Melissa Holt
Assignment 12
EDT 5372
Dr. Zhang
After
reading two educational post from the educational technology blogs that I
subscribed to, I found the postings to be very enlightening. A synopsis of what
I learned from each of the educational technology blogs is listed below:
Edutopica: Building
Vocabulary Through Fun and Games
In this blog post, I truly learned several really great
things that I plan to take back to my classroom. I enjoyed this article, not only because the findings
within the article are intended to provide academic vocabulary building skills
for all student, but also because the suggestions in the article can specifically
be geared toward students who are English Language Learners (ELL) and English
for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL).
Because the El Paso boarder region has a large number of students who
are ELL’s and ESOL’s, these strategies can prove to be very beneficial in helping
teacher facilitate and promote student learning in the classroom setting as
student build their vocabulary skills in the English language. The importance of vocabulary building is not
only essential for ELL and ESOL students, but often students have difficulty
with comprehension skills due to unknown vocabulary words. The approach to building vocabulary through fun
games is an approach to deepen students’ understanding of key terms while
keeping them engaged in their learning. Some interesting findings
presented in the blog post included having students examine non-examples of vocabulary
words, using online vocabulary tools such as a visual thesaurus, and drawing
guessed meanings of unknown words as students encounter new vocabulary words. The
article even incorporates a kinesthetic approach to building vocabulary skills
with a “rating game”. I found the
suggestions in this article to be very creative ways of teaching vocabulary and
I aim to integrate at least one of these strategies into my classroom this
school year.
Feedly Link: http://feedly.com/i/entry/5kWGs/SfI+JL6mNKQAH3ijVlWPFqbbz7OtOHvwYHe/E=_1584a4de2b9:4be463:42ec361
Direct Link:
https://www.edutopia.org/article/buliding-vocabulary-through-fun-and-games-rebecca-givens-rolland
https://www.edutopia.org/article/buliding-vocabulary-through-fun-and-games-rebecca-givens-rolland
Edutopia: 6 Techniques
for Building Reading Skills-In Any Subject
In this blog post, I was able to learn about various
strategies that can be implemented into any grade level and content area. I found this article extremely beneficial in helping
student prepare for STAAR testing for tested graded levels 3-12. The STAAR exams in Reading, Math, Science,
and Social Studies are in essence all reading exams; however,
they are just reading exams that are content specific. For example, the Math
STAAR exam is a reading exam on Math, and the Science STAAR exam is a reading
exam on Science, etc. Therefore,
building reading skills across the curriculum is an important skill for
students to develop throughout their education.
The techniques mentioned in the blog post included teaching students
closed reading skills, appealing to the senses, setting reading goals, varying
text length, offering opportunities for choice reading, and assessing content
and skill. The strategies are intended
to help students develop their readings skills as well as continue to grow in
their reading development as they become lifelong learners.
Both of these educational
technology blogs provided insightful information that can be used by educators
to support students in an effort to meet the needs of the 21st
century student in effective, creative, and meaningful ways.
Feedly Link: http://feedly.com/i/entry/5kWGs/SfI+JL6mNKQAH3ijVlWPFqbbz7OtOHvwYHe/E=_15853bd3517:4f0a23:48c9ca4f
Hello again Ms. Holt, I hope you're semester is going well. I like your second post on building reading skills for all subjects, as this is what is being pushed in education now. I completely agree with this, I do feel that students need to be consistently exposed to writing in order for them to improve.
ReplyDeleteAlex,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comments. My semester is going well, and I hope that yours is going well too. :o) I really do think that it is extremely important for us, as educators, to teach our students to read with a deeper understanding of everything that they read. I really like the strategies that this article presented. I think these strategies will prove to be very useful in my classroom. Thanks again for your comments. :o)
All the best. :o)
-Melissa Holt-
Dear Melissa,
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate your post. I am a PhD student and although I have studied more English courses than other kind of courses on my life, I still struggle with the language. For international students, like me, it is very important learn vocabulary not only because we have to communicate and understand others, but also because we have to take and pass exams like TEOFL and GRE as requirements to get be admitted in any university. I know what difficult it is. So, your post is really interesting for me.
Thanks,
Maria
I completely agree vocabulary building skills are essential for all students in all grade levels. As you mentioned in El Paso a large population of our students are ELL students. I think the students will really enjoy playing these games which will benefit them greatly because they will be building up much needed vocabulary skills.
ReplyDelete