Thanks to all those who attended the CALL SIG Forum at JALT 2017. In case you missed it, here is Josh Wilson’s killer list of sites and apps for language learning:
Year: 2017
40 Tech Tips from JALT CALL 2017
- howdoyou.do allows students to practice their English writing and speaking skills by chatting with native speakers or with other learners of English
- Basecamp allows groups of people to collaborate on projects remotely…
- …as does Trello
- Tandem is a mobile app which helps students to find native speakers of English who want to do a language exchange
- P2 is a theme for WordPress that transforms a blog into a social forum, with features such as inline comments, and inline editing of posts and comments
- The Ginger Grammar Checker helps students write better English and efficiently corrects texts
- The Cambridge English Corpus is a multi-billion word collection of written and spoken English
- The NGSL-S is a list of high frequency words of everyday spoken English…
- …while the Michigan Corpus of Academic Spoken English focuses on academic spoken English
- Word Learner (iOS|Android|Web) is a science-based efficient word learning system which tracks students’ vocabulary learning
- Lingopolis is a fun, social and fast vocabulary game powered by Cambridge Dictionaries Online
- VoiceTube allows students to learn English by watching TED talks, movies, and music videos…
- …while Speech Yard also offers English learning through videos with interactive subtitles
- PirateBox is a DIY anonymous offline file-sharing and communications system built with free software and inexpensive off-the-shelf hardware
- RACHEL Offline provides free copies of open source websites such as TED and Wikipedia for download and use without an internet connection
- Plickers is a tool that lets teachers collect real-time assessment data without the need for student devices
- The Intel Compute Card is a credit card sized computing device to be launched in August 2017
- SpyFall is an online version of the popular language-based board game of the same name
- Showbie combines all of the essential tools for assignments, feedback and communication into a single app…
- …while Schoology allows teachers and students to connect, communicate, and share with their peers across campus and around the world
- ReadTheory is an online reading practice platform that supplies students with an extensive library of passages targeting individual levels
- English News Weekly is a weekly English news podcast produced by Hiroshima University
- The M3 is a tiny fully functioning computer
- Kapture is an audio-recording wristband that allows you to easily save and share audio recordings of your life
- Not Hotdog is an app which allows you to check whether or not something (or someone?!) is a hotdog
- Mersiv is a concept designed to revolutionize the way in which we learn languages
- Memoto is a tiny, automatic camera and app that gives you a searchable and shareable photographic memory
- Sketch Engine is a corpus tool to create and search text corpora in more than 80 languages…
- …while WordSmith Tools provides a variety of corpus analysis software…
- …as does Laurence Anthony
- Datawrapper is an open source tool which allows you to create charts and graphs…
- …as does Tableau
- Datasift provides access to data from social networks, blogs, news, and more
- AntCorGen is a freeware corpus creation tool
- FireAnt is a freeware social media and data analysis toolkit
- PhraseBot is an awesome puzzle game to actively learn any kinds of words, phrases or sentences
- Apps 4 EFL: Real Time allows you to test your students’ vocabulary knowledge in real time, and has the NGSL, NAWL, and other word lists built in
- Apple TV allows students to wirelessly connect their devices to the classroom projector
- iBooks Author allows anyone to create iBooks Textbooks for iPad and Mac
- Spaceteam ESL is a fun English learning game that students can play with their friends and classmates using phones or tablets
If you found these tips useful, why not check out the new version of my book, which has been revised, updated and expanded for 2019: 50 Ways to Teach with Technology
Online English Learning @ JALT Fukuoka
Thank you to all those who attended my presentation Online English Learning: Resources, Activities, and Evidence at JALT Fukuoka. Thank you also to the CALL SIG for giving me the opportunity to attend the event. The slides shown during the presentation are now available to download as a PDF.
10 ways to make textbook dialogues more interesting
- Do it without looking. Tell the students to look down at the line, then look up and say it.
- Do it with the book closed (students can open it briefly to check if they forget the line).
- Substitute words and phrases for the students’ own ideas, change names, places, or any other words.
- Do it with emotion – happy, sad, angry, confused, etc. Get the students to try a variety of combinations.
- Do it with an accent – American, British, robot, zombie – get the students to use their imaginations!
- Do it with gesture only but no sound, over emphasizing the gestures to convey the meaning of the text.
- Tell the students to stand up and act it out. Get them to use props and costumes if available.
- Have the students write another five or ten lines for the dialogue, and then repeat steps 1 to 7.
- Repeat steps 1 to 7 with a different partner.
- Have the students translate the dialogue into their first language(s), and then back to English again without looking at the original.
230,000 real sounding “fake” words
The list is available under a Creative Commons license, and can be viewed and downloaded here.
The list of real sounding “fake” words used for the new Apps 4 EFL activity “Fight the Fakes” is now available for download.
The list was generated by looping through each of the words from the SIL list and splitting them into three-letter chunks. A Markov chain process was then used to determine which of the three letter chunks were most likely to precede or follow each other. The three-letter chunks were then recombined according to these likelihoods in order to create realistic sounding neologisms of various lengths, e.g.
- generotizing
- liminativate
- coronably
- solarians
- troscorifyingly
The words were doubled checked against the SIL list to ensure no real words were accidentally generated.
Fun ways to teach with the words
- Try the new Apps 4 EFL activity Fight the Fakes, which uses the words as distractors against low frequency items from the BNC
- Ask your students to try and invent “definitions” for the fake words based on what they sound like, e.g. “hispanelist (n.), chat show panelist from Latin America”, “mandibilious (adj.), used to describe an animal with extraordinarily strong jaws”, “rattlesnatcher (n.), a person who goes around stealing toys from small children”
- Use them as in Yes/No vocabulary knowledge tests to ensure students don’t cheat by clicking “Yes, I know this word” for every item