Monday, June 21, 2010

Module # 10 Assignment Presentation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh8QJJ5RV80

My lesson plan is made based on Course Design and I will present Task chain 1-Words parts in Lesson Plan. The presentation sequences are as below.

1. Teacher rechecks the words on the Focus Sheet 1-1.
2. Teacher gives students Assessment 1-2 and gives them a test.
3. Teacher gives students Work Sheet 1-3 and makes them look at the picture and fill the blanks with correct words.
4. Teacher gives students Work Sheet 1-4 and makes them listen to the statement and number the correct picture.
  • Lesson Activation from Course Design

















  • Lesson Plan

  • Materials
.Text book, Words list, CD

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Module #9 Reflection on working on the rubric and the course design

Actually I had no idea about rubric and course design. Even I didn’t get any rubric or syllabus, just heard of the syllabus roughly. That’s why all were new to me.


Grave (2000) said organizing course is deciding what the underlying systems will be that pull together the content and material in accordance with the goals and objectives and that give the course a shape and structure. Organizing a course occurs on different levels: the level of the course as a whole; the level of subset of the whole: units, module, or strands within the course, and then individual lesson (p.125).

In Korea, most students learn a foreign language focusing on exam and so did I. At first, before I start a course design I asked to myself “What is the goal?” “Is there anything else except getting good grade?” But after starting designing course, there were many things I had to consider as below.

Organizing a course involves five overlapping processes: 1) determining the organizing principles that drive the course; 2) identifying units, modules, or standards based on the organizing principles; 3) sequencing the units; 4) determining the language and skills content of the units; 5) organizing the content within each unit (p.125).

Well organized and detailed syllabus must be introduced to learners to let them know the course they will take exactly.

A rubric is a great tool for teachers, because it is a simple way to set up grading criteria for assignments. Not only is this tool useful for teachers, it is helpful for students as well for students can do their tasks and judge their own work based on a rubric which make them accept more responsibility later. Teachers also can explain to students the reason of getting them a grade. So when teachers make a rubric, they must provide them with clear criteria and detailed explanations and students look through the rubric for their works.

Mostly teachers give students a rubric but if I have a chance to make a rubric to use in my classroom I want to involve my students in creating a rubric for assignments together. I think it can be fun and more effective ^^.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Moduel #8 Course Design (Revised)

  •  Cover letter
This course provides students with listening sections which is designed to enhance learners’ listening at the same time students can improve speaking and writing skills with a workbook in this course as nearly every aspect of communication and writing skills can be improved if students learn how to be a better listener.

Listening comprehension is one of important skills to master foreign language. There are many things you can do to improve your English listening skills from everyday activities like watching TV, listening to music or story telling books or taking a formal listening class and so on.

Most students think listening comprehension is difficult because they hear too many new and unfamiliar words while they are listening so they tend to just memorize words without knowing exact pronunciation of each word. But this isn't the only problem. Take an example of Koreans, many students who have studied for years and know hundreds or thousands of English words . But they still find listening comprehension is quite difficult. Why is that? One of the reasons is that when students listen to an English speaking, they not only have to recognize words by hearing them instead of by reading them which means students have to recognize the words very quickly. So it is very important to build the ability to recognize and understand English words and phrases very quickly when you hear them.

Whether you are studying English as a second or foreign language (ESL and EFL), the key is to be persistent and practice a lot.

Here I am introducing practical listening course book ‘Jump up Listening’ to students to take for listening class during 2010 spring.

  • Course Introduction

Course book: Jump up Listening (1), Workbook (1), CD (1) Instructor: Yunjoung So

E-mail: genie0312@hotmail.com Grade: 7th, 8th Grades

Level: Intermediate EFL

Length: 12 weeks (April 5-June 25)

Year/Quarter: 2010 Spring

Time: 1.5 hours per day (five days a week) Units: 12


  •  Relevant Course Standards

TESOL ESL Standards for Pre-K-12 Students: Grades 4-8

Goal 1, Standard 1
To use English to communicate in social settings: Students will use English to participate in social interactions

Goal 1, Standard 2
To use English to communicate in social settings: Students will interact in, through, and with spoken and written English for personal expression and enjoyment

Goal 1, Standard 3
To use English to communicate in social settings: Students will use learning strategies to extend their communicative competence

  •  Course goals
1. To improve students’ practical listening skills.

2. To make students use of internet sites for better listening skills.

3. To make students memorize words relevant to units.

4. To improve students’ speaking and writing skills by doing a workbook relevant to units.


  •  Unit Objectives
.Unit 1-Learn the expressions describing culture

.Unit 2-Leran how to discuss daily health habit

.Unit 3- Learn pet care phrases and vocabulary

.Unit 4- Learn about dreams and why it’s important to dream

.Unit 5- Learn the common internet terms and phrases

.Unit 6- Distinguish between specific country and town expressions

.Unit 7- Learn the names and descriptions of jobs

.Unit 8- Learn the words used for helping others

.Unit 9- Learn about how people prepare for tests and why people take them

.Unit 10- Learn the words associated with holidays

.Unit 11- To be able to discuss generation differences

.Unit 12- Learn the vocabulary used to discuss ways of preserving the Earth

  •  Course Requirements

1. Students must memorize all words relevant to each unit before class.

2. Students do speaking and writing sections in a workbook as homework.

3. Students utilize Internet Sites recommended

4. Students submit a workbook as homework after completing for grading.

  •  Recommended Internet Sites
http://www.esl-lab.com/
http://www.elllo.org/

http://literacynet.org/cnnsf/week.html

http://www.focusenglish.com/

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/newshour_index.html


http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/news/

http://www.esl.about.com/cs/listening

http://www.rong-chang.com/listen.htm

http://www.manythings.org/pp/

http://www.cdlponline.org/

  •  Course Policies
1. Students must have words test

2. Students submit a workbook according to course calendar

3. Assignment should be submitted on time or points will be deducted (1 late day x 1 point)

  • Course Evaluation Plan













  •  Course Calendar









































Sunday, May 23, 2010

Module #6 Blog Response on the Topic

What are my goals of English teaching? What are my objectives of English teaching? To be honest, as I am teaching English in a small institute, I have never thought about those goals and objectives seriously. My goal is to make students have a good grade and objective is to make students solve questions related to exam. How awful method I am using!
Through Chapter 5, I can explore what goals and objectives are and the relationship between them as well as a variety of ways to formulate and articulate them.

Goals are a way of putting into words the main purposes and intended outcomes of your course. If we use analogy of a journey, the destination is the goal; the journey is the course. The objectives are the different points you pass through on the journey to the destination. As J.D. Brown proposes that goals are “what the students should be able to do when they leave the program.” Goals are future oriented. Making goals must aim that the course will explicitly address in some way so that it helps bring students into focus their visions and priorities for the course.

Objectives are statements about how goals will be achieved. Through objectives, a goal is broken down into learnable and teachable units. By achieving the objectives, the goal will be reached .Teachers always ask themselves “ Will achieving this objective help to reach the goal?” When they determined that the answer is no, they must eliminate that objective and seek other, more appropriate objectives. That is, if the goal remains important is not achieved through the means or objectives, then the objectives may need to be examined and changed or refined so that the goal can be reached. In short, objectives spell out what the students will actually learn or be able to do by the end of the course. General objectives spell out holistic results and specific objectives spell out particular knowledge or skills the students will acquire (Vale, Scarino, McKay 1996).

Objectives are in a hierarchical relationship to goals. Goals are more general and objectives more specific. Brown (1995) points out that one of the main differences between goals and objectives is to help achieve it which means goals are more long term, objectives more short term. In addition, one objective may serve more than one goal and many goals are served by the same objectives.

Formulating goals and objectives helps to build a clear vision of what you will teach. Because a goal is something toward which you will explicitly teach, stating goals helps to define priorities and to make choices. Goals and objectives provide a basis for making choices about what to teach and how. Objectives serve as a bridge between needs and goals. Stating goals and objectives is a way of holding students accountable throughout the course.

Below is summary of guidelines to consider when formulating Goals and Objectives.

1. Goals should be general but not vague.

2. Goals should be transparent. Don’t use jargon.

3. Goals should be realistic Goals should be achievable within the time frame of the course with that group of students.

4. Goals should be relatively simple. Unpack them and make them into more than one goal, if necessary.

5. Goals should be about something the course will explicitly address in some way.

6. Objectives should be more specific than goals. They are in a hierarchical relationship to goals.

7. Objectives should directly relate to the goals and focus on what students will learn.

8. There should be more objectives than goals. However, one objective may be related to more than one goal.

9. The goals and objectives give a sense of the syllabus of the course.

10. A clear set of goals and objectives provides the basis for evaluation of the course (goals) and assessment of students learning (objectives).

Teaching is required to make choices. So teachers should make appropriate decisions for the specific course in its specific context. Most of all, teachers must present clear idea of what the course is about and what students will learn. Since goals and objectives are not fixed ones they can be modified and changed accordingly. Teachers must keep monitoring goals and objectives and try to adapt them for successful completion of the course and for students!

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Module#5 Annotated Bibliography

This annotated bibliography assignment was conducted by Jua Lee    , Yunjoung So, Ahrim Jung as a group work. This work aims to help teachers design curriculum for middle school students writing class. Below are sources that my team locates.

Citation 1:
Peterson, S.S. (2007). Teaching content with the help of writing across the curriculum. Middle School Journal, 39(2), 26-33.

Summary:
This article investigates that integrating the teaching of writing across the curriculum leads to consolidate students’ content understanding as well as students’ being better writers. The result of applying this method to eighth grade’s science classroom illustrates that writing not only facilitates the learning of content-area concepts but also engages students in higher thinking and reasoning processes. The author asserts that teaching content using writing project enables students to engage wholeheartedly in a writing project and also to show a good understanding of the concepts.

This article shows that teaching writing in content classrooms is effective in that students write on any topic they choose, using whatever genre and tone seem appropriate for the topic. In addition, content area subjects provide real-life questions and topics, authentic contexts for student writing and a breath and depth of knowledge about concepts and genres that students can draw upon in their writing. The author argues that the types of activities associated with content classes such as working with concrete materials, field trips, interviews, reading print-based materials of all types, small-group discussions provide information for students’ writing and teach the content concept.

Writing lessons also give advantages to support students in determining the types of information that would be important and in helping them to record that information so it could be later used in their writing. It does not mean that teachers have to include a written project for every unit and rather can select some units that provide plenty of scope for students’ writing. Students can work on content writing or free-choice writing during writer’s workshop but it is important to schedule writing time as often as possible. The ways that students read out their writing to classmates, audiotape or videotape readings of their writing for peers to listen to and upload their writing to a school web site or in newsletters are effective to stimulate students’ motivation. If teachers and students work together checklists for assessing their writing, students can have a shared sense of ownership of the assessment procedures.

Review:
The article presents the positive effect of teaching writing across the curriculum. Incorporating the teaching of writing across the curriculum enriches students’ content learning and their motivation to learn. Students can use the writing they do in any subject area to explore new ideas and consolidate their content understanding. The author mentions the importance of writing instruction that teaches content concepts arguing that once students have expressed their learning in writing and visual images, they have something to look back and reflect on to shape and consolidate their learning. To be sure, teachers will likely be overjoyed by seeing students engaging sincerely in a writing project.


Citation 2:
Firkins, A., Forey, G. & Sengupta, S. (2007). Teaching writing to low proficiency EFL students. ELT Journal, 61(4), 341-352.

Summary:
This article suggests that a combination of two explicit teaching methodologies, a genre-based and activity-based pedagogical approach to teaching writing are particularly suitable for educational contexts where the students are low proficiency English as a foreign language (EFL) learners. The authors examined the effect of two approaches. The genre-based approach, which aims at focusing on strategies to improve student writing, is based on a teaching-learning cycle where strategies such as modeling texts, joint construction, and independent construction are prompted. At the same time the activity-based approach is also utilized for students to develop their language physically modeling the genres through a range of different activities.

The study is initiated with thirty-two secondary students with low proficiency English who demonstrate consistent low performance in English but do not have intellectual disability. The genre-based approach is selected along with the activity-based approach to foster students’ learning. The authors chose Halloween as a topic with a number of related activities, each repeating the genre through a text and providing opportunities to reiterate, develop, and practice vocabulary, meta-discoursal and lexico-grammatical features. Twelve 35-minute sessions are held, concentrating on one activity-per session related to writing procedural texts. All sessions are logically linked to previous sessions. As activities are presented in similar ways and there is a reiteration of linguistic choices, students are also able to generalize from one activity to the next.

The learning-teaching cycle consists of three parts. First, students model through the activity such as making the mask to understand how the procedural text functions in context. Second, the students jointly construct a procedural text and revise vocabulary and language patterns. These two steps are repeated. Third, in the stage of independent construction, students write their own instructions on how to make a mask. One limitation authors present is time. They say given more time, the students would have further developed the flexibility to independently write a variety of procedural texts. Above all, this approach is seen to be positive by all the English teachers and has been included as part of the writing program in the general English curriculum.

Review:
According to this article, the activity-based genre approach clearly assists students to organize their writing and understand the nature of a text within an activity based context. This article demonstrates how teachers can combine, modify, and apply a positive learning environment for students with generally low proficiency. However, this article has limitation in that participants are volunteers with strong will to learn yet with low proficiency, which is contrary to most students with less interest and participation in real classrooms. That is, the will of students may lead to the positive result. Nevertheless, it is no doubt that the writing genre approach with students’ authentic activities is very helpful for students to involve in.


Citation 3:
Andrad, H., Buff, C., Terry, J., Erano, M., & Paolino S. (2009). Assessment-driven improvements in middle school students' writing. Middle School Journal, 40(4), 4-12.

Summary:
This article chronicles a successful attempt by the authors and their colleagues to teach writing by making improvements in the assessment of writing in the classroom. The participants of this article began in the fall of 2005, when Shaun Paolino, the principal, invited Heidi Andrade to help improve students' writing skills and scores. To meet the overarching goal of improving the assessment of writing at Knickerbacker Middle School (KMS), Prof. Andrade collaborated with the sixth, seventh, and eighth grade teachers of English and social studies with set three goals:

1. Make assessment processes, criteria, and standards crystal clear to students.
2. Provide frequent, useful feedback to students about the quality of their work via teacher, peer, and self-assessment.
3. Use the assessments to analyze the strengths and weaknesses in students' work and to plan instruction.

These three goals are grounded in the literature on formative assessment. A significant element of effective classroom assessment is formative—the kind of ongoing, regular feedback about student work that leads to adjustment and revision by both the teacher and the students. A formative conception of assessment honors the crucial role of feedback in the development of understanding and skill building.

The research shows that peer and self-assessment are key elements in formative assessment, because they involve students in thinking about the quality of their own and each others' work, rather than relying on their teachers as the sole source of evaluative judgment. Without the rubric, they may not have fully understood what specific changes to make as they revised, or how to make them. But simply handing out rubrics would not magically produce good writers and high test scores, teachers must concern with the matter of engaging students in carefully considering the strengths and weaknesses of their works in progress, according to the standards set in the rubrics.

Review:
Students' writing ability does not change overnight. But if teachers make it a continuous effort with students in collaborative circumstance, they will slowly develop their writing skills and their writing will improve. Making assessments also must be clear to students, providing frequent feedback about the quality of their work via teacher, peer, and self-assessment. Teachers try to make students visualize which criteria they were strong and the area that could be improved by assessing their writing based on rubric.
Summing up, I want to emphasize again the authors’ beliefs for this article as below.
. High expectations for every member of the learning community
 .Students and teachers engaged in active learning
 .Assessment and evaluation programs that promote quality learning


Citation 4:

Shin, S. J. (2006). Learning to teach writing through tutoring and journal writing. Teachers and Teaching: theory and practice, 12(3), 325–345.

Summary:
This study focuses on the development of teachers’ views and practices regarding the teaching of second language writing skills in one-on-one tutoring arrangements that lasted from 4 months to over 1 year. In particular, this study explores new teachers’ emerging conceptions of teaching second language writing and what it means to be a teacher, learner and writer. The participants were 12 pre-service teachers with little or no experience in teaching writing who reflected regularly in journals upon their experience of tutoring English language learners in writing.

This article describes ways in which both native and non-native English speaking pre-service teachers adapted their instruction to meet the particular needs of individual ESL writers and what they learned in the process. Teachers with little or no training regarding how to provide feedback on second language writing often find it difficult to decide whether to start correcting all errors which often results in crossing out and rewriting entire blocks of sentences or to leave the errors untouched because there are simply too many of them. What does a successful teacher response to student writing look like? Successful teacher feedback results in substantive and authentic improvements in students’ perceptions and practice of writing. The author of this article states that as teachers consider how to respond to student writing they are faced with following questions.

1. Exactly when—and how frequently—during the writing process should I respond?
2. How can I respond to the student’s writing so that the student can process the comments and apply the specifics of my response?
3. What forms of response (written, oral, individual, group, class, formal, informal would be most successful for the students?
4. When should my response be global or summative (focusing mainly on the major strengths or weaknesses) or discrete (focusing on single items within the essay)?
5. What are my objectives for this writing task (for example, improvement in topic sentences, organization, details)? What do I want the student to learn?

To answer these questions teachers must examine the specific needs of individual students and consider the student’s perceptions of what he/she considers his/her strengths and weaknesses as writers. Writing instruction must be individualized through teacher feedback on student writing because mere exposure to standard writing conventions does not improve students’ writing.

Review:
According to this article, most of the pre-service teachers came into the tutoring arrangement with little or no experience in teaching writing but seemed to have developed more confidence and competence in teaching writing partly as a result of this reflective clinical practice. The writing journal entries seemed to help them to critically examine what they know, to evaluate their various roles as writing teachers and to reflect on the socio-cultural and political nature of teaching writing in English to speakers of other languages. Overall, the journals played an important role in helping teachers to better understand the successes and difficulties that the pre-service teachers experienced as they developed as writing teachers. Class discussions and journal entries can highlight pre-service teachers’ beliefs about writing instruction, their attitudes to writing and teaching writing and the problems they had with students of different proficiency levels and first language backgrounds. This leads not only to useful discussions but also changes in the pre-service teachers’ strategies.


Citation 5:
Paulus, T.M. (1999). The effect of peer and teacher feedback on student writing. In Attetwell, J. & Savill-Smith C. (Eds.), Journal of Second Language Writing, 8(3), 265-289.

Summary:
This article investigates about the effect of peer and teacher feedback on student writing. Peer and teacher feedback is commonly used in English as Second Language (ESL) and English as Foreign Language (EFL) classrooms, and the research about how the activities can improve student writing is needed. Author plans the research to examine how peer and teacher feedback affects students’ revisions in a multiple-draft, process-approach writing classroom and whether required revision through multiple drafts of an essay improves the overall quality of written work in a classroom situation.

The study was conducted with 11 international students enrolled in a pre-freshman composition writing course which is designed for those students who need further development of their academic writing skills before enrolling in the composition course required for graduation. The students were asked to do critical reading and discussion, summary writing, journal writing, in-class writing, revision, and development of the traditional five-paragraph academic essay through ten-week course starting with paragraph-level work and ends with the production of the traditional five-paragraph essay. Students received written and oral feedback from their classmates on the first drafts of the essays; then, they revised and wrote a second draft. After that, they received written teacher feedback on the second draft. Finally, they revised again and wrote a third draft. The author tape-record two think-aloud protocols (TAPs) for observation and used taxonomy of revisions for data analysis.

The most common type of revision students made to their essays was meaning-preserving changes that paraphrased and essentially re-worded concepts present in the text. The results indicate that students did use both the peer and teacher feedback to influence their revisions. They take their classmates advice seriously and make meaning-level changes to their writing. Also, they take 87% of teacher comments and make global-level changes to their writing. The results of this study reassures writing instructors that their written feedback can be used by students to make meaning-level revisions to their work.

Review:
The article presents the effectiveness of peer and teacher feedback on student writing. It shows that students are affected by peer’s opinions in their communication by writing because they take a large percentage of others’ advices in meaning-level. Regarding teachers feedback, students have more trust in teacher than students. Students make more global-level changes, including surface-level changes, taking teachers’ comments. The fact that the multiple-draft process did result in better essays encourages teachers to make revision and re-writing, combined with meaningful peer and teacher feedback, an integral part of the writing classroom

Citation 6:

Monroe, B. W. & Troia, G. A. (2006). Teaching writing strategies to middle school students with disabilities. The Journal of Educational Research. 100(1), 21-33.

Summary:
This article addresses the usefulness of strategies to facilitate planning, self-regulation, and revising while writing opinion essays. The goal of this study is to teach students with writing problems to use multiple strategies for planning, revising, and self-regulating that separately have been shown to positively affect the writing performance of students with disabilities. The results present that at post-treatment persuasive essay, the three students who received planning and revising strategy instruction made a notable gains in each of the five quality traits: content, organization, sentence fluency, word choice, and conventions. In addition, at posttest, the students in the treatment group outperformed the group of students with disabilities who did not participate in the strategy intervention.

This study was conducted at an urban middle school in the Pacific Northwest. Six students from special educational language arts class with learning disability (LD) were selected as a special educational control group while six additional students were selected randomly from general educational classes as a general educational group. The special educational control group was taught (a) a strategy prompt for writing opinion essays, (b) a strategy prompt for revising their papers, (c) a simple scoring rubric for monitoring and assessing their own writing performance and that of their peers, and (d) procedures for establishing personal writing goals and generating self-talk to support self-regulation of the writing process. Also, the authors observed whether the students would benefit from short-term, explicit instruction in a set of writing strategies that targets multiple aspects of the writing process and the characteristics of good writing.

The study shows that teaching the planning, self-regulation, and revising strategies to students with LD results in marked improvements in their persuasive writing abilities. The outstanding finding is that strategy instruction helped 2 of the 3 students with LD write papers of nearly the same quality as a group of students without disabilities who did not participate in the strategy instruction. Another worthy result is that collaboration helped the students view writing as something more than a solitary activity and appropriate higher writing standards.

Review:
The article suggests that writing strategy instruction is effective as a valid and robust approach for improving the writing attitudes, behaviors, and performance of students with and without disabilities at most grade levels and in varied contexts. The authors argue that teaching multiple strategies for tackling all of the elements of effective writing is feasible and will be educationally meaningful benefits for students with learning problems. However, this study has a few limitations. The small sample size and nonrandom selection and assignment of participations to conditions restrict the generalizability of our findings. Nevertheless, if strategy instruction is integrated with process writing instruction, typical classroom writing instruction is expected to be improved substantially

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Module #4 Blog Response on the Topic



Capter 4
Conceptualizing content is a kind of a syllabus which describes what teachers will teach. Perhaps a useful analogy to conceptualizing content is that of making a part of the planet earth. One map highlights the geological surface features of the territory. Another map highlights the natural recourses. A third map shows the network of roads and towns. A forth map shows population density (Graves, 2000, p.39).

As Graves also said what you choose are their needs, why they are taking the course, and whether and how the course has been described to students or the public, as well as your own experience and preferences. Choice is a key, because you cannot explicitly focus on or do everything. A map which tries to show all the features of the four map listed above would be a mishmash that would be hard to make sense of.

A well-constructed syllabus plays a role like a sign in desert to show a way to a destination. As conceptualizing content varies depending various factors teachers must explicitly present what students will learn with exact goals of course.

Chaper 8
Developing materials is the process of making syllabus more and more specific. When teachers are required to strictly adhere to a textbook and timetable there is little room for them to make decision and to put to use what they have learned from experience, which, in effect, ”deskills” the teacher (Apple, 1986). I don’t think every teacher makes time and effort to develop materials to tech in calls but it is essential job for students to make the most effective class. That is, teachers must be ready to how to make up their material as soon as they get textbooks.

For a teacher designing a course, materials development means creating, choosing or adapting, and organizing materials and activities so that students can achieve the objectives that will help them reach the goals of the course (Graves, 2000, p.150).

Even though developing materials are mostly conducted by making choices of teachers based on their belief, understanding and experience, it must be designed to be easy to follow by students and feasible, appropriate for the goal of students.

Chapter 9
It shows not only how teachers can change and evaluate textbooks but also how they exploit the advantages. Even textbook is fixed when it is written, it can be modified by teachers according to students’ goals, needs and requirements of context.
Here are examples of advantages and disadvantages of textbooks (Graves, 2000, p.174).

Advantages
.It provides a syllabus for the course
.It provides security for the students because they have a kind of road map of the course.
.It provides a set of visual, activities, reading, etc., which save the teachers time in finding materials.
.It provides teachers with a basis for assessing students’ learning.
. It may include supporting materials.
.It provides consistency within a program across a given level, if all teachers use the same textbook.

Disadvantages
.The content or examples may not be relevant to the group
.The content may not be at the right level
.There may not include everything teachers want
.There may be the right mix of activities
.The sequence is lockstep
.The activities, reading, visuals, etc. may be boring.
.The material may go out of date.
.The timetable for completing the textbook or parts of it may be unrealistic

There are many more advantages and disadvantages about the textbooks so teachers must try to make use of advantages overcoming disadvantages in order to use a textbook as a tool for a class.

Adopting textbooks is the same as adopting weapons for a battle. Even solders are great if they fight with useless weapon they will be defeated. So solders must adopt good weapons and adapt them to a battle.Like weapons, teachers must know how to adapt textbooks not only to meet the needs and interests of students but also achieve the goals of class.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Module #3 Teacher Curriculum Interview




http://genieso.podomatic.com/entry/2010-05-01T08_15_06-07_00


I have never used curriculum for my class. As I am teaching students English in a small institute, it is not easy for me to conceptualize about curriculum. So I want to make a chance to know about curriculum used in school not institute through this interview.

His name is Kisuck Oh. He is teaching English in middle and high schools for almost 20 years.

Here are questions I asked during interview.
1. Thank you for giving me time for interview. Can you introduce yourself?
2. Since you are working in school I think you are teaching English based on curriculum, am I right it?
3. Who makes and provides curriculum for school teachers?
4. What are the contents of curriculum?
5. Which part do you think is being emphasized in curriculum provided by government?
6. Do you think class based on curriculum is helpful? If not why?
7. Can you modify the curriculum during class?
8. If you can change curriculum how do you want to change curriculum what do you want to be added or cut?
9. Almost all students are studying English focusing on tests in Korea. Do you think current curriculum is learner-centered or test-centered?
10. Personally, I think learner-centered curriculum must be utilized more than now, is it possible now in Korea?
11. Here is my last question. Do you have something to tell about curriculum?

After finishing the interview I talked more about curriculum with him. Before the interview I thought curriculum is not that important to teach because I am teaching English without curriculum for many years. But while I was having the interview I realized what I know is not everything.

As he is teaching middle school students English he is having a class based on curriculum provided by government. Even most school teachers are given curriculum they can modify and adjust it according to level of class and students. He said Korea English Education is in a transitional stage and curriculum also being changed. Current government made curriculum focusing on speaking than other parts. I feel the same as he said because government is emphasizing practical English more than ever. He has a very positive view in using curriculum for his class as curriculum suggests guideline and direction. But he wants government to make curriculum, emphasizing class of field practice. What I really want to know is how much teachers can apply curriculum to class under test-centered circumstance. He said it is not easy to do perfectly as in curriculum but curriculum is being developed to learner-centered. That’s why he mentioned transitional stage. He emphasizes curriculum based class is necessary and believes curriculum will be continuously improved to learner-centered practical one!

The interview was very satisfactory and it gave me a good chance to think about curriculum again^^.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Module #2 Blog Response on the Topic


To be honest, I don’t have much idea about curriculum design because I have been teaching students English in an institute without curriculum for many years. So I think curriculum is the one needed in school. As I am working in an institute, making students have a good grade is more important than having a class with a good curriculum with bad grade. Even though curriculum is great nobody is sure it can make students have good grade in English exam. Of course, having a good grade is not everything in learning language. Even worse right before school exam I am very busy teaching students skills how to pick up the right answers and letting them know the possible questions on the exam. But after reading a book and PPT related to curriculum I realize it is necessary to guide students effectively and take advantage of the class efficiently.

In order to make a curriculum, teachers must look trough and know the various contexts carefully to make decisions about the course. Designing a course is similar to designing a house. Graves (2000) showed the chart which summarizes the various aspects of the context that teachers can define: people, time, physical setting, teaching resources, and nature of the curse and institution. The more information teachers have the better course teacher can make . But if teacher design a course too much materials for the time given, or is built around the topics that are inappropriate for students, or depends on materials that are not readily available to the students, the course will be ineffective or, at best, require ongoing repair(Graves, 2000, p.18). Most of all, the curriculum must to be designed to meet the students learning needs. So teachers need to have a lot of information in order to design a structure that will fit the context (Graves, 2000, p.14). Module 2 PPT, slide 9 shows how teachers can develop curriculum.

.The term learner-driven suggests that learner - not the subject matter - plays a central role in determining curriculum.
.Learner-driven approaches draw upon constructivism, a theory of learning in which "people learn when they relate new information and skills to what they already know, actively practice the new information and skills in a supportive environment, and get feedback on their performance.
.To develop learner-driven curriculum, teachers need to view learners as active inquirers who use previous experiences - both mental and social - to make meaning of the world.
.Curriculum springs from students' purposes for learning and uses real-life materials and contexts.

In Korea, most of the students are passive in class, so developing learner-driven curriculum is very useful for students I think. But I also wonder whether it really works in test–centered Korean circumstances.

In addition to the context, teachers’ beliefs play a role at stage of course design (Graves, 2000, p.33). Among the examples of teachers’ beliefs, I like Denies Lawson’s. Denies Lawson is a teacher who designed an advance writing course for a university extension program in the Unite States. Three factors influences her beliefs: her experience as a teacher, her experience as a teacher and how the students responded to her and each other, and understanding from readings (Graves, 2000, p.32). Denies Lawson articulated four main beliefs that guided planning of an advanced composition course: her belief in learner-centered curriculum, a meaning-centered curriculum, a process-centered curriculum and her belief that the roles of teachers and learners should be clearly articulated (Graves, 2000, p.35). Rich and powerful beliefs have important implications to design a course but teachers focus on a few considered essential.

I think teachers try to plan curriculum based on context of the course, integrating their beliefs to help achieve the goals of students^^.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Module#1 About myself

My name is Yunjoung So born in 1974 in Seoul, Korea. I am a working mom. Four years have passed since I got married. I felt happier after having two daughters. Juhee is first and Joungyoun is second. They are 5 and 3 who always make me smile and my life get richer.

I majored in Russian language and graduated in 1998 in Korea. I have been teaching English to middle and high school students in an institute. And my target teaching levels are the same. I don't have any experience with curriculum as a learner and a teacher.

I am using my mobile phone just for making a call so I have never used mobile devices for language learning or teaching.

Most Korean students go to an English institute after school for learning English more. Since I am working in an institute not in school, I need to design my own curriculum for my class. As I don't have any experience in making curriculum I really hope to learn how to make it through EESL 614 course^^