Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Teacher Discussions: Phone Use in the Classroom

(TESOL Ideas--Classroom Management, Teacher Development)

Google: docs, pub
[Notes: As I've mentioned before, smart phone use in class has become big issue in my teaching context.  Recently I helped to lead a discussion on ways to manage phone use in class.  I should clarify the context for this discussion.  Because we are teaching at a university, the students are allowed to have phones in class.  Teachers are not allowed to take the phones away, and teachers are not allowed to ask students to put the phones in a basket or central table.  Teachers are allowed to ask students to put their phones away or to stop using them, but we have no power to discipline students if they choose not to comply with these requests.  So, alternative methods to manage phone use must be sought.
I've been talking with a lot of my fellow teachers about how they manage phone use in their class, and I put all their ideas onto this document.  At the teacher forum, we then talked about the pros and cons of each approach.]

Here are some strategies that teachers have been using.  What are the advantages and disadvantages of each approach:


1. The laissez faire approach–The teacher does not do anything about students using phones in class.  The students are adults, and take responsibility for their own learning.


2.  Do a lesson about digital addiction at the start of the course, so that students are aware of why they are addicted to their phones, and what strategies they can use to mitigate this addiction.


3. Ask students to put their phones in their bags during class time, so they can’t see the phones and aren’t distracted by them.  


4. Ask students to put their phones flat on their desk (and not in their hands) during class time.  Students can see their phones, and will not have to be curious about whether or not they are getting messages, but they also will not be using them unnecessarily.


5. Keep students active and moving around the classroom (gallery walks, board races, etc) so that they never have a chance to sit down and check their phones


6.Build in as many phone activities as possible during the lesson (Kahoot, quizziz, quizlet, etc).  If students are going to be addicted to their phones anyway, then have them use their phones for class activities.


7. Build in a “check your phone” break every 20 minutes in the lesson. 


8. Having explicit periods of the lesson where phone use is banned. This can help to create a feeling of give and take and the students may respond better to having to put their phones away as they know they will get it again soon. 


9. The teacher leads by example.  The teacher makes it a point to never check their own phone throughout the 2 hour class time.


Sunday, October 29, 2023



 

Books (226 pages this week)
Dracula by Bram Stoker p.350-365 (finished) (reviewed) (15 pages)
Three Kingdoms Volume 1 by Luo Guanzhong Introduction p.1-20, p.1-35 (55 pages) (from Three Kingdoms)
The Book of Leviticus p.106-116 (Leviticus 1-11) (From The Bible) (10 pages)  [Note: By July 31, 2023, I had previously read up to p.120, Leviticus 16, but since that was well over a year ago, I have decided to just restart Leviticus from the beginning.]
Teaching Speaking: A Holistic Approach by Christine C. M. Goh, and Anne Burns p.1-18 (18 pages) [This is another book I had started before, but it's been so long I've just decided to restart from the beginning.]
Comic Books (Comic Books don't count towards weekly page counts)
Revolutions Season 7: The Revolutions of 1848 2nd Listening From: 7.31- The Assembly of the Damned Finished 2nd Listening. Started 3rd Listening. To: 7.08- The Political Question (from Revolutions Podcast)

Videos from this Week:


For more information about what this is and why I'm doing it, see HERE.

Friday, October 27, 2023

Started: Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong translated by Moss Roberts (This edition is in 4 volumes, so just like I did with Journey to the West, I will be keeping track of when I start and finish each volume.)


Journey to the West by Wu Cheng'en translated by W. J. F. Jenner: Book Review


On My Shelves: January 05, 2023
Started: January 19, 2023
--Finished Volume 1: February 15, 2023
--Finished Volume 2: June 02, 2023
--Finished Volume 3: August 05, 2023
Finished: October 25, 2023

(This is my first time reading this book, so according to my new rules, I'm doing this as a video only review.) 



See also my reviews of the individual volumes:

January 22, 2023 Journey to the West Introduction p.1-22, Story 1-222
January 29, 2023 Journey to the West p.222-446
February 5, 2023 Journey to the West p.446-466
February 12, 2023 Journey to the West p.466-544
February 19, 2023 Journey to the West p.544-644
February 26, 2023 Journey to the West p.644-698
March 5, 2023 Journey to the West p.698-742
March 12, 2023 Journey to the West p.742-790
March 19, 2023 Journey to the West p.790-832
March 26, 2023 Journey to the West p.832-860 
April 2, 2023 Journey to the West p.860-900
April 9, 2023 Journey to the West p.900-944
April 16, 2023 Journey to the West p.944-990
April 23, 2023 Journey to the West p.990-992
April 30, 2023 Journey to the West p.992-1014
May 7, 2023 Journey to the West p.1014-1040
May 14, 2023 Journey to the West p.1040-1070
May 21, 2023 Journey to the West p.1070-1112
May 28, 2023 Journey to the West p.1112-1140
June 4, 2023 Journey to the West p.1140-1173
June 11, 2023 Journey to the West p.1177-1192
June 18, 2023 Journey to the West p.1192-1200
June 25, 2023 Journey to the West p.1200-1258
July 2, 2023 Journey to the West p.1258-1336
July 9, 2023 Journey to the West p.1336-1392
July 16, 2023 Journey to the West p.1392-1486
July 23, 2023 Journey to the West p.1486-1520
July 30, 2023 Journey to the West p.1520-1660
August 6, 2023 Journey to the West p.1660-1758
August 13, 2023 Journey to the West p.1761-1874
August 20, 2023 Journey to the West p.1874-1924
August 27, 2023 Journey to the West p.1924-1958
September 3, 2023 Journey to the West p.1958-1996
September 10, 2023 Journey to the West p.1996-2046
September 17, 2023 Journey to the West p.2046-2082
September 24, 2023 Journey to the West p.2082-2130
October 1, 2023 Journey to the West p.2130-2198
October 8, 2023 Journey to the West p.2198-2210
October 15, 2023 Journey to the West p.2210-2232
October 22, 2023 Journey to the West p.2232-2254

Playlist HERE

From CNN: Maine communities still grieving after shooting rampage are under stay-at-home orders as manhunt for suspect continues.

A friend of mine wrote on her Facebook page: 
This is a cruel joke if this is “freedom.” Sorry to the state of Maine as you enjoy your freedom in lock down… #ironyisnotdead #humansaredead
...to which I might add: yeah, really.  Is this what freedom looks like? 

Thursday, October 26, 2023

Journey to the West Volume 4 by Wu Cheng'en translated by W. J. F. Jenner: Book Review


Started: August 7, 2023
Finished: October 25, 2023

(For my video on volume 1, see HERE. For volume 2, see HERE.  For Volume 3, see HERE.)



Here is the summary I made before filming this video, to help me keep the storylines straight: docs, pub

Story 0: The 3 senior demons of the mountains
Chapter 77
Wrapping up a story started in the previous volume

Story 1: The Kingdom of Biksu
Chapter 78-80
The King is spellbound by a Daoist priest and his beautiful daughter.  He wants to use the hearts of 1,111 boys to make an elixir.  The daoist priest than says that the monk’s heart would be more effective.  Monkey disguises himself as the monk.  

Story 2: The she-demon disguised as a young woman
Chapter 81-83
The rescue a she-demon and bring her to the monastery.  She starts eating monks. Monkey disguises himself as a monk.  She abducts the monk. Monkey eventually gets Nezha to arrest his adopted sister

Story 3: Dharma-Destroying Kingdom
Chapter 84-85
A kingdom where all buddhist monks are killed.  Monkey turns the tables by shaving their heads at night

Story 4: Leopard Demon
Chapter 85-86
the Monk is captured.  The demons say they have already eaten him and throw out a skull.  Monkey goes into a rage, and kills them all. It turns out to have been a leopard demon

Story 5: The drought of Phoenix-Immortal Prefecture
Chapter 87
The kingdom is suffering a drought.  Monkey finds out what the problem is, and the king repeents, and the drought is finished

Story 6: the 9 headed lion demon
Chapter 88-90
They enter into India, get 3 disciples, lose their weapons, fight all the lion demons and the 9 headed lion demon

Story 7: the rhino demons
Chapter 91-92
The rhinoceros demons abduct the monk.  but the wooden stars can defeat the rhinoceros demons

Story 8: The princess who has been switched out for the Jade rabbit
Chapter 93-95

Story 9: The rich man Kuo
Chapter 96-97

Chapter 98: Getting the scrolls

Chapter 99: One last tribulation with the giant sea turtle

chapter 100: the homecoming

And here is the Weebly site I used to help jog my memory and help me make that summary: https://journeytothewestlibrary.weebly.com/novel-summary .

Jiajing Emperor Wikipedia article that I mention in the video: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiajing_Emperor

August 13, 2023 Journey to the West p.1761-1874
August 20, 2023 Journey to the West p.1874-1924
August 27, 2023 Journey to the West p.1924-1958
September 3, 2023 Journey to the West p.1958-1996
September 10, 2023 Journey to the West p.1996-2046
September 17, 2023 Journey to the West p.2046-2082
September 24, 2023 Journey to the West p.2082-2130
October 1, 2023 Journey to the West p.2130-2198
October 8, 2023 Journey to the West p.2198-2210
October 15, 2023 Journey to the West p.2210-2232
October 22, 2023 Journey to the West p.2232-2254

Volume 4 Playlist HERE:


Journey to the West Playlist HERE

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Finished: Journey to the West Volume 4 by Wu Cheng'en translated by W. J. F. Jenner (The fourth volume of Journey to the West)
Since this is the last volume, this also means that I've now finished all of Journey to the West.
I think I'll do 2 reviews.  One review summarizing the 4th volume only.  And then one final review on the whole novel.  I'll try to do both of these as soon as possible---over the next couple days, time allowing.





Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Dracula by Bram Stoker: Book Review


On My Shelves: September 3, 2023
Started: October 2, 2023
Finished: October 23, 2023

(This is a reread.  I originally read did this book as an audiobook in 2001.  However, this is my first time reviewing this book on this blog, so according to my new rules, I'm doing this as a video only review.) 



Videos mentioned:
Steve Donoghue: Your Daily Penguin: Dracula! https://youtu.be/Ryv0tbn_3ug?si=Gyi-lYuQE3a8KsOk
Paperback Journeys: Dracula: A Spoiler Review: https://youtu.be/kRUwz_7dNjA?si=IFhc4MSb6xWWkBdK
Overly Sarcastic Productions: Halloween Special: Dracula https://youtu.be/7fT0efeSIx4?si=n6o0vqcz8O6q-IDa

See also:

October 8, 2023 Dracula p.1-110
October 15, 2023 Dracula p.110-240
October 22, 2023 Dracula p.240-350

Playlist HERE:



As I mentioned before, I'm listening to Steve's videos from last year's Dracula read-aloud to accompany my own rereading of Dracula.
Steve's commentary was mostly at the end on this video, but I thought he made a number of good points about the positives and negatives of this book's conclusion.

Monday, October 23, 2023

Finished: Dracula by Bram Stoker.  (Review coming soon, hopefully.  But first, now that I've finished the final chapter, I need to listen to Steve's commentary on it.  Then my own review will come after that.)




Videos mentioned:
Steve Donoghue: Your Daily Penguin: Dracula! https://youtu.be/Ryv0tbn_3ug?si=Gyi-lYuQE3a8KsOk
Paperback Journeys: Dracula: A Spoiler Review: https://youtu.be/kRUwz_7dNjA?si=IFhc4MSb6xWWkBdK
Overly Sarcastic Productions: Halloween Special: Dracula https://youtu.be/7fT0efeSIx4?si=n6o0vqcz8O6q-IDa

Guided Discovery Worksheet

(TESOL Ideas--Clarification Stage Any Grammar Point)

Sample: drive, docs, pub

Before I begin, a quick point of clarification.  This post is about a guided discovery worksheet, and not a guided discovery lesson.
In my experience, I've heard the term "guided discovery" used in two ways in TESOL staffrooms.  One use of "guided discovery" is to refer to any sort of inductive language lesson.  And in many of my past posts on this blog, I've used that meaning--see HERE, HERE, HERE, HERE and HERE.
However, there's another meaning of "guided discovery" which is more specific.  This second meaning refers to giving students a worksheet during the clarification stage of the grammar lesson instead of doing a teacher-fronted clarification.  This blog post is about the second meaning.
With a guided discovery worksheet, the grammar is put into context for the students as usual using some sort of model text.  The students process the model text as usual (gist question, specific information question).  And then, once the students have processed the model text for meaning, a sentence (or sentences) containing the target language point is highlighted.
At this point, we go into the clarification stage.  Butt instead of a teacher-led clarification, the students are given a worksheet with guiding questions on the worksheet.  The students work through the worksheet by themselves or in pairs while the teacher monitors.  Then, after the worksheet has been completed, the teacher confirms the answers in all class feedback.

An example of a guided discovery worksheet I created is here.  


(I had previously posted this worksheet here.  It is meant as a follow up to the dictogloss posted here.)
On the google drive file, the first sheet is the dictogloss that the teacher does to provide the model text.  But then the second and third sheet are what is given to the students.
As discussed in a previous post, the clarification stage should cover meaning, form and pronunciation, and so these can all be put on the guided discovery worksheet.  
In my guided discovery worksheet, Exercises A,B,C and D cover meaning.  Exercise E covers form.  And Exercise F covers pronunciation.  
However... take note that my sample worksheet is probably not ideal.  I was recently talking to an experienced CELTA instructor, and he gave me some advice on guided discovery worksheets.
First of all, guided discovery worksheets should only be one sheet of paper--single side.  If students have to the backside of the paper, the guided discovery is too long.
Secondly, although meaning, form and pronunciation should all be covered, there should be only one exercise each.  (In my guided discovery worksheet, I had four activities covering meaning, but this is too many.)

And speaking of this CELTA trainer, here is some other tidbits I got from him:
* It's often good to have the students do the guided discovery in pairs, so that they can help teach each other.  (For controlled practice activities, we like to have the students try to do the activities individually, and then check their answers with a partner afterwards.  But the guided discovery isn't considered a practice activity, it's still part of the teaching phase, so it's good to have students learning collaboratively.)
* The teacher should closely monitor the students during the guided discovery worksheet.  If the students are struggling with the guided discovery worksheet, then the worksheet should be abandoned, and the clarification stage can go back to a teacher-centered clarification.  But this does not mean that the teacher needs to plan two clarification stages.  The prompts that are used for the guided discovery worksheet can still be used in a teacher centered clarification stage.
* It is possible to do pronunciation on a guided discovery worksheet--things like phonetic script or word stress can be expressed in written form.  But pronunciation can never be completely taught by a worksheet.  It always has to be supplemented by oral drilling after the worksheet has been completed.
It is also possible to leave pronunciation off of the guided discovery worksheet entirely, and just do pronunciation only by drilling.

I think that's everything I have to say about guided discovery worksheets.  I've linked to the Google Drive version of my worksheet above, but I'll also copy and paste it below.  Although please note that some of the formatting will be a little off, and  the timelines don't copy and paste.


Worksheet: past perfect

A. Yesterday morning, my alarm went off at 6 AM, and I woke up.  I got out of bed and drank the coffee that I had made the night before. 

1) When did I get out of bed?

2) When did I drink the coffee?

3) When did I make the coffee?

4) Put these events in the order they happened in time:

____ got out of bed

____ drank the coffee

____ had made (the coffee)


B. Choose the correct timeline for this sentence:  I got out of bed and drank the coffee that I had made the night before

1)2)

3)4)



C. “had made coffee” is in the past perfect tense.  Choose the correct rule for the past perfect?

  1. The past perfect is used to show that something happened a long time ago.

  2. The past perfect is used  to show that something happened before now.

  3. The past perfect is used to show that something happened before the time in the past that is being talked about.

  4. The past perfect is used to show that something happened after the past simple.





D.   Look at the three sentences.  When should you not use the past perfect?  1 and 3 are incorrect.  2 and 4 are correct.  

  1. Yesterday morning, my alarm had gone off at 6 AM, and I woke up. (incorrect)

  2. Yesterday morning, my alarm went off at 6 AM, and I woke up. (correct)

  3.  I had gotten out of bed and drank the coffee that I had made the night before. (incorrect)

  4. Yesterday morning, my alarm went off at 6 AM, and I woke up. (correct)


Circle the correct answer:

You should not use the past perfect when:

  1. The order of the verbs and the order of the time is the same

  2. The order of the verbs and the order of the time is different


E. Look at table showing past perfect verbs from the story.  Write the form above the column:



had 

made

’d

bought

’d

washed

had

written

had

started



F. In the sentence, “that I had made the night before”, what is the correct pronunciation of “had”?

1). /hæd/

2). /həd/