This Blog is created for the purpose of sharing posts and information about ELT...
Showing posts with label ELT Testing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ELT Testing. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Lesson Plans and Materials
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Monday, September 16, 2013
Interactive Lectures...
What is Interactive Lectures?
Interactive lectures are classes in which the instructor incorporates engagement triggers
and breaks the lecture at least once per class to have students
participate in an activity that lets them work directly with the
material. The engagement triggers capture and maintain student attention
and the interactive lecture techniques
allow students to apply what they have learned or give them a context
for upcoming lecture material.
Instructors can also think of the value of format change during a class period in two ways.
All of the activities used to make lectures interactive involve a
learning curve for both instructors and students. Instructors must learn
how to develop good questions, analyze the student responses, and
incorporate that information into the following lecture segment or the
next class period.
As with many active-learning techniques, interactive lectures may take longer to cover any given topic than non-interactive ones. Mazur (1997) recommends that the lecturer save time by only going over more difficult and important material rather than duplicating the coverage of the textbook.
Resource: link
Interactive lectures are classes in which the instructor incorporates engagement triggers
and breaks the lecture at least once per class to have students
participate in an activity that lets them work directly with the
material. The engagement triggers capture and maintain student attention
and the interactive lecture techniques
allow students to apply what they have learned or give them a context
for upcoming lecture material.
The Basic Structure of Interactive Lecture
The goal of interactive lecture is to engage students by finding ways
for them to interact with the content, the instructor, and their
classmates. Accordingly, interactive lectures include segments of
lecture combined with segments where students interact.
One of
the things that makes the lecture interactive is the ability of the
instructor to choose the content of the lecture segments based on the
students' needs. If students have difficulty answering a question, or an
activity goes astray in many or most student groups, it's time to find a
new and better way to deal with the material.
Instructors can also think of the value of format change during a class period in two ways.
- Format change is valuable in its own right for recapturing attention and engaging students.
- Also, the new format is often a better way to teach a topic or get a point across.
All of the activities used to make lectures interactive involve a
learning curve for both instructors and students. Instructors must learn
how to develop good questions, analyze the student responses, and
incorporate that information into the following lecture segment or the
next class period.As with many active-learning techniques, interactive lectures may take longer to cover any given topic than non-interactive ones. Mazur (1997) recommends that the lecturer save time by only going over more difficult and important material rather than duplicating the coverage of the textbook.
Resource: link
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Webskills I learned through the 10 weeks in the E-Teacher Course..
Friday, June 7, 2013
Last week in Webskills Course..
The final week, it is!
The main topic for this week was centering on the use of technology integration matrix. It is a very practical and clear way for integrating technology. It provides teachers with all what they need in order to follow a successful gradation of integrating technology.
Through these 10 weeks, I have built a great knowledge about technology integration in teaching.I really find my self incapable of counting the benefits that I gained
through this course. It is really an opportunity that I can not afford.
Being exposed to many topics regarding integrating technology in
teaching, now by the end of this course, I feel like I am a new teacher
that is growing once again. Reviving and renewing the teaching materials
I would use in teaching, adding more teaching techniques to the ones I
used before, discussing many issues of teaching with teachers from all
over the world and knowing much more about my students and how to keep
them on the right road, I am now definitely a new teacher with more
modern and brighter insight.
This is the last week in our course, but This will not be the last post in this blog!
Through these 10 weeks, I have built a great knowledge about technology integration in teaching.I really find my self incapable of counting the benefits that I gained
through this course. It is really an opportunity that I can not afford.
Being exposed to many topics regarding integrating technology in
teaching, now by the end of this course, I feel like I am a new teacher
that is growing once again. Reviving and renewing the teaching materials
I would use in teaching, adding more teaching techniques to the ones I
used before, discussing many issues of teaching with teachers from all
over the world and knowing much more about my students and how to keep
them on the right road, I am now definitely a new teacher with more
modern and brighter insight.This is the last week in our course, but This will not be the last post in this blog!
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Learners' Autonomy
Here are some tips that I found important for teachers to follow in order to build up learners' autonomy:
Offer encouraging, focused feedback as well as general praise to encourage students to work with purpose.
Recognize and praise effort. Help your students develop self-efficacy by helping them see the connection between effort and achievement.

Make success possible. Begin each assignment with the easier material, question, etc. Creating confident learners will encourage them to keep trying.
Offer students a variety of ways to self-monitor their work. The
easiest way is to offer them checklists to keep track of completed
tasks.
It’s almost magic. If you think highly of your students, they will tend to behave better for you than for the teachers who obviously do not enjoy being with them.
Give clear written and verbal direction so that your students can
find it easy to stay on task. Students who know how to do their work
well will be less apt to be off class than those who do not know what
they need to accomplish in class. Examples of bad work are also helpful because they can
show student what not to do.
Arouse student curiosity about a lesson and you will find that inherent motivation will prevent many discipline problems.
Spend two minutes at the start of a lesson: ask questions, show
photos, play clips, give quick teamed activities…anything that will
encourage students to want to learn more.
Spend time setting goals with your students. Looking forward in this way gives your students practical reasons for wanting to do their work.
For more Information see this link.
Offer encouraging, focused feedback as well as general praise to encourage students to work with purpose.Recognize and praise effort. Help your students develop self-efficacy by helping them see the connection between effort and achievement.

Make success possible. Begin each assignment with the easier material, question, etc. Creating confident learners will encourage them to keep trying.
Offer students a variety of ways to self-monitor their work. The
easiest way is to offer them checklists to keep track of completed
tasks.It’s almost magic. If you think highly of your students, they will tend to behave better for you than for the teachers who obviously do not enjoy being with them.
Give clear written and verbal direction so that your students can
find it easy to stay on task. Students who know how to do their work
well will be less apt to be off class than those who do not know what
they need to accomplish in class. Examples of bad work are also helpful because they can
show student what not to do.
Arouse student curiosity about a lesson and you will find that inherent motivation will prevent many discipline problems.
Spend two minutes at the start of a lesson: ask questions, show
photos, play clips, give quick teamed activities…anything that will
encourage students to want to learn more.Spend time setting goals with your students. Looking forward in this way gives your students practical reasons for wanting to do their work.
For more Information see this link.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Teaching English Pronunciation to Speakers of Arabic as a Mother Tongue
There is no
doubt that all the teachers of English as a foreign language are wondering
about an easy way that would enable them teach pronunciation. For me, I think
that detecting the areas that may cause difficulties and eases for the students
in pronouncing English sounds is an effective way that enables the teachers
find the right way to a better pronunciation teaching. Here, in this post, I am
providing the findings of a paper that I wrote about the difficulties that may
face Arabic students in pronouncing English words and utterances.
The
Purpose of the paper was to provide a contrastive study between the Arabic and
English sound systems and investigate the extent to which the pronunciation of
the mother tongue may influence learning the pronunciation of a second
language. Thus, the study is projected in three parts. The first part
postulates the contrastive study between the Arabic and English sound systems.
It provided a clear distinction between the Arabic and English consonant and
vowel systems, underlying the areas of differences and similarities between
both. And then, an error analysis study is applied in
five Sudanese Arabic learners’ pronunciation for twenty chosen English words.
In this post, as I said, I am producing the findings of my paper, that may help
all those who teach English pronunciation to speakers of Arabic as a mother
tongue.
Regarding the findings projected in the study, it is obvious that the most number of errors
committed by the students are approximation errors which are in fact the cause
of their mother tongue interference. In the articulation of the word “pupil”,
three students tend to pronounce the word with replacing the first [p] with
[b]. This is a selection error because the students selected the wrong sound to
pronounce the word. It is due to mother tongue interference as in the Arabic
sound system there is no /p/ sound, so the
students tried to produce and select a similar sound instead of producing a proper / p / English sound. In the pronunciation of the words “pig” and “big”, this interference can appear clearly, as no student made a mistake in pronouncing the word “big” while four of them pronounced the / b / sound instead of /p /. The pronunciation of the word problem as well is a good example of this phenomenon.
students tried to produce and select a similar sound instead of producing a proper / p / English sound. In the pronunciation of the words “pig” and “big”, this interference can appear clearly, as no student made a mistake in pronouncing the word “big” while four of them pronounced the / b / sound instead of /p /. The pronunciation of the word problem as well is a good example of this phenomenon.
Approximation errors made by the students because of the mother
tongue interference also appears in the students’ pronunciation of vowels. As
it is said before, the fact that in English there are more vowels than in that
of Arabic, students of English may find difficulties in pronouncing some
monophthongs and diphthongs. Some Examples about the mistakes the students made
with regard to the pronunciation of vowels is the word “pupil”. The students
applied their colloquial Sudanese Arabic pronunciation and that is by replacing
the vowel / ə / by / ɪ / which is simpler for them to pronounce and similar to
their own Arabic pronunciation.
Words like “star”, and “struggle” are likely to be pronounced wrong
by the students, namely because in Arabic there are no consonant clusters. In
such words, students seem to add an initial vowel / ɪ /, so they treat the one
syllable word “star” as a two syllable word: [ɪs tɑ:r], as well as for the word
“struggle.” It is obvious that the fact that Arabic words cannot begin in
consonant sounds, so as the students find it difficult to pronounce such words.
In the word “text” as well, 4 students tend to pronounce the word with adding a
vowel / ɪ / separating the two consonants that compose the consonant cluster.
However, in pronouncing the word “doctor”, as it is used in both
English and Arabic language meaning the same thing, students tend again to apply
their mother tongue pronunciation. It is also the case in pronouncing the word
“alcohol”. These two errors are selection errors. The students selected the
wrong sounds to pronounce the words.
They are classified as well as errors due to mother tongue interference.
In Sudanese colloquial Arabic the word “garage” is also used meaning the same
thing in English. It is pronounced with a final / ʃ / instead of / Ʒ /. Thus, the students tend to remain the
pronunciation as they do in the Sudanese Arabic.
Furthermore, the facts that in Arabic the / r / is always
pronounced as a trill makes it respectively difficult to pronounce the silent,
rhoticized or non-rhoticized varieties of English. In words like “star”,
“understand” and “doctor”, the / r / is
silent, but the students tend to pronoun it clearly. It is an addition error
that the students added more sounds. It is also an approximation error because
in their mother tongue the / r/ is not silent but a trill.
Another area of difficulty lies in the differences between the
consonants and vowels in both languages that there are some consonants which
exist in English but no in Arabic and so on. With respect to this fact,
students actually found difficulty in pronouncing words containing the
consonants: / v /, / dƷ /, / tʃ /, / ŋ /, etc. In table 2.3, the words: “solve,
language, champion” are pronounced wrong, because the students try to
substitute the unfamiliar sounds with other familiar ones that sound like those
in the system of their mother tongue. So, they replaced the / v / with / f / in
“solve”, the / dƷ / with / Ʒ / in “language”, and the / tʃ / with / ʃ / as in
their pronunciation for “champion”.
Although the study tempted to contrast between both systems in
order to find areas of differences that may come up with solutions for the
students’ problems in pronouncing the English sounds, but the matter was not
about the influence of the standard Arabic, it was about the Sudanese dialect
of Arabic spoken by Sudanese students. In pronouncing some English words, it is
observed that some pronunciations by the students cannot be justified as mother
tongue interference unless this mother tongue is considered as the colloquial
Arabic spoken by Sudanese people. As in
so many other cases, in pronouncing the word “what” as [wʌṭ] with the emphatic
sound / ṭ /, we cannot admit that it is the standard Arabic pronunciation that
influenced the students’ pronunciation of this word. Accurately, as Sudanese
people always seem to pronounce the sound / t / as / ṭ /, it is likely clear to
assume that it is this spoken variety by Sudanese people that influences the
pronunciation, and not likely the standard one.
Nevertheless, not all the errors are
classified as approximation errors, some of them turn to be competence and performance
errors which are due to unintended mistakes by the students that they would be
able to correct, or errors that are not due to the mother tongue
interference but to the students’ own
ability to pronounce them. This appears in the students’ pronunciation for the
words “adults, what, live, oxford, playing”. The students, in these errors, did
not apply their mother tongue in the pronunciation but they produced their own
pronunciation that differs from English and have no relation to the Arabic one.The full version of this paper is available for everyone who is interested in this topic. Just send to khadijam.989@gmail.com and the file will be sent to your mail.
I Hope that I was helpful!
By: Khadija Muhammad Abdussalam
Teacher in the University of Khartoum
Khartoum, Sudan
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