite so 'whack' - wonder what's going on in that boardroom today, LOL!

              Alex Case is a Papi. Oh, I know that might not be so interesting for you lot, but Case has a special place in my blogger's heart: he's my maestro, taught me what I know - plus, gave me my first break by letting me do a guest piece for him at a time when my blog had like 50 visitors a day! Congrats Alex!

              On a more serious note, he wrote a fab guest post for Burcu Akyol on writing articles for the ELT market and Jason Renshaw's been discussing the money ELT authors make on over here.


              For more interesting postings currently available in the blogosphere, see OneStopBlogs.




              Twop tweets from the Twitterverse


              As there are simply so many fantastic links I've favorited and you don't really need my opinions on them, I've simply decided that I'd link them below - in the same way they'd appear within my twitter stream!

              Service
              monk51295

              RT @speters: #TWBC09 More Photos of Teachers without Borders' trip to Africa: http://tinyurl.com/mbt2nk





              Learning

              cgoodey

              RT @barbsaka: Familiar & new vocab processed in same part of brain. http://bit.ly/aScNv #language #esl

              icpjones 100 Reasons to Mind Map | Mind Map Inspiration http://bit.ly/11dSIt

              cgoodey

              "Novelty seems to promote memory" RT @kdwashburn: Learning By Surprise: http://tr.im/x6fO

              rliberni

              English language learners 10 reasons to choose one to one lessons http://bit.ly/19jKS

              TEFLPet

              RT @marynabadenhors Change any written doc, RSS, blog etc. into spoken language 4 auditory learners http://www.readthewords.com Incredible!!


              Myngler

              Thought provoking article: Can switching languages change your personality? http://bit.ly/LO0Tg


              TheEngTeacher

              TOEFL speaking tips and practice materials online. Very nice too :) via @englishraven http://viigo.im/0Jiy

              monk51295

              RT @alfiekohn: the case against ed. that's focused on memorizing facts, practicing skills, & producing right answers: http://bit.ly/76obd





              Edtech

              barbsaka

              RT @carlaarena: 50 Ways to Use Wikis for a More Collaborative and Interactive Classroom | Smart Teaching http://tinyurl.com/nuogyd

              langwitches

              New blog post- Creating a poem with Animoto http://bit.ly/3tYZag

              ShellTerrell

              Gr8 find! RT @tomwhitby: RT @weemooseus: Education Podcast Network: http://www.epnweb.org/ #edtech #elearning

              PeterVogel

              RT @JRenold: RT @jsuzcampos: 100 ways to use Voicethread in Edu to Voicethread in the Classroom http://bit.ly/NQMn3


              NikPeachey

              "In the Web 2.0 world, self-directed learners must be adept at building and sustaining networks." a good read http://bit.ly/DaZ7s


              Larryferlazzo

              RT @langwitches: For digital storytelling,here is GREAT site @mnjorgensen and wonderful teacher handout 2 download http://tinyurl.com/5uhgaw





              Materials


              burcuakyol

              A great blog post by @englishraven. The last article of the 'Spread Your Knowledge' series -writing ELT materials http://bit.ly/1aEFOb

              CotterHUE

              18 FREE activities from my resource manual, Better Language Teaching #esl #efl #education - http://bit.ly/1Y9CXP



              Business and ESP English

              prestwickhouse

              RT @GuyKawasaki:12 masters of visual storytelling: http://om.ly/Iohn


              sjhannam

              @maureenmcgarvey Gr8! Not at all - I am sure we can make use of this great resource Harvard Business School http://tiny.cc/1JkWE

              carldowse

              Webquest on online brand management for business English teaching: http://bit.ly/1J0ShN

              carldowse

              Working with figures http://bit.ly/4Bho2 simple online quiz for business English learners -pronunciation of figures practice & balance sheet

              mattfirth

              English for Law Blog: http://lawee-set2.blogspot.com/




              Miscellaneous stuff that made me laugh
              or learn or think...


              thornburyscott

              @kalinagoenglish After that, try The Singing Neanderthals by Steven Mithen: language evolved out of innate musicality?


              msgregson

              woo hoo! my professor for one of my classes is a SL guru! :)


              hoprea

              RT @burcuakyol: Probably everybody knows this, but I wanted to tweet anyway. http://www.makeadifferencemovie.com/



              For more collections from the Twitterverse,
              see Valentina Dodge's excellent reactions to Tweetville,
              Larry Ferlazzo's August tweets
              & Shelly Terrell's fascinating approach to sharing tweets she's favorited
              in her weekly "What did they Tweet? series.


              Best,
              Karenne
               

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