Showing posts with label tech-tips-4-ELTeachers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tech-tips-4-ELTeachers. Show all posts

Foxy Voxy: #mlearning meets motivation in language teaching

In a rant, several weeks back I emphasized my thoughts on how I really, simply, can't see how mobile phones and language learning/teaching are ever going to lie in a bed together...  partly because of the size of the tool itself, issues related to internet access on the go, but also, most importantly to be quite frank, my main suspicion is that, like Thornbury's suspicion of products developed for IWBs, is all we're gonna wind up with is a rehash of tired and out-dated methodologies spiced up for diamond-sharp-screen-technologies (gap-fill, random-name-that-photo anyone?) but these materials won't be personalized nor learner-centered, and undoubtedly won't be an interactive learning tool and sure as heck, won't be motivational.

I sure do love being proved wrong.

Folks, it looks like a fox has slipped into the henhouse with something really rather innovative.

FOX

At first contact, when they emailed, I scoffed and almost reached for the mark-as-spam button.

Oh, here we go, I thought,  I mean just how many emails do I really have to receive each week with someone wanting to be promoted on my blog?  But this email was very different.   It didn't congratulate me  and tell me how much they just love my blog but instead I got a long, professionallly laid out  list of solid reasons why their product was worth taking a look at.  

I clicked through.

I emailed back.

We Skyped.

I put it to the student-test.

Unanamious votes all round:  they said "cool" "guile" "very cool".    They asked "can we download it in German?"  I told them not yet.  But I hope soon.

The company who've created this incredibly simple concept of sending out a 3 minute SMS/email/app with a lead in in the students' own L1 is called Voxy, headed up by Paul Gollash (who lists in his claim to fame, working within Richard Branson's venture capital wing). 

His killer team includes Manuel Morales - in charge of community outreach; Gregg Carey (co-founder) and Ed Menendez who are developing the product; Laura Martinez (journalist and blogger) their Editorial Director - she currenlty creates the daily streaks.  

Linguist Jane Sedlar and language coordinator Sandra Rubio keep them on andragogical track... and their secret weapon?


Rudy Menendez who comes in with a background in creating addictive games.

  

The language learning tool came out of a simple wish to make language learning more interesting, they ask:


Why is language learning so un-interesting? Languages are, after all, empirically exciting, useful, and empowering to all of us. Does studying it have to suck? We don't think so.

Voxy was first conceived over cold beers at a Yakatori bar in the East Village of New York and the business plan was written shortly afterwards while in San Sebastian, on the northern coast of Spain. It grew out of a fascination for evolving media (including magazines, newspapers, digital and social), and a passion for language learning in an increasingly global community. At Voxy's core is a fervent belief that there is better way to learn a new language.

Voxy raised a seed round of capital from a group of angel investors with experience building successful businesses in the for-profit education space, and a history of creating powerful consumer brands.

Software in the back records what the students are interested in, what stories they tend to click on and flashcard games based on the lexis that the students have chosen themselves goes into a personalized bank.




Voxy is a young company, founded in Feb 2010 but has already been written up in the New York TimesCNN money and TechCrunch. In the TechCrunch Disrupt Battlefield (video), Gollash quotes Chomsky saying that 98% of language teaching is just about keeping the students interested and they've met that challenge head on by creating an application which adapts seamlessly into adult life, converting relevant, topical content and turned this into a game.




Voxy uses an incremental approach, important in minimizing cognitive load.  Language is also offered in chunks - no grammar-based curriculum here although there is grammar: highlighted in context. (Hear my gasp!)

New material is presented at a level of difficulty  just beyond the students' current ability.

Students receive points based on how often they log in and play these streaks, the words they accumulate and the games they play.






Want to get involved?
As I mentioned earlier, Voxy is a young company and very eager to get real feedback from teachers and students.  The website is completely free (the i-phone app will cost a dollar) so if you happen to be a teacher reading my blog, based in the US or in Central or South America or Spain - basically anywhere where you have Spanish speaking students learning English then why not head on over to the Voxy website, mess around a bit  and then if you like, show it to your students.

If you'd like to ask questions or send in your thoughts, contact the very friendly Manuel Morales: manuel (at) voxy (dot) com.


Useful resources: 

and if you thought I was kidding when I said I am mostly suspicious of mobile technologies... do please have a thorough look at David Reed's blog on mobile ESL, he reviews products there and talks about the use of the phone in the classroom.  Well-written posts but as far as I can tell, personally, really can't figure how these apps he reviews are supposedly thinking outside the cage...   watch out ELT.


Best,
Karenne

Google for teaching adults how to describe statistics

Google is just so useful, isn't it?  But did you know that you can get your adult Business English students looking for their own data, specifically relevant to their own interests, projects and responsibilities?




 
For fun, drag the yearly scroll bar!


This incredible site, Google Public Data Explorer, offers statistics from the World Bank, Eurostat, OECD and also includes several more country-specific-options as well (Australian Bureau of Statistics, US Bureau of Labour Statistics and much, much more).

Most of the charts are completely customizable and although the fun factor, when messing about on the site trying to decide just how to present the data, is high (you can change years, colours, countries and layouts),  the very real potential for pedagogical application is even higher!

Screenshots can be taken of each data set, printed, turned into jpegs and inserted into PowerPoint/GoogleDoc presentations, however, what I like best is that the charts can be easily embedded directly on to your students' own blogs/pages/ wikis, Nings or any other learning platform you're using to teach with.








For fun, hover over the country names!


What can you encourage your students to do?  
  • Give them the link to the site or show in class if you have internet access.
  • Ask them to review the options and to personally choose a set of statistics that they are interested in knowing more about or that they need to know about for their own work/study.
  • Show them the various options for presenting information: globally vs. the country they're in/ doing business with/ countries they're interested in knowing more about.
  • Encourage them to then work in teams (comparing their preferred data sets).
  • Tell them to create essays, blog posts or presentations researching and exploring the reasons which explain the data they'd found.










What language could you use this website to practice?
  • the langauage of describing statistics
  • expressions for trends and changes
  • numbers and financial English expressions
  • comparatives and superlatives
  • range of past structures and present tenses
  • predictions for the future
  • asking and answering critical questions about the world we live in

Previously on Kalinago English, posts related to this posting:
Why use Google?
More lessons tips for ESP:Financial
More lessons tips for Business English Adults

Useful links
Statistics for a changing world
Search Power
Google Docs presentation on ways to use the Public Data Explorer
Blog about stats (lots of great tips)

Best, Karenne

Powerpointing My Office

It goes without saying that any good beginner level (and many elementary) coursebook has a picture appropriately labeled to tell the students what everything is.   If it's aimed at general learners, it'll be the kitchen or the bathroom or perhaps all the rooms in a house.  If it's aimed at Business English students or ESP learners, it'll be common instruments they probably come into contact frequently.

But here's the thing... why use someone else's picture when your students actually live in houses, work in offices or manufacture on site?


My tech-tip to bypass the coursebook or rather personalize it, if you wish, is this:

1. Ask students to take photographs of the room they need to describe or refer to in common speech. In the example above, we've used an office.  By the way, these were taken with Torsten's mobile phone.

2. Get your students to load the pictures up into a Powerpoint document.

3. Ask them to now work in groups to share each others best guesses at what things are before checking their dictionaries (online/on the phone/in hard copy).  

If you're working individually, as I am in this case (not many beginner level students in Germany!), talk through the items together, ensuring that the student does most of the work, using words he's already come in contact with before and look up others together, rather than you giving him all the answers.  

4. Ensure that your student(s) do all the labeling themselves.  

5. If you're working on an online platform with students, you can also jpeg the slides and upload them into a common album.



Why is this such an amazing resource?

Aside from the fact it's a very personal photograph and therefore has a real and immediate relationship to the learner and his needs, you can use these pictures/Powerpoint slides, repetitively, to
  • practice articles
  • practice this and that, these and those
  • practice prepositions
  • discuss functions of items
  • review vocabulary
What other things could you get your own language learners taking pictures of and labeling?  What other language functions can these pictures help practice?


Have you ever tried anything like this?   How did it go?   Do you think that the pfaffing involved is setting something like this up is prohibitory (it took us about 10 minutes to go around the building snapping pictures... about 5 minutes to load the pictures from his phone into Powerpoint but then I needed to teach him how to make boxes and label, that was about another 10 minutes - I'd refused to give the instructions in German) - we did this about a month ago and his feedback was that he knows the words because he 'sees' them whenever he looks at things in the office now.


Useful links related to this posting: 

Best,
Karenne

Twitter: 4 students 2?

Despite the following tweet:



and the amazing responses within an incredibly short time -  the wow! factor from my students who'd never seen anyone tweet before (though the site seems to be referenced on the news a lot these days) -  the fact that I could share the answer to their question as it came back to them in real time....

I still seem to be on the fence when it comes to combining learning and Twitter.

My problem with it is that there is so much "other" going on.  


I mean, who would they follow - teachers?   But the teachers are busy tweeting to their PLNs, wouldn't that become sort of weird and horribly dull after a while?

Well... they could follow other students, develop their own PLNs... but then, hmm... I guess it'd work but how would they know when the answer was the right answer?  How could they organize the information, reference it, keep track of it?

Hashtags set up on the different subjects?   


Thinking about it, I would add a twitter tracker function to my students' Ning if I knew for sure that there was someone moderating a specific hashtag, in my case one aimed at English Language Learners...but what code?  For the most part, #esl and #efl don't really mean anything to our students - wonder what would?

Random thoughts, random.


Yours?

Best,
Karenne





p.s. The Answer (courtesy of the British Council via Mtranslator on Twitter)

p.p.s Many, many thanks to GreatGrammarGurus:

Useful links
See Jen Vershoor's blog posting on Twitter in the Classroom

    Ask for Help - EdTech Tip #14

    "sMarty..." I whined to my baby brother busy sitting in the corner checking on his FB friends via his i-touch.

    "Wa' you want?" He didn't bother to look up.

    I handed him my LG Prada.

    "Can you check this out for me and tell me how it works?"

    I've had the phone for about 4 months now and apart from the obvious features: the ones that my HTC had or the ones I've needed for classes, I really haven't had the time or inclination to explore. Besides, so much easier when someone tells you where everything is, reading instructions is for chumps :-).

    As expected, 15 minutes later Martin found out how to use the radio and take panoramic pictures.

    Cool.

    Don't need either feature for classes but then my whole life isn't actually in the classroom.



    Do you have someone in your life (your son, niece or nephew, spouse) who is a digital native or a fully integrated immigrant?


    Don't sit there, ignoring the changes in our world today... drumming up cliches & excuses and missing out on all the things which can make your teaching work easier, fun, more effective...

    Ask for help.



    Your Options


    Teach yourself:
    • type "how to xyz" in Google
    • type "how to xyz" in Youtube

    Join a Ning:

    Join Twitter & follow the #edtech hashtag

    Read more in this series of tech-tips or TEFL lessons with a techie edge:


    Subscribe
    to these ELT-EdTech bloggers/posts:
    & General Education EdTech Bloggers
    Do a 6 week course for free with EVO online

    Go to national & international conferences and attend tech-based workshops.

    Do a course through the Consultants-e: (I took their wiki training with Ana d'Almeida, an excellent trainer based in Brazil.)

    Best,
    Karenne

    Powerpointing Me -EFL Tech Tip #13

    The other day when I was reading Nick Jaworski's blog postings on using the Teacher as the Narrative in EFL classes, I left a comment behind regarding one of my used-a-gazillion-times-first-lessons...


    The Getting to Know You, Getting to Know Me game

    I've no idea where I originally picked up the bones of this before techitizing it for my own purposes, so 'xcuse me if I don't reference the source - however, if you know, let us all know below.


    Objective

    • Create an atmosphere of sharing right from the get-go.
    • Find out your students' communicative abilities and weaknesses: particularly when making small talk /asking and answering questions.

    Prep
    • Approx 2 - 4 hours, depending which option you choose below. However you'll be able to use it an infinite number of times in an infinite number of (first day) lessons for an infinite number of years.

    Brainstorm

    Who are you?
    Jot down quick notes on words that describe you and your life.
    • country of birth
    • countries lived in
    • marital status
    • family & siblings
    • current job
    • previous jobs
    • a job you dreamed of having
    • degree(s)/ other studies
    • hobbies and interests
    • group/ associations you belong to
    • places you've been on holiday
    • your age (number)
    • how long you've been teaching (number)
    • your house number
    • fave food /drink
    • fave music /musicians
    • fave book(s)
    • something unusual about you
    • anything else you feel like sharing


    Procedure Option 1 (no tech, photocopier optional)
    • Dig out photos that match the above list, clip pics out of a magazine
    • Type the numbers using a large font and print
    • Photocopy the pics to A4 if you'd like them to be uniformed in appearance
    • Stick on to colored card and laminate



    Procedure
    Option 2 (low tech)
    • Open up a PowerPoint document
    • Insert personal pictures from your computer
    • Search www.flickr.com or google images (cc-licensed*) for the images/maps you don't have yourself - import these into your ppt.
    • Type the numbers in a large font.






    Procedure Option 3
    (medium tech - quickest)
    • Go to Wordle.net
    • Enter the words you brainstormed
    • Print several copies of your wordle & laminate (or capture as a jpeg / insert into a ppt slide)





    Procedure Option 4
    (will take >4hrs)
    • PhotoPeach your life. Use with intermediate learners+ re fast imagery.
    • Same as option 2
    • Save all slides as jpegs
    • Upload into Photopeach
    • Select music: something related to your own culture or fave band works best.

    PhotoPeachingMe on PhotoPeach



    NB. It doesn't matter what order you present your images in.



    In class


    After briefly introducing yourself to your new students and getting their names, ask if they know anything about you and if they'd like to.
    Optional: depending on your students' levels you may like to review question structures (wh-q/auxiliary and modals/conditionals/present-perfect) prior to doing this exercise, but not necessary.

    Tell your students you're going to show some pictures and you'd like them to guess what the images have to do with your life by asking you questions.

    Show the first picture / beam the first slide / show the first 30secs of movie.

    Once you've elicited the correct answer, elicit the best question form which would produce that answer.

    A rough example:
    Picture: A boy and girl which look like me
    Teacher: What does this have to do with me?
    Students: "Brothers and sister?"
    Teacher: How can you make that into a good question?
    Students: "Do you have brother and sister?"
    Teacher: Brothers and sisters are called siblings, you can also ask "Are they your brother and sister?"
    Students: "Do you have (any) siblings?"
    Teacher: Yes, I do. I have 2 brothers and a sister. My little brother wasn't born yet - in this picture - he's only 19. Do you have any questions about them?
    Students: "Where they live?"
    Teacher: Where do they live
    etc...

    Show the rest of the pictures or slides and continue getting students to ask about your life.

    If you chose the movie option, show the whole film and then get students to ask questions about your life based on the images they've seen.

    If you chose the Wordle option, get students to work in groups to figure out what the words might have to do with your life before getting them to ask the questions.


    Their turn

    Get students to jot down 5- 10 questions they'd like to ask each other. Circulate and correct their structures and vocabulary.

    Form pairs or small groups and encourage them to ask each other about each others lives.

    After around 15 minutes, switch members of groups and now ask them to tell their new partners about the lives of those they were talking to, as well as themselves. Depending on the size of your class, you can repeat this step as often as you like.


    Post task

    Students can create their own powerpoint presentations, wordles or movies based on what they're able to learn from the internet and/or other sources regarding one or more of the following:

    • politicians /local or international
    • sports figures
    • entertainers: singers, movie stars, tv personalities
    • their googlegänger
    • anyone else

    Ask students to bring what they learned to the next class in order to present it - share and discuss what they learned - again encouraging them to ask each other to ask questions & prompting for extended answers.





    Useful links related to this posting:

    Getting to know you, video with lyrics (can be used pre-task)
    Getting to know you introduction games
    Getting to know you - conversation prompt cards (available free to registered members of my website).


    Do you have any questions or a creative tip for first lessons that you'd like to share with us?

    Best,
    Karenne

    Note: you can print these lesson tips as a pdf by clicking on the title of the post, scrolling down and then clicking on the green "print as pdf" button.

    A smart way to use your phone in ELT classrooms: TechTip #12

    Whenever I see freelance language teachers still luggin' around great big CD players from in-company site to in-company class... I always pause and wonder why.

    Because these days, in your pockets, you've got all the audio power you need.

    If you've got a smartphone or actually any phone with an mp3 player, or even just an i-pod, all you need to bring audio to the classroom is a pair of speakers.

    Here's a video of me using my previous phone and a €10 set of speakers.

    I confess I did think about re-shooting this video - now that've got a swishier set of butterfly speakers with powerful enough audio for a large room of 2o students and a rather flashier phone... but Katrin did let me film her face and did such a lovely job of starring in this vid... so I decided to load this one up after all.

    The video even shows you the little bit of "faffing-about" that so many teachers complain of when it comes to teaching with technology - I left this in so that you can get a feel on how it really doesn't interrupt our class.






    To put audio tracks on to your phone, simply insert your CD in your computer, upload into either Windows Media Player or I-tunes, then download the tracks you want on to your phone's memory card, in the same way that you do with music!

    What are some of the other ways we can use our smartphone devices to teach English?

    Or better yet, what are some of the ways our students can maximize their jogging, commuter time, walking to the canteen time.. etc, to learn English with their very clever machines?

    Best,
    Karenne

    Useful links:

    The English Language Teacher's Guide To Twitter, tech tip #11

    The other day I quickly posted up notes on how to best use Twitter in a couple of the ELT Yahoo!Groups I belong to and one community member wrote and said... er, why isn't this on your blog so we can find it again?


    So, here it is
    :
    (don't forget you can always print out my blog postings by scrolling down to the bottom and clicking on the eco-safe badge, you can also email it to other teachers who aren't yet on Twitter).


    What is Twitter?

    Twitter is a conversation that happens at the speed your fingertips can type. For educators, it's a community, a place to meet and form global relationships with other like-minded professionals in a ...virtual staffroom.



    The basics

    • visit Twitter and create a profile. You can use a "handle" or alternative name if you wish.
    • load up a great pic, preferably of you smiling.
    • use a nice background, either those provided by Twitter backgrounds, your company's logo or a great photograph -perhaps where you're from or a place you enjoy visiting.
    • write a good 160 character description of yourself, include your interests and be sure that your relevant expertise in teaching is there - bios are incredibly important to those who have many followers, we want to know who you are and if we should make the connect.



    Conversing with other tweachers
    • to talk to someone on twitter use the @ sign in front of their name/handle at the start of the tweet (@kalinagoenglish blah, blah). Only they and the people you both share in common will see your message.
    • if you are sharing something that you would like both the reader and the rest of your followers to see, enter a . or any text/symbol before the @name (hi @kalinagoenglish this is a gr8 link 2 materials from the BBC etc).
    • if you would like to talk to someone privately put a D in front of the name no @ (i.e. D kalinagoenglish) or simply click on the word "message" on their home page. If you're using a client, click on the thing that looks like an envelope when you hover over the tweeter's picture. You can only do this if the person you follow is following you back.
    • to share something from one tweeter to all of your followers, put an RT before the @name, this will spread the message on to the person's followers as well.
    • think before you tweet ;-) sometimes you'll say things you didn't mean to or make spelling mistakes but don't worry about it. The time line's pretty quick and contrary to everything you read on the web, tweets disappear very quickly.



    Managing the chaos
    • the very best app (in my opinion) to manage life in Twitter is Tweetdeck. You can use this on your computer or on your phone. It's a free download and very easy to use. It also enables you to divide up your stream into different groups.
    • you don't have to follow every link the second you see it appear on the screen. From the Twitter home page, click on the star and then read it when you have time. If you're using Tweetdeck, hover over the tweet, click on the settings wheel, scroll down to the tweet and click on favorite.



    Finding other like-minded teachers

    • you can also scan through these lists on Twubs: #teachertuesday and #edchat to find those with similar interests.
    • to recommend other people to the people that you follow/ are following you back in your PLN (Personal Learning Network), use the hashtag #teachertuesday on Tuesdays or #followfriday on Fridays.
    • to show the whole Twitterverse that you are discussing something related to TEFL, use one of these hashtags: #tefl #esl #efl #elt #esp #businessenglish - this is also a great way to find other people to follow as you can save up to 10 searches on the twitter side bar. Obviously if you're a teacher of another subject use a relevant hashtag.
    • as a general rule unless you're really, really only interested in talking to 10 people: follow your followers: try to limit yourself to those who are in the same niche area you are in. You can also follow people who have the same interests as you do - pop music, books or art. But be careful with social-networking "gurus" who tweet all day long filling your stream with miscellaneous information or the life-coaches who tweet nonsense and watch out the spammer p*rn-girls.



    Understanding and unleashing the power of Twitter
    • the fastest way to understand why millions of people, and now teacher-trainers, are recommending Twitter when, as a newbie, all you're seeing is chaos (that was me 6 months ago) is actually due to the quality of one's PLN.
    • Twitter actually doesn't take on any shape until you follow and are followed by over 100 people. Once you reach that stage you will begin to connect and have fascinating and amusing conversations and you'll be able to access the Wisdom of the Crowd extremely quickly when you need to find information.
    • Twitter, as an educator, is all about the sharing. Sharing knowledge, getting to know other global teachers and networking with them, informing them about the work you do, finding out about the experiences they have, telling everyone about articles, blog postings or new ways of thinking about teaching.
    • you can repeat tweets which contain important links. As twitter is global and obviously on a 24 hour clock, some of your followers may miss it the first time round so you can RT stuff hours or days apart. For those who're using their phones and are on Twitter all day or perhaps are insomniacs, you can vary up the intro to the link.


    Having excellent manners and fabulous net-i-quette.
    • publicly or privately thank people when they RT your tweets - you don't have to do this all the time - however it doesn't hurt to be conscientious about doing it fairly regularly.
    • likewise, when someone recommends you to their stream in #teachertuesday #tt #followfriday or #ff. Fairly rude if you never say thanks! btw, NEVER, ever use these hashtags to promote your own work or resources. Ever. We will hate you and possibly, probably, unfollow you.
    • if you put a call-out to your stream asking for help with something, send out another tweet out a few hours or days later saying you appreciated their participation (or perhaps they won't help you again!)
    • pay kindness back with kindness. Do unto others as you'd have them do unto you.


    Also, it is really important to note that an unbelievable amount about a person's character can be determined within those 140 characters you send out. So make a conscious effort to be the same nice person that you are in real life ;-).


    The list of absolute "NO" goes:

    • do not only talk about yourself /your company /your articles /your book/ your blog etc - no matter how passionate you are about these things. The general rule of thumb for this, if you're in business or you're on twitter for professional reasons, is: 1 about you and 4 about others/life/teaching and the questions of the universe.
    • share the work of other people through RT'ing and communicate with other people about what they're doing: never put someone's name on something that they didn't tweet themselves.
    • do not use a logo unless it is a very, very likeable one. No one wants to talk to an image. It's not rocket science: would you like to spend time talking with a poster or a roadside billboard? That would be seriously freaky, right? We can see your company's name at the bottom of your tweet or use it as your background - we'll notice you and respect you if you have a personal picture because it assures us that you're here to participate, not simply wanting to spam us.

    General teachers don't have to worry about the above.



    • do not use an automated feeder only. We, like, um can tell that you're not you and it totally turns people off. An exception to this might be Aniya, @TheEngTeacher (who came up with the concept of #teachertuesday - she uses Viigo to feed a constant stream of links on teaching, autism and smart-phone related issues). If you're on Twitter, then be on Twitter.
    • do not protect your updates. It makes you look secretive.
    • never ever follow any link that says "get 100 followers" -these are spam bots that will take over your account. Get your 100+ followers slowly and patiently by earning your stream's respect. If you follow weirdos and pornstars we will be rather dubious of you.
    • be very cautious of DMs from people you don't really know advertising weight-loss gain or videos you starred in - these tend to be from people whose accounts have been hijacked (usually because they themselves clicked on a dodgy link) and are worms.
    • do not talk about coffee, in fact, try to limit trivia in general unless it's Sunday morning (!) or you've been on for a while and have now formed real friendships with the global teachers you're meeting, share good links to the articles you've read and enjoyed.
    • never, ever talk about dogs if you're following Scott Thornbury! LOL, obviously, do not tell him I warned you.





      
    Who to follow if you are an English language teacher:



    http://tweepml.org/100-ELT-other-educators-to-follow-on-Twitter/
    *if you're non ELT you can also search this site for other excellent lists of educators in your field



    Update 24-11-10
    The Tweeplm website (and list of educators to follow) is currently down while they update their site.  For the time being, a good way to find those in ELT would be to look at the list of folks I've marked as ELT
    HERE



    My handle on twitter is @kalinagoenglish - http://twitter.com/kalinagoenglish.

    Oh, but before I sign off, just in case the above wasn't information overload already, here are links I've saved to help pave the way and get you up to speed:
    http://delicious.com/KalinagoEnglish/on-twitter



    I lk fwd to c'ing u in the Twitterverse!



    Karenne


    Useful links related to this posting:




    NOTE: this article, like most of the stuff I write is copyleft/licensed CC-ND-NC. This means that although it's totally free, it's also my intellectual property. Unlike copyrighted material, however, you can download it, pass it on, email it, print as a pdf, distribute it amongst your staff..etc, etc without notifying me. However if you'd like to use it in a commercial magazine, you should write and let me know the details. If you're a fellow blogger, no seriously, peeps - you can't copy the whole posting! Contact me and I'll let you know what to do.

    EFL Teachers LinkedIn - tech tip #9

    rusty chain link by laenulfean
    Like everything else in life, you get back what you put in and LinkedIn is no exception to this rule.

    LinkedIn is a social-networking site, in the same way that Facebook, Twitter and Ning are, however, its community function is slightly different and its core objective lies in bringing together professionals.

    Whether they are accountants, IT managers or CEOs they're all there on LinkedIn.

    English language teachers, institute owners, publishers, authors, bloggers and e-learning site developers.

    However, and actually the thing I like best about this site, is that unlike most other social-networking sites on LinkedIn you know exactly who're you're talking to and the profile you build also manages to serve as an online public CV (resumé) .

    That may seem a little scary, especially if you're learning all this techie stuff with me step-by-step, but if you are looking to

    • expand your clientele
    • stretch into new fields of expertise
    • state your availability for new projects or jobs
    • or you just want to let the world know about your teaching abilities
    then it is an excellent space in which to do this in.



    Harvesting what you plant...


    1. Building a good profile

    Spend time filling in all the details about your life, work experience, abilities, qualities and aspirations.

    Remember that you are not only listing what you can do but, in a way, just like in an interview you are selling yourself in advance.

    Definitely put in the same amount of time you'd spend updating your CV if you were applying for a job next week - LinkedIn is searchable by Google and once you have a profile listed, it is this (if you have a vanity profile) that will most likely be on the first page whenever someone types in your name.

    Read these***


    2. Add applications to make your page attractive

    Towards the bottom of the left-hand column you'll see something that looks like a wheel, click on that to add apps (applications).

    Are you a great English teacher?

    Dig through your hard-drive.

    Are there any lessons you could upload into box.net?


    Are you running a language school?

    Upload your latest brochure so your network can learn more about what you and your school offers and why this is special.

    Drop the web 1.0 approach to everything - the web 2.0 works on openness and sharing and you are much more likely to attract clients if they can download your information easily.


    Are you a teacher trainer?


    Have another look in the dead-files, do you have a good powerpoint presentation you've made that you won't be using again (or at least not exactly the way it is now) which could be easily loaded up into slideshare so that potential teachers or associations can view the quality of your work?


    Are you an aspiring or published author?

    Stick up a chapter or two up for easy and free download. You will earn respect and if your network likes your work, they'll buy it.


    Are you an editor or an ELT salesperson?

    Load up your company's catalog. If you're looking for new leads tell the world what you have (but do not spam). If you're looking for writers of materials, say so and openly provide a specific email address for this function.

    If you don't want to be bothered with unattractive requests, state this.



    Do you have a personal blog or a website?


    List it.

    Use the "other" function so that you can name it appropriately (google-searchable).


    What books are you currently reading?

    Add one or two using Amazon, this will make you look much more well-rounded.


    Travel a lot from conference to conference?

    Let your network know, perhaps you do really prefer sitting in dusty hotel rooms all alone but if you don't, perhaps meeting up for a beer with someone in the same location might lead to further conferences or in-house employee workshops. Or a new friend.



    3. Finding a great photograph

    Remember that you are in a professional environment and want to look your best but also do make a good effort not to look boring!

    Read this

    Seth Godin and the power of the tiny picture



    4. Expand your network



    Who do you know that is already on LinkedIn?

    Check your email addresses and send an automatic invite.

    Connect with me (Karenne Sylvester - mention the blog so I'll know it's you - my email address for LinkedIn purposes is kalinago.english (at) gmail (dot) com.


    partySearch for old bosses and dig through your last ELT conference's business cards - you know the ones you shoved in the back of your wallet - see it was useful for you to keep these!

    Try to build a good-sized network of at least 50 people. Below this and you probably won't be able to experience the benefit of being on LinkedIn.

    Take a look at the people in your contacts' contacts lists - have you already met some of those people? If you have, send them an invite to connect.

    Read this
    10 etiquette rules for LinkedIn



    5. Get recommended

    After a little while on LinkedIn, say a few weeks once you've tweaked and re-tweaked your profile (it takes a while to get it right), have a look through your contacts - who knows you and the quality of your work?

    Would they be willing to say so in a public sphere?

    Send them a nice email asking them to write you up a short reference.




    6. Join Groups

    The very best way to expand your network and find other like-minded professionals is to join in with other like-minded professionals!

    Here's a list of some of the great ELT groups available:



    If you're a Tweeter, also join Tom Whitby's

    But don't join only education groups - search for ones applicable to the country you live in, the type of interests and hobbies you have as you never know where that next great teaching assignment or professional contact will come in from.

    If you're a language institution, do reach out to the HR professional groups and connect with them as well as teachers who you may potentially hire.



    7. Getting "known"


    The best way to connect with others is to connect with others!

    Read your groups' discussion pages:

    • If you need help figuring something out about teaching, ask a question.
    • Can you help by answering someone else's question? Share your knowledge.

    There's also an open Q&A section within LinkedIn, search through these to see if anyone wants to know something you know about.

    And whenever you really like someone's questions or answers, linkup with them by using the Add to your network (top right) + select the group you both belong to from the drop-down menu.

    Whenever contacting pure strangers, try not to use the standard "I'd like to add you to my network" invite from LinkedIn but instead say something like "I really liked your answer on.... blah, blah, and I was wondering if you'd like to connect with me."

    The key is to be polite and most people will say yes.



    8. Update your profile status regularly


    Every time you make a change to your page, your network is notified, so do do this.

    Whenever you notice a change on someone else's profile that is interesting, comment - it shows you are paying attention and develops your social-networking abilities.

    And of course, the next time you're at a workshop or a teaching conference, you'll have a lot more to say to each other than "jolly good location, the food's great but the coffee's crap."


    merlin

    More links...
    See what I've saved for you on delicious - this post will tell you what delicious is. Also read Tony Karrer's blog posting with many more links!


    And now for a handful of don'ts

    • If you're not a really close personal friend of one of the people in your contact list, don't ask that person to introduce you to someone else unless you have a really, really good reason. It's in poor taste.
    • Do not shove your products and services down the throats of others! Be the same nice person/ educator that you are in real life - don't send out random annoying email requests to people you don't really know asking them to do you favors or asking them to advertise your products. It's in poor taste.
    • If you have a serious professional offer to make someone, provide a relative amount of detail. "We'd like to work with you" is saying what exactly? ;-)
    • If you decide to be on online, then be online - drop the old ways of thinking. Load up a real picture of you. Never, ever use your company logo or an avatar - it looks really weird if you don't have a real pic here and you will, effectively, have defeated the purpose of creating a profile.

    Any questions?

    Need me to clarify one of the points or have you got a top tip to add? Share it with us! And don't let my note on the "don'ts" scare you - due to the fact that LinkedIn has quite a closed door approach to networking, as a general rule, the spam factor is incredibly low.

    Still not convinced about why this is a good idea?

    Here's just one more reason:
    personal branding and the google love machine

    Best,
    Karenne

    Alert! It's feeding time at the zoo - tech tip 8

    feeding timeI won't ever forget the time I told my students at BEHR that their company was going to be supplying the air conditioning systems for TATA.

    I whipped the article out of my bag and we proceeded through the press release extracting the useful vocabulary before discussing what it would mean for their department (IT).

    This was a great activity but to be honest, the feeling that was the greatest was actually the respect they had in their eyes that I, their English teacher, knew this information before they did.

    So, how'd I do it?


    feeding timeSuper easy, super useful tip if you're teaching Business English. And there's nothing to it, simply enter in the company names and set the alert for as often as you like - weekly is fine.

    All news will then turn up in your email inbox and it's just up to you to follow the links if something catches your eye.

    Depending on your teaching philosophy/ mood you can either print the article and take it into class or you can send your students the link. The major point behind this objective is looking for words that will be a part of the company buzz at the water coolers.

    Oh, and by the way, if you're a blogger too - set an alert for your name and your blog or website url - this morning from my own alert, I found out that I was chosen this month's:

    tefl.net

    Shucks! That made my day ;-).


    rssAnyway, the other thing you want to do, to stay on top of your students' interests is to subscribe to blogs that are in their niche /areas of interest. It goes without saying that you should encourage your students to do this too!

    Subscribing is via something called an RSS (really simple syndication) feed. You'll usually see one of these orange buttons on a blog/site whenever this option is available.

    The web page is then automatically fed into your host for these, e.g.


    If this still feels a bit confusing, watch this video explaining RSS by the CommonCraftShow:




    Hope that was useful and if you have another top tech-tip for student-centered learning, do please share it us!


    Useful links related to this posting:
    Hit the Business Blogs
    Best videos resources
    Sharing, bookmarking and saving
    More tech-tips:
    Using wordle to teach vocabulary
    Using slideshare in Business English classes

    Best,
    Karenne
     

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